Monday, December 18, 2017

How Much Should You Walk to Lose Weight?

When you want to lose weight, many diet programs and health experts recommend brisk walking as a calorie-burning cardio exercise. But what is the right amount of walking each day to help you achieve your weight loss goals? Learn how to make brisk walking a part of your healthy lifestyle to lose weight.

How Long to Walk Each Day for Weight Loss


Aim for a brisk walk of 30 to 90 minutes most days of the week for weight loss.

You can walk more on some days and less on others, but the total time for the week should be at least 150 minutes (2.5 hours).

While you can break up your walking time into periods of 10 minutes or longer, you get an added benefit of burning fat when you walk briskly for longer than 30 minutes at a time after warming up.

If you're new to walking, get started with shorter periods of walking and steadily build up your walking time. You might want to take longer walks every other day at first. The primary goal is to start and continue getting a little better each time.

Burning Calories and Fat

At a brisk walking pace, you would burn 100 to 300 calories in 30 minutes (depending on your weight) or 200 to 600 calories in an hour. By walking for 30 minutes or more at a time, some of those calories will be from stored fat.

During the first 30 minutes of exercise, your body is burning sugars stored as fuel.

These are used up after about 30 minutes. To keep going, your body releases fat from your fat cells and burns it for fuel. This stored fat is exactly what you want to lose, and it's a good reason to build up your walking endurance so you can walk for more than 30 minutes at a time.

Walk most days of the week for at least 30 minutes to burn an extra 1,000 to 3,000 calories in total and to improve your metabolism each day.

Weight Loss Walking Workout

  • A walking workout of 30 to 60 minutes at 50 to 70 percent of your maximum heart rate is recommended for walking for weight loss. Use the target heart rate chart to find the right heart rate, which varies by age.
  • Start with walking at an easy pace for five to 10 minutes.
  • Stop and do some stretches and flexibility exercises.
  • Walk at a brisk pace at your target heart rate for 30 to 60 minutes.
  • Cool down at a slower pace for five minutes.
  • Finish with some gentle stretches.
  • For longer walks, walk for 30 to 60 minutes at your target heart rate and slow a bit to complete 90 or 120 minutes at a comfortable pace.
  • Maximize your 30-minute walk with some simple tips, including posture, walking form, and using intervals to add intensity.


How Far Can You Walk in 30 Minutes?


If you walk at a brisk walking pace for 30 minutes, the distance you will cover would be:

  • 1.5 to two miles.
  • 2.5 to 3.3 kilometers
  • 3,000 to 4,500 pedometer steps.

What If You Can't Walk for 30 Minutes at a Time?


Life can be busy. If your schedule doesn't permit walking continuously for 30 minutes, break it up into walking two or three times a day for shorter periods of at least 10 minutes at a brisk pace.

Always warm up for five minutes at an easy pace no matter what duration you will be walking. You can use intervals, stairs, and brisk walking to get the most out of shorter walking workouts.

How Long Should You Walk Each Week?

  • For weight loss, it is recommended that you walk most days of the week. You should walk five days per week at a minimum. If you can walk every day, that is even better.
  • Try not to skip more than one day in a row. Consistency is good for burning calories and improving your metabolism, as well as for building new habits.
  • Your total time spent walking per week should be five to 10 hours.
  • On your non-walking days, try strength training exercises.
  • If you find yourself worn out, take a day off. But be sure to get back walking the following day.

Watching What You Eat Is Also Essential for Weight Loss

An extra candy bar or bag of potato chips each day will eliminate any weight loss you may hope for from exercise alone. To lose weight, you must eat fewer calories than you burn.

Most people cannot estimate their calorie intake accurately unless they keep a food diary (on paper or with an app) for a few days and do the totals. Weight loss success is due to eating fewer total calories than you burn off each day. Try these if you need help:

  • Weight Loss Calorie Goal: See what your daily calorie goal should be based on how active you are and when you want to reach your goal weight.
  • Fitness Trackers and Apps for Weight Loss: These pedometers and fitness trackers include apps to help you track how much you eat and balance that with your daily calorie goal.

The American Heart Association and CDC recommend at least 2.5 hours a week of moderately intense physical activity (such as brisk walking) to maintain weight and reduce health risks. For weight loss, more physical activity and reducing the calories you eat are necessary. Aim to eat 500 fewer calories per day to lose weight.

