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September 2, 2016

10 Tips on How to be Healthier at 60 than you are Right Now.

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Well folks, it happens to the best of us…

Hard to believe, but I turned 60 on August 24, and I must say, it is a little hard to relate to that number. I am sure many of us are feeling younger and healthier as we age, and the image of being old at 60 just doesn’t compute anymore.

I also realize that many have been struggling with their health along the way, and so since it is my birthday, I want to share some of my favorite personal health strategies that I feel have made me healthy, kept me healthy and promise to keep me healthy as I enter the second half of my life.

While I am incredibly grateful to feel so healthy at 60, I wouldn’t say I have the strongest genetics for health. For example, I was diagnosed with high blood pressure at age 27, and this summer, my two-week average blood pressure was 104/60, which I am so thrilled about—all on no medications of course. I battled heartburn in college, and after doing many overly aggressive cleanses in my early 20s, I screwed up my digestion. Today, I am so happy to report that I have never digested better. I started getting prostate-related lower-back pain in my early 30s, and today, both my low back and prostate are better than ever—and as you will read below, my blood sugar has been a challenge.

It is my hope that some of my favorite health strategies may help you, as they have helped me ward off my weak links. All of this so we can all be healthier at 60!

Before I begin, I feel the most important tip I can share is to be happy, find the joy in everyday life, and play regularly. Don’t stress over money—I am sure everyone reading this will die with some leftover money in the bank.

And most importantly, remember that no one can take away your happiness—we manage to do that all by ourselves.

1. Don’t Sweep Stuff Under the Rug

Fortunately, I found my passion in the field of health and have been able to defuse my genetic weak links or predispositions, described above, before they fully expressed themselves. So don’t sweep stuff under the rug. If you have a minor concern, address it as early as possible in the most natural way possible. With over 700 free self-help articles and videos up on my website, hopefully you can find some natural solutions early in the game. I feel so blessed to be able to apply this healthcare wisdom today in my own life—years before such strategies find their way into your MD’s office, if ever.

2. Keep Moving

Humans do not have the genetics to be sedentary, so exercise and yoga are major tenants in my daily life. There have been some interesting articles suggesting that it is more dangerous to exercise intensely when you are young and only moderately as an adult, compared to enjoying moderate exercise throughout your entire life. If you build big muscles in your 20s, as I did as a triathlete, ski racer and college tennis player, and then stop exercising as intensely, it becomes more difficult for the body to pump blood into and waste out of those big dense muscles as you age.

So now, I exercise every day. This includes 10 minutes on an elliptical machine and 10 minutes on the treadmill, followed by weight training and stretching. I incorporate my 12-minute Workout for the cardio portions of my workout, and do family yoga three times a week. Two of my daughters are yoga teachers, so we have family yoga nights after work.

We also live on four acres in rural Boulder County, and I am the groundskeeper, along with any one of our six kids who I catch being bored. I actually believe tinkering, weeding, trimming and gardening in the yard is my healthiest activity of the day, because it more closely matches our genetics for movement and health.

3. Eating Less

There is good science that suggests that the average American eats more than they need, and that overeating is linked to weight gain, obesity and a whole host of chronic and degenerative health concerns. (1) I believe the biggest side effect (or side benefit) of me rebooting my digestion over the years with the Colorado Cleanse and herbal support has been that I simply do not need as much food as I once did. While I always say start with three meals a day with no snacks, over time I found that I really only needed two meals a day. So currently, I start my day with a cup of herbal tea with a teaspoon of coconut oil for breakfast. Then, I will have my largest meal in the afternoon between 12 and 2, depending on the day, followed by a light supper as early in the day as possible.

In a perfect world, I would rather eat a breakfast and a lunch and skip dinner, but with a big family and young kids still in the house, we feel that a sit-down dinner with the whole family is important. I think the family bonding time over dinner far outweighs the benefits of a no-supper lifestyle. That said, if I want to shed a few pounds, I just start skipping supper for a week or so. You can learn more on my weight balancing plan in my free Ayurvedic Weight Balancing eBook.

