chiropractic health center

6 Tips to Help you Achieve your 2021 Health Goals

Goals are essential in forming new healthy habits, and without them, it can be challenging to achieve optimal wellness. Knowing what you want to achieve is the first step to making a clear path to your goal. Whether it’s improving gut function, boosting your immune system, losing weight, or attaining optimal health you can achieve your goals with some planning.
In this post, I’ll cover six tips to help you achieve your health goals.
Now let’s drill down on how you can achieve your 2021 health

1. Set Attainable Goals

Whether it’s for weight loss, brainpower, changing your eating habits, physical activity, or overall wellness, don’t expect to climb a mountain when you haven’t gone for a jog in six months. Set goals for yourself that you can manage by breaking down a big goal into smaller ones.
Begin by defining exactly what you’d like to achieve, then divide that into achievable steps with short timeframes.  If you’re trying to lose weight, start by cutting out those afternoon sugary snacks. Then try replacing your morning coffee and toast with a protein smoothie. After you’ve reached your first goal, set another to help you make even more progress.

2. Don’t Worry About What Anyone Else is Doing

If you’re struggling with autoimmunity, or other chronic illness, you’ll have different needs than someone who doesn’t. Values and preferences also come into play here. Don’t do something you’ll hate even if it’s the latest trend! This isn’t about punishment or forcing yourself to improve. Taking a positive, caring approach to your health will help you.
For example, even if you don’t enjoy exercise, you can still incorporate healthy movement into your life. You can start with something that feels easy and enjoyable, such as a short walk, gardening, or stretching. If you suffer from fatigue or chronic pain due to autoimmunity or chronic illness, choose a gentle form of exercise. I’ve found yoga can be a great place to begin. You can build up gradually from there in accordance with your body’s abilities.

3. Record Your Goals and Document Your Progress

Putting your goals down on paper gives you a clear picture of what you want to accomplish.
Strategizing and asking questions will help motivate you to succeed. It can also make it 42%more likely that you’ll achieve your goals. Take notes on where you’ve failed before, and plan how to avoid the same results in the future. The notes create an accurate picture of what it will take for you to achieve your goals.
You’re more likely to stay motivated and achieve your goals when you document your accomplishments. Tracking really works. Even if it’s simply “Went for a 15-minute walk and really enjoyed it!” or “Made a delicious and healthy dinner the whole family enjoyed!”, write down your successes.
Activity tracking apps are associated with higher social support levels and self-efficacy scores, and they can be kind of fun if you’re a little competitive, like I am. There are a wide range of activity trackers available for iPhone and Android, and some can be downloaded for free.

4. Eat for Better Health

You aren’t what you eat but rather you’re what you digest and absorb. By increasing the amount of whole foods you eat, you can reduce inflammation in your body and optimize absorption pathways.
Healthy eating can give your body what it needs for all of its everyday processes and the proper fuel to help you achieve your goals.
Foods such as organic vegetables and fruits, grass-fed meats, wild-caught fish, and healthy fats are some of the best sources of nutrients you can provide your body.
Nutrient-dense foods also help with weight loss and weight maintenance because they are naturally full of fiber, vitamins, and minerals.

5. Relieve Your Stress

Stress isn’t just a feeling. It’s an actual release of hormones your body produces when it’s met with a challenge. Stress can lead to a weakened immune system when it becomes chronic and can affect you in myriad ways from raising your blood pressure to impacting your mental health. In fact, it’s one of the root causes of autoimmunity.
The stress you’re under can be emotional, mental, or physical. 
Stress can come from physical injury, sleep deprivation, exposure to toxins, leaky gut, or eating a diet full of inflammatory foods.