How to Keep Weight Off


Don't stop physical activity once you reach your goal weight. The CDC recommends that to maintain weight loss you should spend 60 to 90 minutes most days of week in moderate-intensity physical activity while not eating more calories than you expend all day.

One Final Word


You've taken the first step towards a healthy weight and an active lifestyle. It may sound a little daunting to think of how much physical activity is needed to burn calories. But it's also the amount recommended to reduce your health risks for diabetes, heart disease, and more.

Your weight loss journey can also bring you better health through an active lifestyle. You may also find that you prefer bicycling, or swimming, or playing a sport. It's good to mix it up. Get moving and keep moving for a healthier life at any weight.

Thanks for Reading.......

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Why We Gain Weight After 40 (and How to Stop It)

When you're young, you probably don't spend too much time thinking about preparing your body for the future. When you're in your teens and twenties, your body works so well, you may not pay any attention to it.

This is when you're in your peak condition and the perfect time to start exercising. Cut to 20 years later and, if you didn't start exercising, you probably wish you had since there's something we all start to experience in our 40's: Weight gain.

It's not sudden weight gain, but it certainly feels that way. As though you wake up one morning and there's an extra 10 or 15 pounds that just suddenly materialized. While it may feel sudden, it's actually a gradual process.

What you may also notice is that much of that weight seems to settle right around your belly.

This mysterious fat not only seems appears without warning, it also seems like it's completely immune to both diet and exercise.


What Happens As We Get Older

What happens to our bodies after 40 is a trifecta of weight gain: Our hormones change, our metabolism starts to slow down and, if we're not lifting weights, we start to lose just a little more muscle every year.

That muscle can help protect us from gaining weight because it's more metabolically active. When we lose that muscle, our metabolisms drop even more.

If you're genetically predisposed to gain weight easily, that may be another strike against you.

And the worst part? Even if you don't actually gain weight, you may still gain inches around the waist.

This weight gain can be so frustrating, it's easy to become obsessed with losing it, starving yourself or exercising too much or maybe even looking into the latest plastic surgery procedure.

But, is that really necessary?

Isn't there something we can do about gaining weight after 40? There is and it starts with understanding just what's going on with your body. We can't control everything about our bodies, but the more we know what's going on, the easier it is to find some acceptance for what's happening.

Why We Gain Weight After 40

The big question is, why do we start gaining weight after 40?  There are a multitude of reasons, some of the genetic, some of it the natural course of things and some that are due to lifestyle choices.

The four most important contributors to weight gain include:

  1. Hormones: One of the main culprits for weight gain is, of course, our hormones, which start to change right around the mid-30s and into the 40s. This change in hormones, less estrogen for women and less testosterone for men, causes the fat in our bodies fat to shift to the middle of the body while abandoning other areas of the body you could care less about. That's one reason you may get a little fluffier around the middle while other parts of you actually get smaller.
  2. Heredity:  Scientists have found the specific genes that determine how many fat cells we have and where they're stored. This is something we can't really change and, if you look at your parents and relatives, you'll see those areas where your family may tend to store excess fat.
  3. Lower Metabolism: There are a couple of things that happen to your metabolism after the age of 40. First, your basal metabolic rate (BMR) decreases and, second, you expend less total energy (TEE) during exercise. Some experts suggest metabolism can decrease by about 5% for every decade after 40, which means you need about 60-100 fewer calories every 10 years. If you sit more, eat more, exercise less and deal with more stress throughout that decade, you'll probably need even fewer calories than that. Add that to the fact that you burn fewer calories during exercise and you've got yourself an equation for weight gain.
  4. Loss of muscle:  Like our metabolisms, we also start to lose muscle when we hit our 40s, experiencing a steady decline each decade. Part of this, scientists believe, is that the motor units that make up our muscles decline as we age and that those motor units don't always fire with the same regularity. However, the important takeaway here is this: The biggest factor in losing muscle is the lack of physical activity, which makes exercise a crucial component when it comes to preventing muscle loss.

Of course, just how much each of these contributes to weight gain isn't something we can measure or, often, control.  What we can do is take this knowledge and use it to our advantage, working with our bodies rather than fighting them.

What If I Already Exercise? How Can I Stop Gaining Weight?

If you've managed to keep your weight the same over the years with exercise, it can be a rude awakening when you get into your 40s and 50s.  It isn't so much that you gain weight, it's more that your weight shifts into different places.  Suddenly, the pants you've been wearing for years just don't fit right and you may wonder:  What am I doing wrong?

