5 Tips To Prevent Facial Wrinkles With Age Posted by Staff (04/05/2013 @ 7:31 am)
Wrinkles form on the skin as it grows old. Apart from the age of the skin itself, there are several other contributing factors to facial wrinkles such as smoking cigarette and UV Rays. Daily stress can also lead to its formation. Facial wrinkles will form with age as it’s a natural process, but there are several remedies available that can be used to prevent and delay that glowing skin of young age from hitting the dimmer switch early. Read the rest of this entry » Take control of your life Posted by Staff (01/15/2013 @ 3:59 pm)
We discuss all aspects of health here, including dealing with disease and serious health issues. But for your overall health and wellness, there’s nothing more important than the basics. This article on how to take back your life has simple pearls of wisdom for your physical health along with your emotional and spiritual health. 1. Get sufficient sleep every night. Sleep is often the single most undervalued behavior in our lives and the one with the most immediate power to improve our experience in every waking moment. If you sleep in the 6-6½ hour range, like the average American, just one more hour of sleep a night will leave you feeling more physically energized, emotionally resilient, and mentally clear. 2. Move more. It’s not only good for your heart’s health, but also for your mental health. Do some form of exercise that significantly raises your heart rate for 30 minutes at least four times a week and move frequently during the day. 3. Eat less, more often. Food is fuel. Lean proteins and complex carbohydrates are high-octane fuel. You’re best off when you keep feeding your internal furnace in small doses throughout the day, beginning with breakfast.
Read the rest of the article and you might find yourself coming back to this list often. Posted in: General Health, Wellness Tags: being emotionally resilient, being mentally clear, complex carbohydrates, eat less, eating, eating habits, exercise, exercise more, feeling more physically energized, food is fuel, get sufficient sleep, health and exercise, heart health, heart rate, importance of exercise, importance of sleep, improve your eating habits, improving wellness, Lean proteins, move more, sleep, sleep and health, wellness advice, wellness lifestyle, wellness tips
Early Birds Fare Better Than Night Owls Posted by Staff (06/18/2012 @ 9:43 pm)
Since society is built around a morning oriented schedule it stands to reason that late sleepers feel left behind during the day. Overall, early risers are happier. Scientists are not sure if the feelings of happiness are the result of rest, exposure to light or the body’s bio-chemical response to sleep. By age 60, most people are morning types, the researchers found. Only about 7 percent of young adults are morning larks, but as the population ages, this switches — in the older years only about 7 percent of the population are still night owls. “We found that older adults reported greater positive emotion than younger adults, and older adults were more likely to be morning-type people than younger adults,” Biss said. “The ‘morningness’ was associated with greater happiness emotions in both age groups.”
Couples Who Share A Bed Are Healthier Posted by Staff (06/06/2012 @ 7:12 pm)
Getting cuddly can be good for your health. Even when you consider tossing and turning, snoring and blanket hogs, the benefits of nighttime snuggling outweigh the annoyances. While the science is in the early stages, one hypothesis suggests that by promoting feelings of safety and security, shared sleep in healthy relationships may lower levels of cortisol, a stress hormone. Sharing a bed may also reduce cytokines, involved in inflammation, and boost oxytocin, the so-called love hormone that is known to ease anxiety and is produced in the same part of the brain responsible for the sleep-wake cycle. So even though sharing a bed may make people move more, “the psychological benefits we get having closeness at night trump the objective costs of sleeping with a partner,” Dr. Troxel says.
Catch Your ZZZZ’s To Fight Off Fat Genes Posted by Staff (05/01/2012 @ 8:43 pm)
Getting a good night’s sleep may be more than just refreshing. Obesity genes that respond to lifestyle stimuli when you are fatigued get turned off when you get adequate sleep. Being well rested helps your efforts to make healthy choices have a real impact on your weight. “The less you sleep, the more important genetic factors are to how much you weigh,” says lead author Nathaniel F. Watson, M.D., co-director of the University of Washington Medicine Sleep Center, in Seattle. “The longer you sleep, the greater the influence of environmental factors like meal composition and timing.” Previous research has found that too little sleep is associated with a higher BMI, but many of those studies haven’t been able to entirely rule out the possibility that genes, or complicating factors such as sleep disorders, are partly responsible for the link.
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