Perfect Health - The best health gifts may be hard to wrap
We go through
this every year.
It’s as reliable as the reindeer, as consistent as the
candy canes. It is as much a part of the Christmas season as the lights and
songs and decorations.
It is the annual quest for the
perfect health gift.
It is roughly analogous to the annual quest for the perfect toy
gift, or the perfect jewelry gift or the perfect gadget gift.
But there’s
something about the perfect
perfect health gift that sets it apart from other presents,
from even the most beautiful of baubles, or the hottest technology
tools.
It matters.
In addition to any other virtues of fun or
excitement it may have, a health gift is important. It’s got gravitas, because
quite simply, no matter our age or other interests, there’s little more valuable
than our health and wellness.
So every year I field questions about
products or books or programs that someone might want to give a loved one.
Naturally, what’s best depends on the recipient. People really want to hit the
mark with this present, and the more the recipient seems to “need” a little
health help, the more the giver tends to fret over getting it right.
And
very often, there have been some misses already, the year’s supply of
yucky-tasting meal replacement powder, the uncomfortable exer-cycle that wound
up as an awkward clothing rack.
When you consider that health gifts
really ought to be as individually tailored as our health needs and health care,
you can see that getting the right one may actually require the recipient’s
participation in selection.
That said, there are three general things I
find people need when they’re trying to lose weight and get healthy. In fact,
they’re almost universally worthy, and could be offered to almost anyone on your
health gift list. But how you package them may take some thought and
creativity.
Perfect Health Gift #1: GUIDANCE—People today often expect too much
of themselves—and others—in terms of understanding what it is they actually need
to do to get healthy, particularly when overweight or obesity is at
issue.
We have access to information like never before, yet two thirds of
Americans are still overweight; diabetes is on the rise; the average American is
too sedentary, eats too much processed sugar and not enough
potassium.
Information is great. But while factoids about the “average
American” can help us see the problem, they may not help us identify our own
best solutions. Most people need help using the information, sorting out what
applies to them and how.
We need guidance as individuals, for our own
bodies, not for some composite average.
People who are seriously
overweight truly need medical attention, because untreated, the complications of
obesity lead to life-threatening health problems.
But almost anyone who
is chronically overweight could use some professional guidance, whether it’s
from a doctor, nutritionist, therapist or personal
trainer.
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Related Links:
Obesity: How Fat Is Too Fat?
Dietary Advice: Trans What? Trans Fat?
Healthy Diet Advice: Overdoing Dietary Sugar is No Sweet Deal for Your Body
Calorie Savings: Modern labor-savers mean calories saved, too
Glycemic Index: Good carb, bad carb
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