If you exercise and eat right, you're not doing anything wrong, it's just those age-related changes happening.  And, think about it...if you already exercise to maintain a healthy weight, you're in a much better position than someone who hits 40 with a weight problem.

Even with that, living a healthy lifestyle doesn't protect us entirely from age-related weight changes. In some respects, it's inevitable that our bodies will change as we age and embracing that is just one way to make the process a little less frustrating.

In one study published in The International Journal of Obesity, researchers followed more than 12,000 runners and found that: "Age-related weight gain occurs even among the most active individuals when exercise is constant." Of course, this study didn't include people who lift weights, which may have an impact on weight loss.

The question is: If you already exercise every day, is there anything you can do to burn more calories?

It's possible, but this comes with a warning: We may need more exercise to manage weight as we get older, but our bodies typically tolerate less strenuous exercise as we get older as well.

By our 40s and 50s, many of us are dealing with chronic injuries, stress, fatigue, busy jobs and family life and, perhaps, less time and energy than ever to exercise.

Knowing that, if you really want to increase your exercise and/or intensity, there are some options for bumping up your calorie-burn.

Over 40 Weight Loss Tips for Exercisers

As mentioned before, exercise is an important part of losing weight. But, if you're already working very hard, it's not a great idea to add even more intensity.

You still have to take care of your body and give it the rest that it needs to replenish and rejuvenate. Exercise alone isn't going to make the problem go away. With that in mind, there are some things you can do to bump your calorie-burn a little, including:

  • Try High-Intensity Interval Training - Tabata, interval training or metabolic conditioning workouts are designed to burn more calories and push you to your limits.
  • Try Circuit Training - Mixing up cardio and strength together keeps your heart rate elevated, helping you build endurance and strength while burning more calories.
  • Add more time to your workouts - For example, if you usually workout for an hour, add 10 minutes to 1 to 2 workouts each week.
  • Add more frequency - If you can, add a day of exercise or you could even consider 2-a-days once in a while to pump up your calorie burn for the week - Doing double cardio or a cardio workout in the morning and strength later that day.
  • Be more active - Sometimes, just adding a couple of walks each day can help you manage your calories without going overboard with exercise. Try using a pedometer or tracker to see how many steps you can get each day.
  • Change your diet - You know the drill when it comes to a healthy diet, right? Cut out the sugar and the processed carbs. Eat more vegetables and fiber and cut out the alcohol. Sometimes a little tweaking here and there, without starving yourself, can help you eek out a few more calories each week.
  • Hire a trainer - If you've tried everything, maybe it's time to see an expert and get more specific advice for your situation.
  • See your doctor - If you're killing yourself and still not seeing any changes, see your doctor and get checked out. Discuss the possible reasons for your weight gain or plateau and see if there are some solutions out there. Is one of your medications contributing? Maybe you could try something different.

Whatever changes you make, don't overdo. Listen to your body and back off if you start to feel any symptoms of overtraining.  It's always best to gradually add more intensity and/or exercise into your routine a few minutes at a time.

Weight Loss For the New or Yo-Yo Exerciser


So, what if you don't exercise at all? Or maybe you're a yo-yo exerciser heading into your 40s or 50s and trying to fight age-related weight gain?  How can you get into a consistent program to manage your weight?

If you're not a consistent exerciser, you may be tempted to do a bunch of crazy workouts to deal with weight gain.

Try not to give into that temptation because, for one, it's easy to injure yourself. Another reason to avoid the all or nothing approach is that that exercise may not give you what you want.

The plain fact is, exercise doesn't always work the same way on a 40-something-year-old body as it does on a younger body.

Think back to when you were younger. There may have been a time where you could eat whatever you wanted or, if you gained weight, all you had to do was watch your diet or do a little more exercise and you could easily lose it.

Fast forward to now and your reality is probably much different. The American College of Sports Medicine said it best in their article, "Exercise and Age-Related Weight Gain,"

What does that mean for you? That the weight loss process naturally becomes harder as you get older...that's just a fact and accepting it means you can stop punishing yourself or feeling ashamed about your body. Instead of focusing on the negative, focus on the things you can control: Your workouts, activity levels, diet, stress management, sleep management and, most important, your attitude.

Is It Time to Change Your Goal?