On the other hand, relieving constant stress can help you achieve health goals. When you practice stress relief you can avoid and prevent chronic stress-related conditions such as headaches, digestive issues, heart attacks, and fatigue — as well as a range of immune-related illnesses.
If you do have an autoimmune disease, then lowering stress is essential to reducing your symptoms.
You can also use natural methods to help resolve stress rather than turning to medications with negative and uncomfortable side-effects.
Adaptogenic herbs like ashwagandha can promote a more balanced physical and emotional stress response, and are easily integrated into supplement regimens with supplements such as Adrenal Support. Adrenal Support not only includes effective and well researched adaptogenic herbs, it also contains amino acids and vitamins crucial for those dealing with chronic stress.

6. Find a Support System

A sense of belonging has multiple strong effects on your emotions and mental function, including lower anxiety and greater perceived happiness. A lack of relationships and support systems is linked to lower general health and well-being. Maintaining relationships with people who understand, respect, and support your health goals makes all the difference.

“You get there by realizing you are already there.” –Eckhart Tolle

Less pain, more energy: everything about inflammation

As a chiropractor most of my patients consult for pain and aches in their bodies, and in most cases our lifestyle habits are number one cause of those issues.

If you could understand the basics and how important it is to reduce inflammation you could play a major role in your health and wellbeing.

Aches and pains that many of us experience on a daily basis are not the only sign of inflammation in your body, there are plenty more of us who just feel a little off, sluggish or tired.

Luckily, there are multiple ways to integrate anti-inflammatories into your life, from the mundane addition of spices to the space-age use of cryotherapy. And even by just understanding inflammation and anti-inflammatories, you can better target body feedback issues when they do arise.

WHAT CAUSES INFLAMMATION?

Typical inflammation is the body’s response to injury or an attack by germs. When your tissues are injured, the damaged cells release inflammatory mediators including histamine, bradykinin and prostaglandins. These chemicals do many jobs, including forcing the narrow blood vessels in the tissue to expand, allowing more blood to reach the area. They also isolate the area from other body tissues, so the problem stays localized. 

You’ve probably seen surface indications of inflammation as redness, swelling, pain and local heat, which are all ways for the body to get more nourishment and immune activity to the area that needs it. This acute inflammation is actually a good thing: it’s your body’s defense mechanisms at work. Even better, inflammatory mediators attract white blood cells called phagocytes that basically “eat” germs and dead or damaged cells. All this helps the body heal faster after trauma.

WHAT INFLAMMATION DOES TO YOUR BODY OVER TIME

However, chronic and persistent inflammation often damages the body, leading to many serious diseases or worsening the effects of existing chronic conditions including:

  • Alzheimer’s disease

  • rheumatoid arthritis

  • heart problems

  • cancers

  • psoriasis

  • fibromyalgia

  • diabetes

  • Crohn’s disease 

Continued and unnecessary inflammation can also increase pain levels in daily life. 

And, did you know that inflammation can make you age faster? In a 2015 study on aging, people with the lowest levels of inflammation had the best chance of staying mentally sharp while growing older.

WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT

Even if you don’t have one of these exact issues, chances are that reducing your body’s inflammation will make you feel better than you do now. Here’s how to do it.

  1. EAT RIGHT

Turns out there’s some truth to the idea “you are what you eat.” Food plays a major role in causing inflammation; luckily it can be just as effective as an anti-inflammatory. Use these guidelines to help you choose what you should consume regularly.

  • High-fiber foods: More fiber in your diet is likely to decrease inflammation, says the Arthritis Foundation. A 2009 review published in European Journal of Clinical Nutrition also showed that high-fiber diets combined with eating more healthy monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats also helped people lose weight.

  • Go fresh: Reach for more fruits and vegetables; the more colorful the better. Berries are packed with antioxidants, as are dark leafy greens. Peppers and tomatoes have also been shown to reduce inflammation, though as members of the nightshade family they can act as triggers for some people, explains Health. No matter if blueberries or beets, try to only buy and eat organic produce to avoid potentially harmful pesticides.

