1 Thing You Can Do Today

Start learning a language


More than half the world’s people are polyglots – they speak more than one language. Are you one of them, or do they put you to shame?

You are never too old to learn a foreign language. Yes, it might be easier when you are at school, but people who begin language study in their older years can become as fluent as younger learners – and reap the following mental benefits:

  • You get smarter. How can you not, when you are challenging your brain to recognise, negotiate meaning and communicate in a different language? This skill boosts your ability in other problem-solving tasks too.
  • You delay dementia. Several studies have found that adults who speak two or more languages delay the first signs of dementia by up to five years.
  • Your memory improves. Exercising your brain with a new language improves overall memory – studies show bilinguals are better at retaining names, directions and lists.
  • You boost observation skills. Multilingual people are better at observing their surroundings, more adept at focusing on relevant information and dismissing the irrelevant.

Learning one language makes it easier to acquire others. And you do not have to go back to school. Download one of the many language apps such as Mondly, Duolingo or Babbel and get started in minutes.

Working the Night Shift

Your body is programmed to sleep best overnight and be most alert during the day. But what if you are one of the 15-20 per cent of workers in industrialised countries currently employed in shiftwork?

Industries ranging from health, emergency services and manufacturing to hospitality and mining rely on workers 24/7, meaning many need to work throughout the night, and sleep during the day.

Our preference to sleep at night is not due to habit or convenience, it is driven by our body clock. Many hormones in the body work to keep us active during daylight hours and to rest at night, and it is not easy to switch this around.

If you regularly work the night shift, it can be difficult to get enough sleep or to sleep well during the day. The average shiftworker sleeps one hour a day less than people who work regular hours. This can lead to being tired, both on and off the job, making it harder to concentrate and be alert when at work, and increasing the risk of accidents at work and when driving.


What you can do

Some recommendations:

  • Prioritise sleep. You have to sleep when others are awake, so encourage others when you live to respect this.
  • Try to go to bed and get up at the same time every day.
  • Control noise. You may need to remove the phone from the bedroom and have heavy carpet or curtains to absorb any noise. A fan or ‘white noise’ machine can also help muffle noise.
  • Keep your bedroom cool and dark.
  • Avoid caffeine, sleeping pills, alcohol or cigarettes before going to bed.
  • If you can, sleep just before going to work. If this is not possible, taking a nap before going to work may help.
  • If you are allowed to take a break during your shift, use it for a short nap. A nap should be no longer than 15 minutes, after which a five-minute walk can help you wake up properly.
  • If you have any say when it comes to your shifts, rotate them forwards (morning to afternoon to evening to night) rather than backwards.

Is It Adrenal Fatigue?

It has been a stressful time and now you are exhausted. You feel drained. Could it be adrenal fatigue?

Adrenal fatigue has become a controversial topic since the term was first coined by a chiropractor in 1998.

Most medical professionals say adrenal fatigue is not a real disease; yet alternative health practitioners offer many tests and treatments for it.

Adrenal fatigue makes sense on paper. Your adrenal glands produce cortisol, and they produce lots of it when you are under stress. The theory is that when you are under prolonged stress, your adrenals become fatigued and you run out of control.

This then leads to the classic symptoms: dragging tiredness, brain fog, depressive mood, salt and sweet cravings or nervousness.

Yet these could be symptoms of any number of other issues, including low iron, sleep apnoea, auto immune diseases and mental health conditions. They are also common symptoms of stress in general.

 

What does the research say?

Harvard Health recently reported on a review of 58 studies which concluded, “there is no scientific basis to associate adrenal impairment as a cause of fatigue.” Yet Harvard Health also acknowledged that it is problematic, because there is no formal criteria to define and diagnose adrenal fatigue.

Doctors at the Adrenal Program at Cedars Sinai in the USA are more direct. “Adrenal fatigue is not an actual disease,” says endocrinologist Dr Anat Ben-Shlomo.

“Stress can have an impact on our health, but it doesn’t affect your adrenals this way. When you’re stressed, the adrenal glands actually produce more of the cortisol and other hormones you need. They will give you all that’s necessary.”

Both Harvard Health and Dr Ben-Shlomo warn against taking cortisol supplements for adrenal fatigue.


Harvard Health gives an important word of caution: “some medical professionals prescribe cortisol analogs to treat adrenal fatigue. Cortisol replacement can be dangerous even in small doses. Unintended consequences can include osteoporosis, diabetes, weight gain, and heart disease.”

Dr Ben Shlomo explains further: “the supplement can make you feel good at first because it’s a steroid. But over time, it can actually inhibit your adrenal glands.”

 

How to manage the symptoms

The treatments usually offered by alternative health practitioners for adrenal fatigue are sensible, and will probably help. This includes cutting down on coffee and alcohol, eating more fruit and vegetables, doing light exercise and prioritising sleep.

