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3 Health Things A Lot Of People Are Getting Wrong (Don’t Make These Mistakes)
Plus: top 5 foods to eat for better sleep tonight (& 5 to avoid)
Good afternoon 👋
Problem, or opportunity? Try reframing “I have to…” into “I get to…”, for more energy to Do The Thing(s)™
In today’s email we cover 3 ways people are unintentionally taking health risks at present, foods to eat for better sleep (and foods to avoid before bed), and Dr. Ellen Langer’s “Counterclockwise”.
We know that 10almonds readers love getting the maximum out of life, and today’s sponsor Rain Games is offering an exciting (free) opportunity to enter an online learning competition, with expert training to help you launch (or scale) a profitable business, and a $75,000 start-up fund up for grabs. Check it out; registrations closes soon!
Today’s Main Feature
3 Health Things A Lot Of People Are Getting Wrong (Don’t Make These Mistakes)We look at illegal diabetes drugs and more: |
Recommended Reading
What Is Reformer Pilates?And is it worth the cost? |
12 Foods That Fight Depression & AnxietyAre you incorporating these into your diet? |
Watch and Learn
Top 5 Foods Seniors Should Eat To Sleep Better Tonight (And 5 To Avoid)
Dr. Michael Breus, a sleep specialist, advises:
Prefer text? The above video will take you to a 10almonds page with a text-overview, as well as the video!
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Final Call For (Free!) Registration (Don’t Miss Out!)
A couple of days ago we mentioned this great (free) opportunity to learn new skills and, incidentally, compete with other business-minded women for a $75,000 business start-up fund.
As a refresher, it’s called the Rain Games, and it has a lot more prizes along the way, not just the $75k grand prize! You can see what those other prizes are, here.
Best of all, you can do it from the comfort of your own home, as this one’s an online event!
You can learn more about how it works, here.
It starts on Monday the 24th, so registration closes soon; don’t miss your chance:
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This Or That?
Vote on Which is Healthier
Yesterday we asked you to choose between bananas and grapes—we picked the bananas (click here to read about why), as did 62% of you!
Now for today’s choice:
Click on whichever you think is better for you!
Bonus (Sponsored) Recommendation
PS: our sponsor has given a clue to the first part of the competition, saying “Hint, hint… The early bird gets the worm, so the faster you register, the greater your chances of winning! 😉“
One-Minute Book Review
Counterclockwise: A Proven Way to Think Yourself Younger and Healthier – by Dr. Ellen Langer
We’ve written previously about Dr. Langer’s famous “Counterclockwise” study that saw reversals in biological markers of aging after a one-week intervention that consisted only of a (albeit rather intensive) mental reframe with regard to their age.
This book, as you might expect from the title, refers to that experiment a lot—but it doesn’t stop there. While the Counterclockwise experiment remains Dr. Langer’s most well-known, it’s not her most recent, and she draws from a wealth of research (her own and that of her colleagues in the field) to show the extent and limit of psychosomatic effect on aging.
Note:
psychosomatic effect does not mean: “imagining it”
psychosomatic effect means: “your brain regulates almost everything else in your body, directly or indirectly, including your autonomic functions, which includes immune function, tissue replacement, and more”
And as for when it comes to aging? Aging, like cancer, is in large part a problem of immune dysfunction; in both cases cells (be they senescent or cancerous, respectively) are not being killed when they are supposed to be, and in both cases, better instructions will improve the matter.
Many larger-scale markers of aging, such as mobility, are a case of the body only being able to do what the tissues allow, and the tissues are being constantly rebuilt (for better or for worse) according to autonomically-implemented specifications, and cells’ ability to carry out those orders.
Beyond the cellular physiology, this book discusses (a lot) the brain-down mechanisms by which the most powerful organ in our body can tell the rest of the body how old to be.
Dr. Langer also discusses the matter of “priming”, that is to say, how external factors prime us to believe certain things about our age and, with it, our health. These things can include popular media, conversations with friends and family, and healthcare providers’ framing of certain issues.
For example, a person just under a certain age and a person just over a certain age could both go to the doctor with the same complaint—a pain in a certain joint, let’s say. The doctor may refer the slightly younger patient for an x-ray because “let’s see what’s going on here”, and prescribe the slightly older patient some painkillers because “this is perfectly normal at your age”. One resultant problem is obvious: a difference in the standard of care. But the other resultant problem is less obvious: the older patient has now been primed to believe, by a confident authority figure, “it is natural for my body to be in a state of decline now, and this is what to expect”.
Thus, Dr. Langer prescribes mindfulness, not in the mindfulness meditation sense (though sure, do that too), but rather in the sense of consciously interacting with the world and making our own decisions about our own health and, yes, our own age. Because after all, our body neither knows nor cares how many times it has flown around the sun, and merely responds to physiological stimuli—including those we can influence with psychological reframing.
The book is not, per se, a “how-to” guide, rather it is an explanatory treatise, but it contains more than enough information to put it into practice, and indeed, she does also provide some exercises to do along the way.
The style is… Vivacious, without being especially upbeat. Dr. Langer is enthused about her work, yes, but she’s also angry at how many people are having their health sabotaged on the daily, and calls for a more health-first approach (as opposed to illness-first).
Bottom line: this is the book on our brain’s power over aging, so if that topic interests you, this book absolutely belongs on your bookshelf. Well, in your hands, and then on the bookshelf, and then back in your hands from time to time.
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May today see you well-prepared for the coming weekend,
The 10almonds Team