If you're experiencing some of that age-related weight gain, it's easy to panic and start obsessing, restricting and, maybe, exercising like crazy to get rid of it.

Maybe that works for some people, but you can't live that way forever and life isn't much fun if you're worried about every single bite or every single minute of your workouts.

We have a choice in how we deal with age-related weight gain, even if it doesn't feel that way. We even have a choice to completely give up on weight loss and focus on something entirely different.

That doesn't mean giving up all things healthy to sit at home in your sweatpants eating Oreos and zoning out on daytime TV. It means stopping the fixation on the scale and focusing on the things that really matter - How you feel and how you function.

With that in mind, consider this: Your goal doesn't have to be to lose weight. It's probably foreign to most of us, this idea of not working towards weight loss every single day, but taking your weight out of the equation opens the door for so many more options. Without weight loss as your primary goal, what could you attain?

Think about that as you consider all of your options, including:

  • Option 1: You really want to lose this age-related weight - If you really want to go for weight loss, you're going to have to work at it and you're going to have to work harder than you did before, doing up to 350 minutes of exercise each week. We have to exercise more frequently and more vigorously to compensate for the typical weight gain associated with aging. There are some important points to consider if you go this route:
  •         More work won't necessarily bring the changes you're looking for and there's always the chance of injury, burnout and overtraining, not to mention frustration.
  •                   If you don't already exercise, you're going to have to start at the beginning and work your way up to more vigorous exercise over time. Your body needs at least a few weeks of simple cardio and strength training to build the foundation for harder, more intense workouts. 


  • Option 2: You're already exercising and feel like you're doing as much as you can tolerate. Maybe it's time to work more on preventing weight gain than losing it  - While weight loss can require up to 350 minutes of exercise weekly, preventing weight gain allows a more moderate approach, focusing on about 150-250 minutes of exercise each week, a more approachable goal if you have a busy schedule or you're a beginner.

  • Option 3: Forget about losing weight. You want to focus on being healthy and feeling good - Focusing on being healthy means getting about 30 minutes of moderate exercise every day. This level of exercise can keep your heart heatlhy and work on things like lowering your cholesterol and/or blood pressure. This is a great place to start if you're getting into exercise after a long break.  There's no reason you can't start here and progress to more intense goals as you build strength and endurance.

And these aren't even your only options. You could still set up a healthy program that focuses on something other than losing weight. For example, what about working on getting stronger? Lifting weights more regularly so other things in your life get easier?

You could even train for something, a 5K or a cycling race. Sometimes having something specific to work for is a lot more fun than focusing on the scale.

The Bottom Line

The important takeaway from all of this is this: We can only control so much of what happens to our bodies as we age.  Some things are going to sag or soften or wrinkle no matter what we do, but it's much easier to find some acceptance of our bodies if we do everything we can to keep them healthy and fit. Aging is going to happen.

The question is, can you age more gracefully? Maybe that means something different to all of us. To some it might mean getting plastic surgery. That's always one option, of course, and a good one if something really bothers you and you do your research.

But another option is to do the best you can with the body you have. Nurture it with good food and exercise. Remind yourself that it's not your fault that your body is changing. It's going to change for all of us. Being kind to yourself, forgiving yourself may be just what you need to get through this phase of your life.
Thanks for Reading...........

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Is Sugar the Only Thing to Limit in the American Diet?