  • Add some spice: Ginger, turmeric, cayenne, cinnamon and cloves are all anti-inflammatory powerhouses. Same goes for onions and garlic. All of these are both delicious (for many) and will reduce inflammation.

You could sip some great turmeric latte or ginger lemon tea on a regular basis.

  • Omega-3s:  These fatty acids help reduce inflammation. You’ll find omega-3 fatty acids in fatty fish like salmon and sardines as well as leafy green vegetables, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, flax oil and ground flax seeds. If you eat fish, check the Monterey Bay Seafood Watch card to ensure you’re eating varieties that are sustainable and not high in toxins. Taking an omega-3 supplement, whether plant- or fish-derived, is another good way to ensure proper levels. Look for those that contain EPA and DHA if you go this route.

  • Water: That’s right, water is helpful for flushing out toxins and irritants that cause inflammation. Aim to drink half your body weight in ounces a day. So, if you weigh 160 pounds, you should drink 80 ounces, which is 10 cups (not 8!)  or nearly two and half liters. Drink your water 30 minutes before eating instead of with meals and you’re even likely to lose weight in the process.

  • Supplements: Whether omega-3s, concentrated green food, probiotics, or even a quality multivitamin, supplements help create the baseline for a body that’s low inflammation. Supplements can also help target inflammation triggers through concentrated doses of turmeric or other anti-inflammatory spices if you need an extra boost.

2. MOVE YOUR BODY AND CHILL IT OUT

Move: Regular exercise is an excellent way to prevent inflammation. If you sit most of the day, make sure to walk at least 30 minutes a day. Short, intense workouts a few times a week also help reduce and prevent inflammation over the long term. Just make sure to include recovery time for maximum benefit.

Cool off: Cryotherapy is another anti-inflammatory technique that’s gained popularity over the years. In fact, its effects “have long been recognized by sports therapists as a resource for post-workout muscle recovery and temporary pain relief,” explained Penelope Green in “The Big Chill” in Vogue(March 2015). 

How it works is fairly simple. When you enter a cryosauna, your blood vessels contract because of the extreme cold. Your blood rushes to your core, resulting in increased circulation, and triggering both natural anti-inflammatory response and release of endorphins. The principle is similar to an ice bath , but faster (you only stay in the chamber a few minutes) and, frankly, more pleasant. What about a deep in the Irish Sea or Atlantic Ocean ?

Stress management: Constant stress makes your body produce more cortisol, a hormone that can actually make inflammation worse. So if you reduce your stress, you’re likely to reduce your inflammation levels. More sleep, meditation, yoga, long walks, vacation, even breaks from technology/screens are all great ways to support your immune system.

3. SAY “NO” TO THESE FOODS

 There are plenty of triggers that cause inflammation; even though experts don’t always agree on the details, the general consensus is that more processed foods lead to health issues. Some specifics to target include:

  • Sugar: According to the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, processed sugars trigger the release of inflammatory messengers called cytokines. Cut out foods with added sugars like candy and soda, and look for hidden sugar traps that are making your levels spike, then crash.

  • Refined grains: We’re looking at you, white bread. Simple carbohydrates like white flour breaks down into sugar right in your mouth. Instead, reach for whole grains like brown rice, bulgur, or beans. Less-refined, less-processed foods with a low glycemic load will also help fight inflammation. And remember, reducing doesn’t mean never eating bread again. It just means being conscious of how much and when.

  • Salt: Too much salt causes the body to retain water and, you guessed it, increased inflammation.  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends limiting sodium intake to less than 2,300 mg a day. That’s roughly 1 teaspoon of salt. Processed and packaged foods and restaurants often have incredibly high sodium levels; eat fresh foods whenever possible.

    Pink himalyan salt is the best you can use for his nutritional properties.

  • Caffeine: Study results are mixed on coffee and inflammation, but caffeine can definitely be an inflammation trigger for some.

But as with anything related to health, it varies by the individual. So do what works the best for you and remember that it is all about balance.

Have a good week.