Let’s face it. We spend so much time focused on saving the world, our communities, our families and friends, and the causes we care about, that we kinda do a shitty job taking care of ourselves. I am, of course, painting a broad brush, and you yourself may be a paragon of health and virtue, but we as a community are not immune to broader societal trends of perpetually high stress, insufficient movement, and an overall lack of self care.
Thus, welcome to my new weekly series, perhaps the most important writing I’ve done yet. Every week I’ll focus on tangible things you can do to look and feel better, because we need you active and healthy in order to save this planet of ours. Or put another way, you can’t save the world if you don’t take care of yourself first.
I’ve spent the last several years exploring how to live my healthiest, happiest life, experimenting on myself, diving deep into the science of wellness. I started from a place that pretty much resembled rock bottom—Donald Trump elected president, my marriage in shambles, my entire world turned upside down. My diet was shit, I wasn’t moving, I gained weight—the unhealthy kind, the stuff around the waist that increases risk of cardiovascular disease. I was a frazzled mess, mentally, my sympathetic system broadcasting a perpetual “fight or flight” message to my overstressed body. I doubt I was very fun to be around.
This series will be, in many ways, the story of my last four years, healing my mind, my body, and my soul. As data driven and hyper-analytic as always, I’ve remained firmly rooted in science, but I also learned that everyone is different, and the way we react to stimuli is as varied as the number of people on this planet. So I will talk about what the science says, but I will also talk about what worked and didn’t work for me, and will be ever cognizant that when talking about these things, there are rarely any absolutes. So you won’t get me proselytizing for, say, a specific diet like keto, or a specific workout. This isn’t my marching orders, this is me offering a menu of options, and hopefully you finding something that works for you, that makes your life just a little bit better.
Except today. Today I am talking in absolutes. This is the one thing you need to do no matter what, because it is the single-most important thing you could do for yourself.
WALKING
I only went out for a walk and finally concluded to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in. -John Muir
Nothing delivers more health and mental benefits than walking. Period. Here’s just a sampling of the proven benefits:
I could seriously go on and on, but you get the point—walking is good for your heart, it's good for your brain, it’s good if you want to control your weight. It boosts your immune system and reduces the risk of serious disease. It helps you live longer, do so with less pain, and with a much higher quality of life.
It is meditative and can connect you to the world around you. Get to know your neighborhood, your neighbors, your presence on the street can deter crime. All the great thinkers did some of their best work while walking. “Me thinks that the moment my legs begin to move, my thoughts begin to flow,” said Henry David Thoreau. Walking is proven to boost creative thinking, “[Albert] Einstein’s daily walk was sacred to him,” wrote the BBC on an article on Einstein’s “quirky habits.” “While he was working at Princeton University, New Jersey, he’d walk the mile and a half journey there and back. He followed in the footsteps of other diligent walkers, including Darwin who went for three 45 minute walks every day.”
The best part about walking? it’s so easy.
The health benefits start at 10 minutes, and you get most of them at 30. I don’t care how busy you are, you can carve 30 minutes for a walk. If you can do 30 before breakfast, and 30 after dinner, that’s the best, but not required.
You can find creative ways to fit walking in your life. If you’re going to the store, park at the furthest end of the parking lot. Let others circle endlessly for that spot closer to the entrance. It takes 20 minutes to walk a mile, so if possible don’t drive anywhere closer than a mile away. Take walking breaks, even five minutes here and there add up. If you have a treadmill, great! Use it for more than hanging your laundry. Again, you don’t need to run! Set it at 3-4 MPH and read a book or magazine, or watch a show, or catch up on Daily Kos on a tablet. Thirty minutes will fly by.
Get a dog. Walk the dog. Take the stairs. If you commute by public transportation, don’t use the nearest stop to your destination. Walk to or from a more distant one. Do walking meetings. Hang out with friends on a hike (which is especially smart during the pandemic, as long as you’re masked). At the grocery story, do an extra lap of the store before you check out. Not only can that add another 600 steps (depending on the size of your store), but maybe you’ll remember something you had forgotten.
Don’t use the bathroom nearest you when it’s time to go. Walk to the furthest one in your house or office. Go window shopping. Catching up with friends? Call them while on a stroll. Walk in place while watching a show, or at least while the commercials are on. Spend family time strolling the neighborhood (some of the best quality time with my kids because … NO SCREENS!).
And given that this is Daily Kos, walk precincts, door knock, and just generally be out and about your neighborhood helping drive political change!
If it helps to motivate you, get an Apple Watch or Fitbit or other fitness tracker to count your steps. Your iPhone counts steps, and you can get the Google Fit app for Android phones. The generic target is 10,000 steps, which is around 5 miles, or around one hour and 40 minutes of walking. That’s great if you get there! But you don’t need to. One hour is great! But thirty minutes—or 4,000 steps—is your low-end goal.
Seriously, this one isn’t optional. Please, for the love of any and all (or no) deities, start a daily walking practice. The benefits are wide-ranging, critical to a healthy life, and so easy to integrate into our schedules, no matter how busy they might be.
Her pleasure in the walk must arise from the exercise and the day, from the view of the last smiles of the year upon the tawny leaves and withered hedges, and from repeating to herself some few of the thousand poetical descriptions extant of autumn – that season of peculiar and inexhaustible influence on the mind of taste and tenderness – that season which has drawn from every poet worthy of being read some attempt at description, or some lines of feeling. -Jane Austen
Wellness for Activists
1. Walk 2. Practice kindness
Poll 2534 votes Show Results When it comes to walking ... I am already into fitness, I do more than just waking. I am an avid walker, it is part of my daily routine. I walk occasionally, but I will try to make it a daily practice. I had no idea walking was so important, it's time for me to start. Don't tell me what to do. 2534 votes Vote Now! When it comes to walking ... I am already into fitness, I do more than just waking. 22% 559 votes I am an avid walker, it is part of my daily routine. 38% 971 votes I walk occasionally, but I will try to make it a daily practice. 29% 734 votes I had no idea walking was so important, it's time for me to start. 6 6% 142 votes Don't tell me what to do. 5 5% 128 votes