ono sto mogu licno da primenim
odmah
ustajanje na svakih sat vremena sedenja i setnja tokom radnog vremena
dobro zvakanje svoje
hrane
disanje
budi posmatrac
kocija i jahaci
DO
Add some anti-inflammatory foods to your diet.
Include more organic food to your grocery shopping.
Increase the fiber in your diet.
Take a probiotic supplement (see this page).
Switch to olive or safflower oil.
Drink coffee 1 to 5 times a day, preferably at the heavier end.
UNDO
Cut down sharply on your sugar intake.
Cut out junk food and fast food.
Throw out stale food, including stale cooking oils and leftovers more than a day old.
Reduce overall fat intake.
Reduce salt intake.
Use no alcohol.
DO
Meditate.
Go to a yoga class.
Practice mindful breathing.
Schedule downtime and quiet time.
Practice being centered.
Recognize the stages of stress (this page).
UNDO
Stop adding to a stressful situation.
Refrain from ignoring stressful events in your life.
Walk away from stress as soon as you can.
Resolve a repeated stress.
Examine a problem you have been putting up with out of frustration.
Turn irregular habits into a regular routine.
DO
Meditate.
Join a social support group.
Strengthen emotional bonds with family and close friends.
Take a multivitamin and mineral supplement (if you are age sixty-five or older).
Maintain a balance of rest and activity.
Explore a new interest.
Take up a challenging mental activity.
UNDO
Don’t be sedentary—stand up and move throughout the day.
Examine your negative emotions.
Heal injured relationships that are meaningful to you.
Be mindful of lapses and imbalances in your diet.
Address negative stereotypes about aging and ageism.
Consider how to heal the fear of death.
DO
Stand up and move around once an hour if you are working at the computer or at a desk job.
Walk 5 minutes for every hour you work.
Take the stairs instead of the elevator.
Park your car far away in the lot when you shop or go to work.
Be regular in your sleep routine.
Make your bedroom an optimal sleeping environment (see this page).
Walk for 20 to 30 minutes in the evening.
Take 10 minutes of quiet alone time, preferably in meditation, twice today.
Spend more time with a physically active friend or family member.
UNDO
Replace 10 minutes of sofa time in front of the TV with a walk instead.
Break the habit of waiting until the weekend to catch up on lost sleep.
If you drink alcohol, do it early in the evening—go to bed without alcohol in your bloodstream.
Replace the midmorning coffee-and-doughnut break with a walk.
Walk to one place close by that you usually drive to.
Examine your excuses for not being more active.
DO
Write down five core beliefs and evaluate why you believe them.
Put a core belief into action.
Read a poem, scripture, or spiritual passage for inspiration.
Have a family discussion about which core beliefs everyone holds.
Take your favorite role model and list what core beliefs they held.
UNDO
Examine your negative beliefs as they relate to fear and mistrust.
Open a line of communication with someone who holds radically different values.
If you are stuck on a negative belief, be a devil’s advocate and argue against it.
End your participation in us-versus-them thinking.
DO
Take an allowing attitude.
Approach a situation without resistance.
Act gracefully.
Share a responsibility.
Encourage areas of flow.
UNDO
Stop resisting where you don’t need to.
Let someone else have their way.
Help reduce an area of conflict.
Remove obstacles from someone else’s path.
Ease competition in favor of cooperation.
DO
Be on the lookout for synchronicity (meaningful coincidences).
Change your daily narrative for the better.
Look for a chance to be compassionate.
Openly express love and appreciation.
Be generous of spirit.
UNDO
Resist the voice of fear.
If you find yourself expecting the worst, step away from that expectation and remain neutral.
If you have a negative thought that keeps returning, ask if it is truly serving you or is a relic of the past.
If you feel emotionally upset, find a quiet place to become more calm and centered.
Seek the company of people who inspire and uplift you.
Eat a Mediterranean diet. This is a diet rich in fruits, nuts, vegetables, olive oil, minimal or no red meat, and alternative sources of protein (e.g., fish or, if you’re vegetarian, like me, legumes, tofu, and mycoprotein from mushrooms).
• Get seven to eight hours of sleep per night. It is during the deepest stage of sleep (delta or slow-wave) following dreams (REM sleep) that the brain clears itself of debris like amyloid plaques. This is also when short-term memories are consolidated into long-term memories.
• Exercise daily. Aim for 8,000 to 10,000 steps per day if you have an electronic measuring device. Or take a brisk walk for an hour every day. During exercise, amyloid plaques are dissolved in the brain, neuroinflammation is turned down, and even new nerve stem cells are born in the area of the brain most affected by Alzheimer’s, the hippocampus, which is responsible for short-term memory.
• Reduce stress. Managing stress with meditation and other techniques protects the brain from harmful neurochemicals like cortisol. In a clinical trial of meditation, we also showed changes in gene expression that favor removal of amyloid from the brain and that lower inflammation. It’s also worth noting that as people get older, finding that they can’t recall names and words as well, they often become increasingly stressed out, especially if they worry about the beginnings of Alzheimer’s. Ironically, this stress can lead to cortisol production in the brain that kills nerve cells, perhaps increasing risk for Alzheimer’s.
• Learn new things. Learning new things forces you to make new synapses in the brain, enhancing your cognitive reserve. Growing older should include challenges like learning how to play a musical instrument or taking foreign-language lessons, but also small things like brushing your teeth with the opposite hand, taking a new commute route, or simply watching a documentary or attending a lecture. Because all learning is based on associating new information with what you already know, you not only make new synapses but reinforce the ones you already have. Moreover, this leads to new neural pathways for gaining access to information recorded by specific synapses and existing neural pathways. It’s worth mentioning that crossword puzzles and brain games do not serve the same purpose as learning new things.
• Stay socially engaged. Loneliness has been confirmed as a risk factor for Alzheimer’s. Social engagement and participating in positive, supporting social networks have been shown to be protective against a higher risk for Alzheimer’s disease.