How To Maintain Good Health

There are no guarantees, but here are some ideas for increasing your odds of having a long and healthy life.

1. Drink plenty of water.  
Much of our body and brain are made up of water. You need water to stay hydrated, to flush out toxins, to assimilate nutrients from food, and for your brain to function properly. Drinking plenty of water also keeps your skin from becoming dry and prematurely wrinkled from dehydration.




2. You need a little sunshine.
It is true that you can get too much sun but we need some sunshine. Ten to twenty minutes of daily early morning or late evening sun is beneficial.
Sunshine gives you vitamin D which you need so your bones can absorb calcium. Without enough vitamin D our bones can become brittle and break. It is unnatural to spend all of our time indoors. We need fresh air and a little sunshine to maintain excellent health.

3. Exercise is important.
Our bodies need movement and physical activity. Proper exercise slows down our physical deterioration.
We need three types of exercise: Flexibility, aerobic, and strength training.

4. Eat well.
Fresh fruits and vegetables are among the most important foods you can eat. The greater the variety of colors, the better because they contain different types of antioxidants. Antioxidants strengthen your immune system and slow the aging process. Fresh produce is best, frozen is second best, and the least nutritious are canned fruits and vegetables.

5. Go for plenty of Walks.
A lot of people will say walk for 30 minute per day, I disagree. Walking should not just be for losing weight, it should also be for your own peace of mind. Walking is a non strenuous exercise that improves your heartrate, your respiration, and your mood. Enjoy the walk and take it slowly and you will want to take many more walks.

6. Isometrics.
You do not need to go to the gym to get a workout. Sitting there at your desk you could be doing Bicep Curls right now. Instead of using a weight, simply make a fist and tighten up the bicep. Now, as you bring your fist up to your shoulder, make it as hard as you can on yourself. Literally use your own strength to fight the movement. This will enhance tone, strength, and never risk a muscle. You can do this with any exercise, including something as simple as washing the car.
The two most common diets around are the Low Fat diet and the Low Carb diet. These plans have been popular for many years because of the initial weight loss, but people have trouble keeping the weight off later on. Lets look at them for a moment
Low Carb Diets tend to be impossibly strict. Not only can you not eat Carbs, you can barely eat at all. After a few weeks of following this plan you will notice that you have lost weight though, and this will make you think the plan is working. You will also notice that you feel much more tired, have less energy, and that you have stopped being as active. Low Carb Diets deplete your glycogen (energy reserves) in your kidney and muscles and are generally unhealthy. Yes, you lose weight, but only because you are slowly dehydrating yourself.
Low Fat Diets tend to eliminate some of the truly best tasting food. As well, without fat interrupting the flow of carbohydrates going into your system we tend to feel extreme highs and lows. If you have ever had a sugar high, you will know what this feels like. The crash at the end is the worst part. You will find yourself much more irritable and erratic.

How to maintain optimum health and prevent disease

The powerful effects of food on your body

Many of us are simply unaware of the role of food and its direct effect on our physical, mental and emotional wellbeing; or for that matter, the best way to maintain an optimum level of health and prevent disease. What we eat, assimilate and absorb affects how we feel, think, perceive and respond to the world around us.
Eating improper food can cause depression, anger, fear, instability, anxiety and other forms of physical and mental dysfunction. Also, someone who is deficient in nutrients may have a variety of other symptoms.
Today we seem to go through life feeling tired, needing a nap after we have eaten or feeling overweight and bloated; with intestinal gas, stomach upset or heartburn; with dull and slow thinking; feeling depressed or highly emotional — the list goes on.
However, if we look at what we are eating and drinking, in many ways, we are affected by what we eat.

The modern diet

Our eating habits have changed dramatically in modern times and although our society tends to be overfed it is undernourished. The foods we eat are far less nutritious than they appear due to intensive farming methods, pesticides, additives and preservatives.
When fruit is picked unripe they are incomplete in their normal nutritional value. Vegetables are lacking in minerals as much of the land today is over worked and the soil cannot replenish itself. Therefore, it is unlikely that the average person's diet provides sufficient amounts of the necessary nutrients.
Instead, we are consuming excessive amounts of harmful ingredients like food additives and refined sugars. Processed foods and chemical additives have upset our entire body chemistry resulting in food sensitivities. These chemicals trigger a cascade of allergic symptoms that can affect the respiratory system and the skin and can contribute to various conditions such as asthma, eczema and arthritis.
Sugar is implicated in many physical and emotional disorders, including:
  • Hyperactivity in children and adults.
  • Aggression and violence.
  • Inability to think clearly and concentrate.
  • Diabetes.
  • Heart disease.
Hyperactive children are especially sensitive to sugar and stimulants. Have you ever noticed your child's behaviour changing shortly after it consumed a soft drink?
Other refined foods can also trigger adverse affects, such as the following:
  • Acid-producing refined foods like white flour raise the acidity in the body which can have a significant effect on joints, tissues, muscles and organs.
  • High consumption of salt (sodium chloride) can result in weight gain as it causes the body to retain water.
  • Some fats are healthy, while others are not, such as saturated fats found in meat, whole-milk dairy products (cheese, margarine, milk, and eggs), and it is this type of fat that raises total blood cholesterol levels.
Food refers to anything that nourishes the body and keeps it healthy. The body uses food for energy, growth and for replacement of tissues. We are interested in food that nourishes and the preparation of food that allows it to remain in its highest state of efficiency; not altered into another state.
Most modern processed and cooked foods are nutritionally deficient. You can take food and prepare it in such a way that it ceases to be food. Although we could live on refined food to a certain point, our capability to fight viruses and infection would be compromised. Therefore we need to eat a balanced and nutritious diet of food that is properly prepared.

