|
Donald B. Ardell, Ph.D., is credited with founding the wellness movement in the United States, beginning with his 1977 book, High Level Wellness: An Alternative to Doctors, Drugs, and Disease. Ever since, Ardell has been speaking, writing and teaching about wellness across the United States and Canada. He produces the quarterly “Ardell Wellness Report” and posts essays on the Seek Wellness website. A marathon runner, he won his age group in both the duathlon and national triathlon championships in 2004, and he also holds the title of fastest runner in the world in his age group. Here, Ardell describes the difference between health and wellness.
Most people think of health as not being sick with an illness. It’s often equated, I believe erroneously, with the presence of well-being. I’m so dissatisfied with the confusion that occurs when the word “health” is used; I use the term “wellness.” Health in a wellness context is a lifestyle approach to advanced states of both physical and biological well-being. Wellness reflects three dimensions, including the physical, the mental and the third dimension, which many people would call “spiritual” but I would call “meaning and purpose.”
Yes. Obviously it’s great to be terrific in any one of them, but to be really healthy you need to address a level of sufficiency in each that no one can define because it’s personal. It’s a matter of your unique circumstances, your opportunities, your genetic potentials, your lifestyle circumstances and your commitment to consciousness.
Sure, but a lower standard of being well, I think. In a sense, the physical, mental, meaning and purpose are integrated and are almost inexplicably interlinked. So you really couldn’t be physically well and mentally well and not have the “meaning and purpose” attached and addressed.
The first is the notion that the healthcare system will help people stay healthy. A gigantic medical complex of separate, disparate parts can be very helpful for some kinds of conditions if you get to the right place at the right time and have enough money or health insurance. But, in general, it’s not about health; all it does is pay for sick care. Another myth is that doctors are experts in health. They’re not. They’re technicians in medical care. I think another damaging myth is that it’s a good thing to be normal. Normalcy should be equated with mediocrity. In fact, it’s worse than mediocrity when you consider that 64% of the people in this country are either obese or overweight. Obviously, normal is a pretty sorry state.
One is that the evidence is not so overwhelming that a certain type of nutritional approach is best for everyone. It’s a complex field and what worked under circumstances for certain subsets of the population isn’t optimal for everybody. There’s a lot of profit in selling diet approaches: It’s an entrepreneurial game that leads people to produce books and pills, open centers and otherwise try to convince the public that their particular dietary approach is the best for everybody. People want easy answers; they’re not willing to do the work to understand what an optimal diet might be for them.
The public is very undereducated in terms of wellness. It’s not a value in our culture to be living a wellness lifestyle. It seems like it’s too much trouble, and people believe that it will cost more and take a huge amount of leisure time. There’s insufficient cultural support for optimal living. There are neither ethnic groups, nor affiliated groups, nor religious groups, nor any other obvious type of group to which people belong that addresses these issues and can reinforce traditions and elements of optimal living through use, patterns, habits and rituals.
The outcome of love, connections and loyalty affects our physical state. There’s a lot of supporting information that people have to feel love, feel good about themselves and reciprocate affection with other people to have emotionally healthy lives. The dynamics of exactly how that works is something that neurobiologists have been exploring for some time, but I don’t think anyone would argue that love isn’t a factor in how we feel about our lives.
Learning about the wellness concept is a great way for anyone to assess his or her own thinking about the nature of health. A wellness perspective will invite a person to ask, “Am I really well? Am I anywhere, anything, like the person I could be or want to become? And what are some possibilities?” A conversation like that can set new horizons. It’s very personal: It has a lot to do with who one is, where one is, who one is with and where he or she wants to go. Not to mention the options a person might have in relation to economics, intelligence and physical capabilities.
I don’t think that there’s one single place that it should come from. I think an individual physician can have an impact. I was at the store the other day and the salesperson saw the running shirt I was wearing and started telling me how he’s changed his lifestyle. He started a walking program, is planning to run a 5K in another year and has lost 60 pounds. The reason he did this is because his doctor asked, “How long do you want to live, Wally?” The doctor told him he wasn’t going to see his kids out of high school. The doctor caught his attention and helped put him on track.
