Revolutionary Way To Be Healthy #18: Focus On The Fundamentals
They get embroiled in the finer points of VO2 max, periodization, plyometrics, and slow- versus fast-twitch muscle before they have begun to practice getting any kind of regular, enjoyable activity. Worse, people are often encouraged to ramp up aggressive nutrition and fitness programs before they've been invited to give any thought to their sleep, stress, or available energy.
They attempt to cram a whole fleet of new, complex habits and skill sets into a life whose daily structures, rhythms, and social influences are in no way designed to support them. Needless to say, this doesn't work all that well. A poorly hydrated, malnourished, underslept, overstressed body is going to be stuck in "just-getting-by" mode, and until its basic needs are handled, that's precisely where it's going to stay. So, how can we address the body's hierarchy of needs in a way that predisposes it to progress and evolution? By focusing first on the fundamentals.
1: Whole foods and water. By "whole foods" I mean actual, nature-produced foods -- plants, animal products, nuts, seeds, fruits, legumes, whole-kernel grains -- that have not been commercially processed, combined, re-flavored, and extruded into brand-name food products. And by "water" I mean water -- pure, unsweetened, unadulterated H2O. Why this comes first: Without adequate nutrition and hydration (and the elimination of hugely irritating processed flours, sugars, and chemical gunk), your body won't have the cellular fuel it needs to get out of "struggle" gear. Instead, it will be bogged down with damage control.
Your energy, digestion, mood, and focus will all suffer. You aren't going to feel much like being active, and your life will seem too overwhelming for you to consider undertaking most other attempts at healthy change. You can massage the details of your personalized program (fat/protein/carb ratios, food sensitivities, and specific nutritional needs) through experimentation, or by getting some lab tests done and working with a smart nutrition pro.
But starting with a good, whole-food eating plan is going to get you to healthy a whole lot faster than dabbling with more liminal details first. 2: Sleep and recovery. Instead, you will be plagued by appetite disruptions that torpedo your healthy-eating intentions, and your whole body will be undermined by hormonal, neurological, and immune-system imbalances that work against all your other healthy-living efforts.
There are some real chicken-or-egg dynamics at work here though. For example, if you are not sleeping well, you will feel stressed out, be inclined to eat poorly, and have limited energy for exercise. But if you aren't eating well, being at least somewhat active, and managing your stress, you'll probably have trouble sleeping.
Ultimately, you have to intervene somewhere in the cycle, and only you can decide where you are best off applying leverage first. If you already know what works best for you, go for it. In my experience, a whole-foods diet leaves me sane and energy-balanced enough to manage my life, create space for seven to eight hours of sleep, and sleep well through the night. That inclines me to feel more like exercising, and also lets me take on (and recover from) the higher-intensity training that builds my fitness.
3: Activity and fitness building. Most of us get a certain amount of daily activity just by living our lives, and most of us would benefit from getting a great deal more. Fitness building is really about consciously escalating our levels of activity, while simultaneously seeking more exciting and nuanced opportunities for physical challenge, self-expression, exploration, and enjoyment.
Yes, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) can net you exceptional fitness gains -- but only if you can get yourself to do it, and then maintain your efforts without injury or exhaustion. So, diving into hardcore fitness building before you can tolerate a walk around the block, handle body-weight exercises, and maintain your general health probably isn't going to pay off. It's going to tear you down more than it builds you up; it's going to put your body into injury-prone panic mode.
So why not start by asking your body what it really wants and needs now? Once you get those basics handled, you'll see higher-level motivations and rewards come into clearer focus. And all those pesky optimization details will start to make a whole lot more sense. Find out what you can start doing right now to get healthier ASAP, and to stay strong for a lifetime.
Why healthy metabolism, clear skin, and good energy all hinge on your drinking enough water. The nutritional advantages of whole foods, plus motivation for making them the center of your eating plan. All the know-how you need to switch on your body's most powerful repair-and-rebalance mode. Pilar Gerasimo is a nationally recognized healthy-living expert, author of A Manifesto for Thriving in a Mixed-Up World, and the creative force behind the 101 Revolutionary Ways to Be Healthy. She serves as senior vice president of Healthy Living for Life Time, the Healthy Way of Life Company, and is currently working on a book about the art of being healthy in an unhealthy world.
7: I finish eating at 7 p.m. ’t eat again until 10 a.m. When fasting at night, your body goes into repair mode, correcting blood sugar levels and burning stored fats. It’s called intermittent fasting, and it works. It’s not a diet, it’s a pattern of eating. The maximum time for a woman to fast overnight is fourteen to fifteen hours—for men it is sixteen.
I fast for fifteen, and it works great for me. We live in an eating society. We’re always eating, and we don’t tend to give ourselves a break from it. But we should; our bodies need it. Overnight is an easy time to do an intermittent fast. Fasting lowers insulin levels, increases growth hormone levels and increases the amount of a brain chemical called norepinephrine, all of which encourage the breakdown of body fat and facilitate its use for energy.
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