
Simple Changes, Big Rewards: A practical, easy guide for healthy, happy living
All of us probably know some areas where we could boost our health and happiness — perhaps by exercising more, eating healthier, learning stress management techniques, or nipping a bad habit in the bud — but making a change can be daunting. It doesn’t have to be, though. This report will show you how to incorporate simple changes into your life that can reap big rewards.
It covers seven different topics: exercising regularly, eating healthier, dieting effectively, reducing stress, nipping unhealthy habits in the bud, controlling spending, and embracing positive psychology. For each of these topics, we present six simple choices that can help you reach your goals. Some are easier, others harder —examples include packing a lunch, adding core exercises to your routine, or simplifying your days. You can choose whichever changes appeal the most to you. The report also includes tools to help you track your goals, keep you motivated, and sidestep pitfalls.
Prepared by the editors of Harvard Health Publications in consultation with Edward M. Phillips, M.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School, and Director and Founder, Institute of Lifestyle Medicine. 45 pages. (2010)
- Getting started
- Making lasting changes
- Sidestepping pitfalls
- Launch your first month of change
- Shaping your personal plan
- Picking your first goal
- Your month-by-month calendar
- Breaking it down
- What’s working: You go, girl (or boy)!
- Stick to exercise
- The goal for sticking to exercise
- Six choices for sticking to exercise
- Eat healthier
- The goal for eating healthier
- Six choices for eating healthier
- Diet more effectively
- The goal for dieting more effectively
- Six choices for dieting more effectively
- Ease stress
- The goal for easing stress
- Six choices for easing stress
- Control finances
- The goal for controlling finances
- Six choices for controlling finances
- Harness positive psychology
- The goal for harnessing positive psychology
- Six choices for harnessing positive psychology
- Nip an unhealthy habit in the bud
- The goal for nipping an unhealthy habit in the bud
- Six choices for nipping unhealthy habits in the bud
- Glossary
- Resources
- Organizations
- Books
- Related Special Health Reports
Dear Reader,
Change your life. Three simple words, no easy task. Yet a richer, healthier life is well within bounds. Small changes can add up to surprisingly big course corrections. But which changes should you make? And how can you stick with them?
As the director of the Institute of Lifestyle Medicine at Harvard Medical School, I know people can achieve remarkable changes in their lives one small step at a time. The day-to-day choices you make influence whether you maintain vitality as you age or develop life-shortening illnesses and disabling conditions like heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and stroke. You may understand exactly what you need to do to enjoy a healthier, happier life: carve out time to exercise, perhaps, or find a way to ratchet down stress. There’s just one hitch. You haven’t done it yet.
Often, the biggest hurdle is inertia. It’s true that it isn’t easy to change ingrained habits like driving to nearby locations instead of walking, let’s say, or reaching for a donut instead of an apple. However, gradually working toward change improves your odds of success. And once a new, healthy habit takes root, I guarantee it will be hard to break, too.
This Special Health Report highlights small changes you can make across seven spectra to enhance your health and life: stick to exercise, eat healthier, lose weight more effectively, ease stress, control finances, harness the power of positive psychology, and nip unhealthy habits in the bud. The actions you’ll undertake range from easy to challenging. If you’re starting from scratch, you’ll find an encouraging foothold. And if you’re already engaging in some healthy behaviors, I can help you up the ante to reap greater benefits.
Guided by this report, month by month you make choices that appeal to you. In every section, “The goal” sets a target. For example, a goal may describe current exercise guidelines, distill the tenets of healthy eating, or point out possibilities for happier living through positive psychology. “Six choices” explains changes that help you move toward the goal.
Ambitious attempts to improve often fail because people try to make too many changes at once or can’t implement the changes they’ve selected. Here, you set your priorities, choosing only the changes that appeal most to you. You can master just one change at a time before moving on to the next. Each month, you can select a different goal from the seven goals or decide to explore further changes within the goal you’ve been working on. The tools provided will help you break down worthwhile changes you want to make into small, manageable steps that set you up for success.
Sincerely,
Edward M. Phillips
Medical Editor
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