Blue Zones

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New Year Resolutions

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

January is the time of year when everybody’s thinking about food.  While some savor December’s holiday feasts, others lament their yuletide excess.  And for many, the New Year brings with it a steely resolve to “eat better”. 

It is thought that over 100 million Americans set New Year’s resolutions.  Sadly, most are abandoned by February, victims of weighty aspirations.  Too many resolutions focus on improbable dreams of “losing this” or “quitting that”, instead of smaller, easier-to-keep lifestyle changes that might actually survive Ground Hogs Day.

Recent research into longevity has uncovered simple things everyone can do to live longer, better:

  • Switch to 10” plates and skinny glasses
  • Put healthy options in plain view and hide the junk food…even in the refrigerator
  • Stop eating when you are 80% full
  • Avoid mindless munching by turning off the TV when eating
  • Take a short walk after dinner

These incremental changes are relatively painless and can have a profound effect on our wellbeing.  However, they won’t become habit overnight.  It actually takes five weeks of practice to make a new behavior a habit.  So resolve today to eat better in 2010.  Just make you’re still practicing until the next national food holiday…Super Bowl Sunday!

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Are You In the Zone?

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Travel far enough away from the influence of American fast food and you’ll find populations with an abundance of nonagenarians (i.e., 90-year olds).  Coincidence?  I think not.  Instead, I submit that these pockets of longevity, so-called Blue Zones (I guess because of the abundant grey hair), exist precisely because they avoid our dysfunctional approach to food and exercise. 

BZBlue Zones were identified by a team of researchers funded by National Geographic and AARP.  To date, five geographically disperse zones have been identified (with more expeditions planned).  The common building blocks for longevity include: having the right outlook, moving naturally, being part of a tribe and eating wisely.  If these seem obvious, it’s because they are.  And except for, “wear clean drawers in case you get hit by a bus”, it’s the same advice you likely heard from your mom.

More interesting is how the “Blue Zoners” are applying their learning closer to home.  They recently conducted a Vitality Project in Albert Lea, MN, where local residents were encouraged to make small, manageable changes to their lives…kids walked to school, people planted gardens, neighbors volunteered, side salads appeared on fast food menus.  The net result?  Increased longevity, reduced health care costs, increased productivity, and more bliss (although work continues on modeling the relationship between reduced happy meal consumption and bliss).

Obviously, we don’t need to relocate to be “in the zone”.  There are small changes we can make that will have a big impact on our quality of life…now and in the future.  It starts with being more deliberate about what we eat, how we move and with who we connect.  If the research is correct, the changes will help us live better, longer and we can look forward to the day when “zones” exist only where living a long, rich life is not the norm. 

You can get more information on living better, longer at www.bluezones.com.

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