The biggest myth is that exercise is optional, and that exercise is something that people can do when they get around to it. I don’t think it is: I recommend that people do one hour of rigorous physical exercise daily. Cooper Clinic says to get 20 minutes of exercise daily and that will reduce your exposure to illness. But that’s the problem. People are not motivated to avoid getting illnesses; they need something positive and exciting and fun. You have to motivate them to do something that they want to realize in the near-term. I feel that nothing has the power to provide early returns to a person who’s muddling through and not healthy than a strenuous exercise program from the get-go.
I think they’re great; anything someone does that leads to flexibility, strength-training and cardiovascular activities like fast walking are terrific. I’m giving you the gold standard when I talk about getting an hour of fitness a day. If you want to pursue a vigorous and dramatic change in your quality of life, exercise is just one of many requirements and recommendations for a wellness lifestyle.
It’s really not that complicated unless you have obesity or blood sugar problems. The key is to maximize the amount of vegetables and whole grains you eat and stay away from empty calories. Lay off fats, sugars, junk foods and excessive salt. Lean toward fresh fruit, vegetables, fish, whole grains and white meat, and go easy on highly saturated animal fats.
Based on what I’ve read from nonobjective third parties that are not selling the stuff, I think it’s all just a bunch of hocus-pocus. The body takes care of itself. Eat good food, exercise and enjoy yourself. There may be other reasons to fast. Someone may get great satisfaction out of it, such as doing it for a cause or as a means to demonstrate mastery over desires. But I think you’re deluding yourself if you think that your body needs to somehow rid itself of toxins.
The biggest benefit for our overall wellness would be for a wide variety of things to happen. From public leadership at the top, to cultural transformation, to giving people a stronger sense of the positive payoffs, to a much stronger sense of personal responsibility regarding wellness. And, if people relied more on personal responsibility, less on medications, doctors and medical breakthroughs, and learned key principles of the wellness lifestyle and acted accordingly, there would be an extraordinary revolution.
For more information about Dr. Donald Ardell, visit www.seekwellness.com.
Donald B. Ardell, Ph.D., is credited with founding the wellness movement in the United States, beginning with his 1977 book, High Level Wellness: An Alternative to Doctors, Drugs, and Disease. Ever since, Ardell has been speaking, writing and teaching about wellness across the United States and Canada. He produces the quarterly “Ardell Wellness Report” and posts essays on the Seek Wellness website. A marathon runner, he won his age group in both the duathlon and national triathlon championships in 2004, and he also holds the title of fastest runner in the world in his age group.
If you plan to age, prepare yourself, it's later than you think. The 69 tips in Aging Beyond Belief offer evidence-based tips that provide invaluable insights on: exercise, humor, sexuality, personal responsibility, and a dozen other life-skill areas....
My love life has changed for better since the interference of the most powerful spell caster on earth called Dr.Atase in my relationship, My testimony today is in regard of the help that Dr.Atase render me when my lover departed from me. My name is Anabel from USA and it gives me joy today in writing this testimony as a way of showing my appreciation to Dr.Atase and at the same time i am using this opportunity to advise those that are finding stress and pains in their relationship or marriages to contact Dr.Atase who is the best spell caster in the world through these contact details via email: indiaspelltemple@yahoo.com or his number +2348112796070.Because Dr.Atase is the only one that can restore your marriage or relationship with love. He can also help to win lottery spell,contract,sickness and more.
Hello dear friend,
To love someone is nothing, to be loved by someone is something, to love
someone who loves you is everything. Looking here for everything of my
life, I write some words. I am single and not engaged. I am in search of
true happiness and am hoping the future brings it. I am almost too honest
for my own good - and hate game playing.
nI am trying to handle some pretty encompassing issues in my life... but am
waiting to remain open-minded where the idea of romance exists. I am
looking for Honest, caring, patient, funny and loyal person. A man that
can be himself in the beginning and remain that same person all the way
through to the end of time !
nIf you are willing to love and be loved with your whole heart & willing to
make the people in your life a "solid' part of your soul... then maybe you
and I will connect. We might just have a lot to talk about through my
private e-mailbox(maryluveu@hotmailcom)
my contact info is.
Take care,
Ms mary maryluveu[at]ho/t/m/a/i/l/com