4. Eating Clean

We have all grown up in a world where avoiding processed foods has been next to impossible. Today, we have healthier options and way more science and logic that makes eating clean very doable. Jack LaLanne used to say, “If it has a wrapper, don’t eat it.” To be precise, when looking at a label, if it has any oils that have been cooked or baked, ingredients that seem foreign to you or added sugar, consider it a processed food. For example, if you choose to eat bread, the ingredients should look something like: wheat, salt, water, starter. Read much more on this in my new book, Eat Wheat. Regarding oils, cooking with repeatedly heated vegetable oils has been linked to blood pressure, cholesterol and circulation health concerns. (2)

5. Eating Seasonally

When you begin to understand how our digestion works, much of its success depends on the microbial “changing of the guard.” In other words, the microbes in the soil dramatically shift with each season, and the foods we eat in-season deliver those seasonal microbes into our digestive tract, where they offer critical health benefits for that season. (3) This makes eating organic foods very important, as the lion’s share of microbes on conventional foods has been killed off by pesticides.

I make a concerted effort to eat more berries and greens in the spring, more fruits and veggies in the summer, and more dense foods like beets, sweet potatoes, nuts, seeds and animal proteins in the winter. I like the advice of the centenarian culture, who eat only 10 percent of their diet as meat and naturally eat more fat and protein in the winter.

In addition to my book, The 3-Season Diet, I publish a free monthly seasonal eating guide to make it easier for us to eat more seasonal foods throughout the entire year.

6. Managing Sugar

I have always had a sweet tooth and it is still hard for me to completely avoid sugar. So to help my pesky sweet tooth, I take my own blood sugar almost every morning to help keep me on track. If I eat poorly, my blood sugar tends to creep up, and if I follow the no added sugar rule and eat light and less starch at night, my blood sugar does really well. It is my own little bio-feedback device. By keeping an eye on my blood sugar, I stay motivated to eat well, avoid sugar and to not snack.

7. Making Rest a Priority

It is very easy for me to get a second wind around 10 p.m. and dig into my computer about some health topic, and then before I know it, it is after midnight. One of the things that I can say I am happy about being 60, is that it really does come with a little wisdom. Now, I make a point of getting to bed before 10 p.m. and getting up as close to or before the sunrise as possible. Getting 7 to 8 hours of sleep is a scientific requirement, but when you get the sleep is just as important. Going to bed late and sleeping in can disturb your circadian clocks and, over time, cause weight gain, less physical activity and other health concerns. (4)

8. Family Time

While having six children wasn’t actually planned by my wife and I, it has been far and away the biggest blessing in our lives. With two still in college and the last of the bunch now 13 and 16, I think there is a psychological imprint within me that says something like, “You can’t get old, your job as a father is still far from done.” With a big family, the choice of either family or career was never difficult. My wife and I were outnumbered 3 to 1, and being there as a hands-on dad with my 24/7 wife was a no-brainer. Being all together or even partly together as a family, or plucking one out of the mix for one-on-one outings are still my very favorite things to do.

9. Pulling Back the Bow

If you have read any of my books, articles or videos, you may have noticed an underlying theme that weaves them all together. Using the archery analogy, when you pull back the bow, the arrow must be held perfectly still. Any slight movement of the arrow creates a massive change in the direction the arrow flies.

In the same way, the human mind evolved over millions of years entrained with the stillness and silence of nature. Functioning from that stillness with the bow pulled all the way back was the norm. Today, we are pushing into new evolutionary terrain without that deep connection to nature and that silence. We work longer, stress out more, and accomplish way more in a day than our ancestors did. To mitigate the stress of our new higher capacity, re-training the brain to be still is a critical requirement for health and longevity today. I truly believe that meditation has trained my mind to be able to handle stress more or less like water off a duck’s back. I regularly find time to meditate, take a hike in the forest, or just find peace during a busy day. The goal of meditation is to take that calm with you into a busy and hectic day.

I have written many articles on meditation, and have even written a meditation course called the Transformational Awareness Technique (TAT). Check it out and learn the first two meditations for free.