Why We Should Take a Look at Our Diet as a Whole

|These days, the harms of excessive sugar in our diets are getting a lot of attention. Those harms are real, and the attention warranted up to a point. What is not warranted are the claims that the harms of excess sugar are newly discovered, or have been concealed from the public. The very first Dietary Guidelines for Americans, all the way back in 1980, had seven key take-away points. Number five was to limit intake of sugar.
The tendency to invoke one scapegoat or silver bullet when it's the whole dietary pattern that matters is a classic example of missing the forest for the trees. Sugar is excessive in our diets; but it certainly is not the one thing wrong with prevailing eating patterns, nor do the harms of excess sugar exonerate refined starches, fatty and processed meats, excess sodium, or saturated fats.
Thoughtful commentary on sugar in the context of the whole diet is provided below. From my perspective, it lands right in the sweet spot, with a focus on wholesome foods, mostly plants, in sensible combinations as the best way to get nutrition right.
Andy Bellatti, MS, RD
Co-founder and Strategic Director of Dietitians for Professional Integrity
There are many reasons to limit our intake of added sugars (i.e. table sugar, agave, honey, maple syrup, etc.) and free sugars (i.e. fruit juice). An increasing body of research is connecting the dots between high intakes of these sugars and increased risks of—and worsening of—hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes.
Added and free sugars provide calories, but no nutrition. This is why you can drink a few hundred calories of soda—or eat a few hundred calories of candy—and still be hungry. Eating an orange is a much better choice than drinking orange juice because the juice is a concentrated source of sugar, while the whole fruit also provides fiber and more nutrients that offer various health benefits.
So, yes, it is definitely important to keep an eye on sugar intake. Several health organizations have set daily recommended limits. The American Heart Association recommends no more than 36 grams (9 teaspoons) for adult men and 24 grams (6 teaspoons) for adult women. The World Health Organization recommends capping added sugar intake at 10 percent of total calories, and states that five percent is even better. For someone eating 1,600 calories a day, 10 percent of total calories equals 40 grams (10 teaspoons) and five percent of total calories equals 20 grams (5 teaspoons).
The average American is getting roughly 88 grams of added sugar a day, so a general call to reduce intake is smart.
With all of that said, it is never wise to blame one food or nutrient for all of our public health ills. As important as limiting added sugar is, it is equally important to limit one's intake of red meat, processed meats, sodium, and refined grains (i.e. baked goods made with white flour).
One of the negative unintended consequences of focusing strictly on sugar is that, by default, unhealthy foods that don't contain added sugar (i.e. bacon, sausages, margarine) can be misconstrued as "healthy." Nutrition is about a food's total package.
Nacho cheese Doritos have 0 grams of sugar, but that does not make them a health food.
And, as important as limiting added sugar is, it is equally important to make sure that we eat 25 to 30 grams of fiber a day (the average American eats 14 grams). Fiber is exclusively found in whole, plant-based foods. Concerns about added sugar, as valid and science-based as they are, should not be mistaken as a green light to load up on steak, sausage, and ham.
Christopher Gardner, PhD
Professor of Medicine, Stanford University
If there is only one wrong thing about the American diet, then this might suggest everything else is right, or at least OK, which isn’t correct.
We cannot vindicate trans fats, sodium, saturated fat, processed meat, artificial dyes, and so on.
Were the question modified to ask if sugar is the most negative of the American diet, we could easily poke holes in that statement by finding individuals who do not overdo sugar intake, but still have an unhealthy diet.
I can certainly imagine that the simplicity of vilifying sugar and trying to avoid it could be helpful to some individuals. With the exception of natural sugars of fruits and vegetables, all of the foods that Americans eat with added sugars are hyper-palatable and ultra-processed foods, and most of those would fall into the categories of candy, junk foods, and fast foods. Those foods are also low in fiber, low in vegetables, and not plant-based whole foods.
My concern is that by focusing on what to vilify and avoid, rather than what to celebrate and include, many clever Americans will find a way to avoid sugars but choose another not-so-healthy replacement  (with the food industry’s help), and still manage to avoid fiber, vegetables, and a plant-based whole food diet.
Let’s focus on what Americans should eat more of—from a nutrient perspective, we should focus on fiber, from a food group perspective we should focus on vegetables, from a diet-pattern perspective, we should focus on a more plant-based whole food diet.
Joel Kahn, MD, FACC
Clinical Professor of Medicine (Cardiology), Wayne State University School of Medicine
Sugar is not the one and only thing wrong with the American diet, particularly amongst children. The habit of eating healthy meals has been all but lost. In a recent publication of the American Heart Association, the number of children who adhere to a healthy diet was recorded as under 1 percent! Yes, you read that right. Among adults it is a slightly higher but still miserable 1.5 percent.
The definition used as the healthy dietary pattern was not complete avoidance of all the 57 versions of sugar. Rather, the recommendations were far more balanced. The goals recorded in the AHA paper were to "consume ≥4.5 cups/day of fruits and vegetables, ≥2 servings/wk of fish, and ≥3 servings/day of whole grains and no more than 36 oz/wk of sugar-sweetened beverages and 1500 mg/d of sodium."
The public anxiety about the health consequences of dietary sugar are highlighted in two articles in the New York Times. In one, the author reports on the dozens of names for added and hidden sugars in food. In fact, there are 57 that we are advised to check for and avoid on labels. It would seem like a full time occupation, perhaps aided by a sugar-synonym smart phone app, to screen all product labels for these 57 versions. The article is without scientific references and represents the angst the public has- that if eating 150-170 pounds of sugar a year is an outrageous and dangerous statistic, then eating any sugar must also be harmful. Author Gary Taubes is in part responsible for that paranoia which is without scientific support.
There is no doubt that the American public and its children eat too much added sugar in processed foods and drinks and would benefit from a drastic reduction in that amount. However, to stand a chance in reversing the epidemic of obesity, type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and other chronic lifestyle maladies, diet cannot be approached with the focus that a single nutrient is the devil, as the devil is the Western dietary pattern stuffed with added oils, salt, sugars, and chemical additives wrapped in plastic lined containers.
Thanks for Reading...........

