The human body is
remarkably resilient. Your body can withstand a great deal of abuse. It bounces
back to fight off many infections, repair strains and sprains, and heal broken
bones.
Your body manages it all, keeping you healthy and on track. And then one day it doesn't. What goes wrong?
Your body manages it all, keeping you healthy and on track. And then one day it doesn't. What goes wrong?
Chiropractic and a Healthy Lifestyle
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A person's lifestyle
is a critical factor in one's overall health and well-being. Increasingly,
lifestyle is being recognized as a chief factor in the development of
diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, and cancer.
A balanced diet and
regular, vigorous exercise are cornerstones of a healthy lifestyle.
Chiropractic care is an additional important component. Regular chiropractic
care optimizes your body's functioning. Your nervous system works at peak
efficiency. You're better able to make good use of the food you're eating and
the exercises you're doing.
In order to obtain
maximum benefit from your healthy lifestyles, it's necessary to have a
nervous system that is working properly. Chiropractic care helps make sure
your nervous system is doing what it's designed to do. The result is optimal
health and well-being.
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The human body is
remarkably resilient. Your body can withstand a great deal of abuse. It bounces
back to fight off many infections, repair strains and sprains, and heal broken
bones. You may drive hundreds of miles in a day, fly across multiple time
zones, and travel to other countries and other continents. Your body manages it
all, keeping you healthy and on track. And then one day it doesn't.
What goes wrong? You
might say, "Why did this [high blood pressure, diabetes, heart attack,
herniated spinal disc] happen to me? I eat right. I exercise. I get enough
sleep. Why me?"
The immediate response
would be "Really? Do you really?" Are you actually engaging in
healthy lifestyles that are right for you? Or are you "paying lip
service" to these behaviors, going through the motions and not paying
attention to what is really needed and necessary?
In the mid-1980s the
author of a best-selling book on running suddenly died of a heart attack after
a daily run. His death was national news and remains a cautionary tale of the
need for a well-rounded exercise program. Running every day does not provide
total fitness. Neither does lifting weights every day. Neither does daily yoga
nor daily Pilates classes. Healthful exercise programs encompass a range of
activities. Total health requires total fitness.1
Healthy eating calls for
the same balanced approach. Too much of anything will usually lead to problems
down the road. Excess carbohydrates cause problems with serum glucose and
exhaust supplies of insulin, ultimately resulting in diabetes and
overweight/obesity. Excess meat or excess dairy will likely result in high
blood cholesterol levels, possibly leading to arteriosclerosis, high blood
pressure, heart attack and stroke.
In addition to 30
minutes per day of vigorous exercise (which can be satisfied, in part, by 30
minutes of daily walking), the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
recommends five daily servings of fresh fruit and vegetables.2,3 It
is remarkable how few people actually do these things. The result is that the
prevalence of overweight/obesity, diabetes, and high blood pressure continue to
rise.
It's best not to have to
play catch-up. The day of reckoning may never arrive if we begin, right here
and right now, to take consistent, daily, healthy actions on our own behalf.
1Andersen LL, et al:
Effectiveness of small daily amounts of progressive resistance training for
frequent neck/shoulder pain: Randomised controlled trial.Paini 2010 December 20
[Epub ahead of print]
2Scarborough P, et al:
Modelling the impact of a healthy diet on cardiovascular disease and cancer
mortality. J Epidemiol Community Health 2010 December 15 [Epub ahead of print]
3Toledo E, et al:
Hypothesis-oriented food patterns and incidence of hypertension: 6-year
follow-up of the SUN prospective cohort. Public Health Nutr 13(3):338-349, 2010
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