10. All My Ayurvedic Stuff 

I might be a little over the top in this category, because I do take many Ayurvedic herbs each day. These days, I focus mostly on supporting the health of my intestinal skin and the function of my lymphatic system. Before this regime, I spent years focusing on my upper digestion, stomach, liver and gallbladder—and these regimes change seasonally. So, here is what I currently take:

Note: The herbs I take are the whole organic plant, leaf or root, dried and ground and capsules made of vegetable fiber. They are not extracts or concentrates, they are all whole foods that have been traditionally eaten for thousands of years as foods. I know that my diet is not diverse enough to get all the diverse microbes that we require for optimal health, so I supplement with the most natural, microbial-rich, diverse foods sources I know of—100 percent organic, raw, whole herbs that are targeted to my weak links or for seasonal microbial support.

My Current Plan

>> Amalaki – To support the health of the intestinal skin: One capsule twice a day after food.

>> Brahmi Brain – To support brain health, brain lymphatic drainage and intestinal skin: One capsule twice a day after food.

>> Neem – An herbal probiotic that knocks out bad microbes, supports beneficial microbes and healthy intestinal skin: One capsule twice after food.

>> Turmeric Plus – To support liver, brain and intestinal health: One capsule twice after food.

>> Manjistha – To support the lymphatic system and provide antioxidants: One capsule twice after food.

>> Lymph Cleanse – A tincture to scrub the intestinal lymph: 30 drops a day.

>> Mega Omega Fish Oils – To support the health of the brain, intestinal skin and heart: Three per day with food.

>> Liquid Sun Vitamin D3 – I truly believe that getting my vitamin D3 levels above 50 ng/mL gave a big boost to regulating my blood pressure. I also remember my joints feeling 10 years younger when I first boosted my vitamin D3 levels. For most folks, 5000 IU a day in the winter and 2-3000 IU a day in the summer is needed. Regular testing is key to ensure correct dosing.

>> Elim I – To tone and lubricate the gut with soluble fibers from slippery elm and licorice along with triphala to tone the large intestine: Two capsules in the evening.

>> Bacopa – Has constituents that have been shown to increase brain-derived neurotrophic factors levels in the blood (5), alongside with turmeric and the ashwagandha (6, 7) which do the same. This means they support the body’s natural process of building new brain cells, and support mental clarity and brain health: One capsule in the morning.

Note: This regime will change in the fall, and again in the spring.

Finally, I am a big believer in daily nasya (nasal inhalation of herbalized oils), abhyanga (oil massage with herbalized oils), oil pulling (swishing the mouth with herbalized oils in the morning) and ear oiling (dripping herbalized oil in the ears and then giving yourself an ear massage).

I know this sounds crazy, but I do all these in the shower and it just adds a couple of minutes to my day.

For more on my “Healthier at 60” tips, please watch my 20 minute mini-seminar (above) on my favorite longevity strategies.

 

 

References:

1. EMBO Rep. 2012 Sep; 13(9): 785–790. Published online 2012 Aug 17. doi: 10.1038/embor.2012.115. PMCID: PMC3432807. Science and Society

2.Vascul Pharmacol. 2014 Apr;61(1):1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.vph.2014.02.004. Epub 2014 Mar 12.

3.Soil Biol Biochem. 2013 May; 60: 95–104. doi: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2013.01.025. PMCID: PMC3618437.

4. Sleep. 2011 Oct 1; 34(10): 1299–1307. Published online 2011 Oct 1. doi: 10.5665/SLEEP.1266. PMCID: PMC3174832

5. Psychiatry Investig. 2014 Jul; 11(3): 297–306. Published online 2014 Jul 21. doi: 10.4306/pi.2014.11.3.297. PMCID: PMC4124189

6. PLoS One. 2011; 6(11): e27265. Published online 2011 Nov 11. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0027265. PMCID: PMC3214041

7. Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2014 Feb;39(2):211-8. doi: 10.1139/apnm-2013-0133. Epub 2013 Aug 23.

~

Author: Dr. John Douillard 

Images: Author’s Own

Editor: Emily Bartran

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