So what should we eat?

The rule is to choose foods that are as close to their natural state as possible, as they are most likely to provide the full range of nutrients that the body needs. Most of us assume that we are getting plenty of nutrients from the food we eat, but in reality, we may not be. There are more than 50 essential nutrients in food and no single food can supply all of these nutrients. This is why it is so important to eat a variety of foods.
Food is the fuel that makes us function, that gives us energy, builds the body and repairs it. When nourished properly, it has everything it needs to function properly, destroying invading agents and removing toxins. However, if it is denied of the most essential nutrients, it becomes weak and inefficient, leaving the body vulnerable to attack.
Nature has given us a wide variety of plant foods that are rich in nutritional content. Whole foods (unprocessed), rich in vitamins and minerals are the best choice. Eating these foods, given that they are organically grown, will feed and strengthen your body, allowing it to heal faster, prevent disease and weight 

The powerful effects of food on your body

The body undergoes a series of changes through a lifetime. Cells are replicated, tissues are reconstructed and body form develops. The cell regenerations are completely dependent on the food we feed these cells, whether they are toxins or nutrients. If these cells are nourished from toxic foods, toxic beverages or toxic drugs, the cells will weaken and will continue to degenerate. Cell regenerations are impossible unless detoxification measures are implemented.
What you eat and drink either nourishes these cells or contaminates them. Whether you eat organic fruits, vegetables, nuts, grains and seeds or whether it is refined ‘foodless foods’ and toxic sugar drinks.

Food and disease

Health and disease are directly linked to what we eat and as all disease originates at the cellular level, healthy cells create healthy tissues, healthy organs, healthy heart and healthy skin. Therefore, what is going to nourish those cells and how well they protect and heal themselves depends on the food we eat. No matter what you do, unless you properly nourish these cells, you cannot improve your health.
All this continuous repair work requires proper nutrition on a daily basis. We need a wide range of nutrients for the body to perform various functions and stay healthy as our bodies do not make them.
The nutrients include proteins, fat, carbohydrates, amino acid, vitamins and minerals; all are required for health and body maintenance. Eating a diet rich in nutrition will not only better protect you from illness, but will leave your entire body balanced and feeling great. To look and feel your best, you have to eat adequate amounts of the proper foods. Having a balanced diet is one of the most important factors in maintaining an healthy lifestyle and protects the body against health problems.
The idea that food can ameliorate, prevent or cure disease, slow the ageing process and alleviate suffering is not something new. Dr Linus Paulings, winner of two Nobel prizes, states that 'you can trace every sickness, every disease and every ailment to a mineral deficiency'.
Dr. Max Gerson, cancer researcher and one of the most eminent geniuses in medical history found that the underlying problems of all cancer patients are toxicity and deficiency. He began observing that cancer and other illnesses could be cured with nutrition in conjunction with systemic detoxification. Correcting underlying nutritional deficiencies can alleviate depression; reduce side effects of medication, prevent and cure disease.
The fastest way to restore health is to stop putting into the body the food that has caused the physical problem in the first place. When we supply the body with proper nutrients, it knows how to repair and rebuild itself. The body has the inherent ability to heal itself and ward off disease when nutrition is corrected.

The major benefits of good nutrients:

  • Increased energy.
  • Increased vitality.
  • A revitalised sex drive.
  • Clearer thinking.
  • You will sleep more deeply.
  • Feel rested when you get up.
  • Your cravings and your emotional moods will ease.
  • You will enjoy life and live longer!
There is much greater awareness today and we can help ourselves and our families reduce the risk of disease to maintain optimum health.
We can take greater control of our health through the food choices we make, knowing that some foods provide specific health benefits. Good food choices are important not only to our present health but to our health and wellbeing in later life.