Monday, October 2, 2017

Best Ways to Shorten Your Life....... Avoid These and Live Longer

Looking around, I'd say that people are looking for ways to shorten their lives. Smoking, eating too much, and more all add up to subtract years from your life expectancy. Take a look at these top ten ways to shorten your life. Feel proud of each one that doesn't describe you.
1
Smoke
Smoking is a fantastic way to not only to shorten your life but to reduce your quality of life too. Not only will smokers have up to 10 years less life on average, they will also suffer from side effects like insomnia, shortness of breath and agitation from almost day one. Best of all, they get to pay thousands of dollars a year for these results. And if you want to shorten your lifespan, don't think you can let up on smoking as you age -- even in middle age or later, when people quit smoking their health improves greatly.

2
Bad Driving / No Seatbelt

Here's another great way to shorten your life expectancy: drive recklessly and don't wear a seatbelt. Driving accidents are a leading cause of death for young people (and a major cause of death for older people too)

3
Don't Exercise

Being a coach potato shortens your life expectancy by as much as 9 years. Basically, when your don't work out regularly, your cells tend to age faster (not to mention the extra weight that seems to stick to you more). Not exercising is also a great way to increase your stress level while decreasing your energy level. Not exercising even helps you not fall asleep at night. So if you want to shorten your life expectancy, be tired all the time and feel tense -- not exercising might be right for you.

4
Don't Eat Fruits and Vegetables

Be careful about fruits and vegetables. They contain substances that not only keep you healthy, but that also repair some of the damage caused by aging. When you eat them, they actually can reverse aging in your body. If you are looking to shorten your life span, be sure not to eat more than a few fruits and vegetables each day and cover them in butter and cheese to erase their anti-aging and health benefits.

5
Be Stressed

Being stressed is a fantastic way to shorten your life. Not only does chronic stress damage tissues in the body through the continual exposure to harmful stress hormones, it also makes you no fun to be around and even interferes with your sleep. This can lead to having fewer friends and a negative outlook (see below). To shorten your life expectancy: avoid relaxation techniques, take everything very personally and try to take on more than is humanly possible.

6
Dislike Aging

People can get really worked up about growing older. It makes them depressed and even angry (they look at aging as "unfair" in some way). Turns out those attitudes are a great way to avoid excessive aging. People with a negative attitude toward aging live more than 7 years less than those with a very positive attitude. So if aging really bothers you, dwell on it a lot and maybe you won't have as many birthdays to worry about

7
Don't Get Screened

Screening tests (mammograms, skin cancer checks, etc.) bring up lots of weird attitudes. Many people say "they just don't want to know." Avoiding these tests is another fantastic way to shorten your life. By avoiding screening, you can also avoid accessing the fabulous advances in early treatment and diagnosis that have saved millions of lives.

8
Eat Too Much

Here's a method for lifespan shortening that I don't have to tell most people about. Eating lots of food is a great way to decrease your life expectancy. In fact, when researchers feed monkeys 30% less food, they live longer. Good research shows this probably applies to humans. So, in simple terms, the more food you eat the shorter your life.

9
Skip Church Services

No one really knows why (divine justice?) but skipping church or other religious services can shorten your life expectancy by a few years. It seems that people who go to religious services regularly just live longer. To shorten your life expectancy, avoid religious services at all costs and (just to be safe) don't even look at a church, mosque, temple or synagogue.

10
Don't Have Friends / Spouse

You can even use your social life to shorten your life expectancy. By avoiding friends and not being in an intimate relationship (like a marriage), your life span decreases. Of course, the quality of your friends/spouse matter too. Researchers have not determined which shortens your life span more -- having no friends/spouse or having bad friends/spouse.

Thanks for Reading .........