I lost a bunch of weight and very carefully watch the scales every day to make sure I don't get carried away again, sometimes having to eat very lightly for a few days when it creeps up.
Did wonders for my blood sugar, cholesterol, and liver. Unfortunately it means I'm just a touch hungry most days.
Also moderate exercise, a bit of aerobic exercise most days, but not too much. Park far away to make myself walk more in daily activity.
Drink too much, work too much, eat a diet consisting mostly of cheese and carbs. Stay in half-decent shape by putting in 14-hour days at a physical job.
I eat relatively healthy, and I stretch well more-or-less every day, but to be honest that's about it.
I would like to smoke less and drink less - they aren't issues in that sense, I'm just getting older and it's obviously getting worse for and harder on my body. I also need to get back to the gym or something, it's been years 😅 it's just hard to find time with kids and a demanding job, and I haven't prioritized it.
Anyone looking to take their health more seriously should just pick a habit or two from this list and see the difference it makes to realize that they really should have just hunkered down, got disciplined and do the rest of these habits routinely.
The difference is pretty incredible and I wish I had done these things sooner but I had so much mistrust in the health space that I never looked into it to find people providing valuable efforts.
I recently started a new job which I think is going to destroy my health. Standing on concrete all day, ugh.
So to counter the incoming joint pain, I'm doing lots of stretches and yoga. Bringing lunch from home is also helping the diet, that should hopefully pay off.
Ironically, I took this job because I thought it would be better for my mental health. Less stress, gets me out of my basement (I was working from home), and it's much more physically active.
But gosh, my bones hurt. I might have to leave this job too for my health. Maybe the lesson here is that working for the man is bad for your health
That's been my experience too, our society is built around slowly killing us, in fact the united states was the only developed country recently to actually experience a drop in healthy life expectancy
Used to be a competitive body builder, that's not healthy let me tell you. Now I lift weights for the physical and mental health and don't trash my body. About 5 hours a week in the weights room, and a 30 min walk every day keeping my heart rate around 120bpm, eat pretty decently.
Try not to stress to much over most things, do stuff I enjoy, and always learning something new.
I take my prescriptions, get my vaccines, wear a mask while in stores and at work, and try to get a good nights sleep.
I'm trying to eat healthier than I have been. Cutting out junk food helps with the cost of this.
I'm doing a combination of lifting weights and bodyweight moves. Going for high rep range for the metabolic overload. This gets the heart pumpin. My metabolism is still revved up from my workout that ended an hour ago.
I'm finding The Bioneer on Youtube to be a great source of information on this.