A healthy lifestyle is about maintaining a disease-free condition. It’s a way of living that lowers the risk of being seriously ill or dying early.
In our last two views of lifestyle—the typical lifestyle and the fitness lifestyle—you can see that each is benchmarking against a healthy lifestyle. A healthy lifestyle is a general context most people have for how they know they should be living.
In a “healthy” lifestyle, you’ve stopped unconsciously engaging in what causes disease, notably the food you are eating, inactivity, and lack of sleep.
You are now eating at least healthier than before; you are active and exercising, and you have awakened to the fact that sleep is essential, but chances are you still struggle with getting enough of it.
Some diseases are not preventable, as genetics are involved. Of course, many deaths, particularly those from type two diabetes, obesity, coronary heart disease, and lung cancer caused by smoking, can be avoided. Even with a predisposition (genetic tendency), if the disease-causing environment is not there, you don’t get the disease.
Scientific studies have identified specific behavior types that contribute to the development of noncommunicable diseases and early death. Health is not only just about avoiding illness. It is also about physical, mental, and social wellness.
When a healthy lifestyle is adopted, a more positive role model is provided to other people in the family, particularly children trained mainly in unhealthy behavior (that means you) from an early age. You want to change your behavior and improve your health so that you and they can live longer lives.
You don’t want to live distracted and held back by bodyweight, acute, and chronic disease conditions; which, are inevitable if you do not at least stick to “the Holy trinity of health.”
Get as much sleep as you need,
Eat a genuinely healthy diet,
Stay active, and exercise.
How is it that the United States spends the most money on healthcare and still has one of the lowest life expectancies of all developed nations? (To be specific: $9,400 per capita, 79 years, and 31st.)
The answer is simple:
We have too much-unmitigated stress of the wrong kind. It’s gotten to the point that we are overstimulated and under recuperated, and overeating under nourishing food to cope with a life that’s super busy but leaves us physically inactive. Whereby we cope with that stress in ways that create even more stress.
Mired in constant tiredness, and eventually, chronic fatigue, weight, mental and physical health complications descend further into chronic conditions, like osteoporosis, diabetes, heart disease, and eventually cancer.
It’s a series of vicious cycles that conspire into a downward spiral of factors that cause us to live unhealthy lifestyles challenging to change.
Researchers from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health conducted a massive study of the impact of health habits on life expectancy, using data from the well-known Nurses’ Health Study (NHS) and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study (HPFS). This study shows they had data on a considerable number of people over an exceptionally long period. The NHS included over 78,000 women and followed them from 1980 to 2014. The HPFS included over 40,000 men and followed them from 1986 to 2014; over 120,000 participants, 34 years of data for women, and 28 years of data for men.
The researchers looked at NHS and HPFS data on diet, physical activity, body weight, smoking, and alcohol consumption collected from regularly administered, validated questionnaires.
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Five aspects of living healthy were chosen because prior studies have shown they significantly impacted the risk of premature death. Here is how these healthy habits were defined and measured:
Researchers also looked at data on age, ethnicity, and medication use, as well as comparison data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Wide-Ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research.
As the authors of this study point out, we tend to spend outlandishly developing fancy drugs and other treatments for diseases rather than trying to prevent them in the US. Too many of us have gotten conditioned to think we catch illnesses when they are diseases of lifestyle. That is a big problem.
Experts have suggested that the best way to help people make healthy diet and lifestyle change is at the large-scale, population level, through public health efforts and policy changes. (Kind of like motorcycle helmets and seat belt legislation) We have made a little progress with tobacco and trans-fat legislation.
There’s a lot of pushback from big industry on that, of course. If we have guidelines and laws helping us live healthier, big companies will not sell as much fast food, chips, and soda. And for companies hell-bent on making money at the cost of human life, well, that makes them angry.
What’s the answer?
A lot more could be said about this, but you’ve heard it here—don’t depend on top-down, corporate, or gov’t interests to ever have your best interests at heart, for the most part.
A healthy lifestyle is a bottom-up activity, as only you care genuinely about your health; naturally, no one will care more than you.
Also, keep this in mind, a “healthy” lifestyle should be a given, not a goal. Your lifestyle should be healthy, period because all human performance depends on it.
You never learned the other lifestyle skills that make all the criteria of healthy living something you can get proficient in. Just telling you to eat a healthy diet and exercise, and get more sleep, is not the same as knowing how to and why you sleep, eat healthily, and exercise to achieve your goals.
We need to learn how to eat whole food nutrient-rich diet in the context of an entire lifestyle that promotes your energy, health, and performance.
Like exercise, eating whole food nutrient-rich diet will build tremendous momentum towards living a healthy performance lifestyle.