At any age, but particularly at retirement age, happiness requires three things. The first is health; without health your life will be less than it could or should be. The second is money. You don’t have to be rich but you need enough money to live, to pay your bills, and hopefully enough to partake of some of the pleasures that are available. Finally, you need time. Not only on a day-to-day basis, but time in the sense of years of healthy living so that you can enjoy the fruits of your labors.
Today I will talk about health. I am not a doctor, so don’t take what I say as “medical advice”. Essentially, it is just good common sense.
If you read my first entry, you already know that I lost my wife to cancer and then had my own cancer event. I could write a book about what this does to your head, and I would guess that each of us would have a different reaction, but for me it raised a single question “why” that I felt driven to answer. Not why did this happen to her or to me. That would have been the first step to insanity or at the very least depression. My “why” was why is this happening to so many people.
A figure you hear a lot is that 80% of all illnesses are lifestyle related. To me, that meant that if I took the proper steps, I could prevent, or at least delay, 80% of the illnesses I can expect to experience in my “golden years”. My goal then was to try to figure out what these steps were, to figure out how to
"disrupt the disease cycle".
I read everything I could get my hands on. A lot of it was medical babble far beyond my ability to comprehend. However, I did find some real gems, often sitting in plain sight in easily obtained and very readable texts. Whenever I could I searched for others who could corroborate the "kernels of truth" that I discovered. I was surprised to find that most were well know and well documented. Although many are incredibly simple, few are being used by the medical profession.
I will try to cover the basics here, but remember these are just the basics. Each of these subjects is covered by one or more books, so what I write here will just touch the surface. In each case I will try to provide enough for you to gain some measurable benefits if you take even the simplest of steps. But, I urge each of you to take a little time to follow these strings further to see where they lead you.
The debilitating conditions we suffer today aren’t sudden occurrences, they build slowly over time and it all comes back to cellular health. Every cell in your body is replaced within one year, most multiple times in a year, some in a matter of days. These new cells are built with the materials your body provides, and so your cellular health is a reflection of what you consume and how you treat your body. Unless you are actively managing your intake and exercise, each succeeding generation of cells become slightly less healthy until ultimately a sufficient number of cells cease to function as they are designed and that is when you “discover” that you have an illness.
This gradual eroding of our cellular health is not inevitable; it can be slowed, and in some cases even reversed. Here are three simple things you should start doing immediately to slow this gradual deterioration. First try to limit (eliminate would be ideal, but it is seldom practical) those things that damage your cells: toxicity, cigarette smoke, pesticides, soft drinks (these are nothing but water and chemicals that your body can’t use), processed foods, and chemicals in lotions, deodorants, hair treatments, etc., are some of the most common. Reducing stress is also important to cellular health.
Second, try to help your body shed the toxicity, including all those dead cells I talked about above, by drinking at least 8 glasses of water each day – coffee, tea, and sodas don’t count. In fact they are “polluted” water bringing more toxicity with every swallow. Your body needs water, just water.
Exercise regularly so that you work up a good sweat, yes a sweat. Perspiration is one of your body’s best cleansing agents and muscle action is vitally important. A mini-trampoline is actually one of the best ways to get most of your muscles moving, but if nothing else is available simply shake your arms and legs. Muscle action causes your lymph system to circulate and your lymph system is what carries the toxicity away from the cells. Do you know that in China many doctors require you to do “lymphatic exercises” for at least 30 minutes before they will see you? They believe that most ailments are due to clogged lymphatic systems. Exercise can help get it moving.
Limit the amount of deodorant you slather under your arms. Antiperspirants in particular plug your pours and that keeps your body from cleansing. At the same time the deodorant is putting more toxic chemicals into your body so this is a double negative. Here is a tip: limiting your red meat intake will benefit you at multiple levels. First you will find you have less body odor so you will need less deodorant. Second you will probably see your weight and your blood chemistry improve. Maybe even to the point where you will need fewer medications. I will talk about alkalinity in a future blog and red meat, actually most meats, are acidic when cooked. So try to cut back.
Third, start taking high quality nutritional supplements so that your cells will have the proper building materials with which to construct new cells. I will do an entire blog entry on this subject, it is a biggie. Just remember, you would never build a house out of scrap wood, why are you allowing your body to build new cells out of garbage nutrition? To do so only speeds cellular deterioration, ultimately leading to illness.
In summary, limit your toxic intake, and work to eliminate the toxins that build up in your body. Drinking sufficient water and exercising are two simple steps that will help. Finally, no matter what you think, you are not getting sufficient nutrition in your food so you need to start taking high quality nutritional products to feed your cells.
Just to make a full disclosure, I do sell nutritional supplements; that is part of my personal “Plan B”. But that fact does not alter anything I have said. You still need to feed your cells.