Monday, January 31, 2011

Putting all the chances of great health on your side

I had two conversations this weekend in which living a healthy lifestyle were the topic. Both were similar in nature in that they dealt with extremely healthy people who got debilitating illnesses. The first conversation was with a man who stated that sometimes genetic predispositions just lead us to cancer, heart disease, or some other disease. His mantra appeared to be, "Well, no matter what you do, you're going to die anyway." We all know the truth in that statement but it's fatalistic and selfish. If we all had that attitude, we would all be living careless lives with little regard for health at all.
The second conversation hit closer to home. My teacher and guru, Dr. David Simon, diagnosed himself with brain cancer in the fall of 2010. Dr. Simon is a neurologist, an Ayurvedic doctor, and an enlightened being. He has dedicated his entire existence to helping others and assisting them in their own healing. He leads a very healthy life. If we were to look at the "why" of his diagnosis, it would leave us all puzzled and quite frankly, downright depressed. If this man who has done everything right got brain cancer, what are in the cards for us?
The truth is we don't know enough about the grander scheme of things to ever have that answer.
In my previous post, I revealed my struggle with cancer as a 28 year old woman. Before that point, I had lived a relatively healthy lifestyle but it was not stellar. I remember telling a vegan friend, "You know, if I ever get cancer, I will become vegan."
What I realized after my experience with cancer was that I got it all backwards.
We live a healthy lifestyle so we can handle disease when and if it occurs. By making our mind, body, soul and spirit at its optimal level we have the strength we need to deal with whatever comes our way.
While I hate to make analogies with national defense, can you imagine if a country with little resources created a policy where they did not spend any money on a defense system? Diplomats of neighboring countries would chastise that country for acting so irresponsibly. The reason being, if the country with no defense system was invaded, it would create a threat for the neighboring countries.
By acting irresponsibly with our own health, we create a threat to our family, loved ones, community, work colleagues, and subscribers to our health insurance. The ripple effect of not taking charge of our own health is endless. Yet, we have a tendency to look at our health as a private affair. We find ourselves saying, "It's my body, I'll do what I want with it." Unfortunately, unless you are a hermit living in a cave, we don't live in a vacuum. We are not only interconnected but interdependent on others to help us when we have ill health.
Living a healthy lifestyle takes consistency and time.
Consistency is important because our bodies are resiliant but most of us are not aware of when the seeds of illness are planted. Think of a really nice car, let's say a BMW. You have paid a lot of money for this nice car. You decide that this nice care was expensive and should work really well. After all, it's a well built vehicle. But the vehicle manual calls for an oil change every 5,000 miles. The first time you go to 10,000 miles, you get the oil changed and nothing happens. The next time you go to 25,000, get the oil changed and nothing happens. You think to yourself, "Wow, the manufacturer just wants me to spend the extra money but the car is fine." So the next time you go to 50,000 miles and the engine burns. Angry, you curse yourself for pushing your expensive car to the limit.
We tend to do the same thing with our bodies. We don't get enough rest, exercise in bursts or go on crash diets and then expect our bodies to perform optimally. Without consistency, our bodies will crash and burn.
Time is important because living a healthy lifestyle takes time in our day. Dedicating 30 minutes to walking, meditation or yoga is time consuming. But realize that doctors appointments, pharmacy lines, x-rays, lab tests, MRIs, emergency room visits also take a lot of time and resources.
For the next week work out this challenge:

"What can I do consistently and dedicate the time for my health and wellbeing?"

Some suggestions might be : learn to meditate, take a yoga class, walk for 20 minutes a day, keep a journal, cook one meal per day with 4 different fresh veggies

How are you going to incorporate a healthy lifestyle into your own life and start taking responsibility for your own health?

Wishing you peace, harmony, laughter and love,

Michelle

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