Monday, May 21, 2012

How to Live to be 100~ Readers Digest Version

How to Live to be 100

This checklist isn't just a prescription for living long; it's your ticket to living well.
Sure, your genes have something to do with your life span, but the doctors we spoke to agreed that you can make a big dent in your risk of chronic disease by doing 12 simple things. What's more, the following checklist isn't just a prescription for living long; it's your ticket to living well.

1. Stop Smoking

 Four years after doing so, your chance of having a heart attack falls to that of someone who has never smoked. After ten years, your lung cancer risk drops to nearly that of a nonsmoker.

2. Exercise Daily

Thirty minutes of activity is all that's necessary. Three ten-minute walks will do it.

3. Every Day...

Eat five servings of produce.

4. Get Screened

No need to go test-crazy; just get the health screenings recommended for your stage of life. Check with your doctor to make sure you're up-to-date.

5. Get Plenty of Sleep

For most adults, that means seven to eight hours every night. If you have a tough time turning off the light, remember that sleep deprivation raises the risk of heart disease, cancer, and more.

6. Ask your doctor about low-dose aspirin.

Heart attack, stroke, even cancer — a single 81 mg tablet per day may fight them all. (Aspirin comes with risks, though, so don't start on your own.)

7. Know Your Blood Pressure

It's not called the silent killer just to give your life a little more drama. Keep yours under 120/80.

8. Stay Connected

Loneliness is another form of stress. Friends, family, and furry pets supply vitamin F.

9. Cut Back on Saturated Fat

It's the raw material your body uses for producing LDL, bad cholesterol.

10. Get Help for Depression

It doesn't just feel bad; it does bad things to your body. In fact, when tacked onto diabetes and heart disease, it increases risk of early death by as much as 30 percent.

11. Manage Stress

The doctors we surveyed say that living with uncontrolled stress is more destructive to your health than being 30 pounds overweight.

12. Have a higher purpose.

As one physician advised, "Strive to achieve something bigger than yourself." By giving back, you give to yourself.

~from Health...The Reader's Digest Version (Reader's Digest Association Books)