 

What about adrenal insufficiency?

As opposed to adrenal fatigue, adrenal insufficiency is a medically accepted diagnosis, and occurs when your body doesn’t produce enough of the hormone cortisol.

Chronic adrenal insufficiency is measured by a blood test that measures cortisol levels.

Rather than purely a stress response, adrenal insufficiency is most often caused when your immune system attacks your healthy adrenal glands by mistake. Other causes include cancer, tuberculosis and inherited disorders of the endocrine glands.

Primary adrenal insufficiency, also called Addison’s disease, occurs when your adrenal glands are damaged. It’s quite rare but can occur at any age.

If you’re concerned, see your doctor for proper testing.

How Lifting Weights Can Lift Your Mood

You know strength training is good for your body, but did you know it is also good for your mind?

More and more research studies are showing that resistance exercise has a positive impact on anxiety, depression and overall mental health – but with interesting exceptions.

It is called the anxiolytic effect, and it applies to all types of strength training including lifting weights, using resistance bands or using your body weight for exercises like push-ups.

But not just any kind of strength training, and not just for anyone. Here is what the research found:

1. Firstly, less is more. A 2014 review of studies, published in Frontiers in Psychology, found that the anxiolytic effect is higher when you work out at a lower intensity. That is, at less than 70% of your maximum.

And in even better news for people who do not want to “go hard”, the review found that exercise performed at low intensities with long rests between sets (50-55% intensity with 90 seconds rest) “produced robust decreases in state anxiety relative to high intensities with short rests”.

2. Secondly, the effect is even more marked in women. Research found that women showed “robust decreases” in anxiety after resistance training.

3. And thirdly, resistance training combined with cardio had the best effect of all. A study of women with generalised anxiety disorder found that, “When resistance training was combined with aerobic exercise, which alone failed to decrease anxiety symptoms, robust decreases in anxiety were observed. This effect suggests that resistance exercise may enhance the effects of other modes of exercise, or conversely, other modes of exercise may enhance the effects of resistance training.”


Lift your depression

Resistance training is proven to help relieve depression. In a 2018 meta-analysis of 33 clinical trials that included 1877 participants, resistance exercise training was associated with a significant reduction in depressive symptoms.

It was shown to work for all adults, male and female, regardless of fitness, weight or other health status.

It is thought that the weight lifting helps trigger a release of endorphins which in turn lower levels of stress hormones like cortisol and epinephrine.

1 Thing You Can Do Today

Visit somewhere new in your hometown

Ever played tourist where you live? Imagine you have travelled across the world to stay in your town or city. What would you want to see? Which foods would you want to eat? What would amaze you?

Experiencing your hometown with new eyes can feel like a mini-holiday and can help you refresh your perspective on life. You might have discovered this when friends or family come to stay and you show them around. They are often enthusiastic about things you have started to take for granted.

To really gain the benefits of a staycation, try researching your hometown just as you would if you were a tourist. Look it up on TripAdvisor, or check out Google Reviews for things to do nearby.


Choose one place nearby that you have never been. It could be a new café, or a new park, or even a monument that has been there for a hundred years. And, like every good holiday, don’t forget to take photos and post on social media – you might inspire others to do the same.

Eat Smarter

Pineapple

How can something this sweet, juicy and refreshing be good for you too?


Pineapple is not only a perfect snack or dessert, it also has surprising health benefits.

It contains an enzyme called bromelain, which has two seemingly different benefits, it’s good for your digestion, and good for tenderising meat: Bromelain breaks down proteins, so it helps your gut digest your dinner AND helps soften that piece of chicken on the BBQ.

Some studies even indicate that bromelain can reduce inflammation, swelling and bruising after injury or surgery. It’s even thought to help with pain relief.

Pineapple is also high in vitamin C. In fact, one cup of fresh pineapple chunks will give you more than 130 per cent of your daily vitamin C requirements. And it is full of other goodies such as thiamine, manganese, vitamin B6, folate and antioxidants.

 

How to avoid pineapple tongue burn

Ever eaten fresh pineapple and felt as though your taste buds have been wiped out? That’s the bromelain. It breaks down proteins, including the protective mucus that coats your tongue. To avoid this problem, while gaining the many benefits of pineapple, you could try one of these tricks:

  • Soak the fresh pineapple in salt water first
  • Eat the pineapple with diary such as yoghurt
  • Cook the pineapple, as this destroys the bromelain (but also reduces the benefits)
  • Cut out the tough core, where bromelain is the most concentrated.

How to Learn Faster

Do you believe you are “not a quick learner?” Did that perhaps come from an overworked teacher at school? What if you are a good learner, and even more, what if there were proven techniques you could apply to improve how well you learn?

Being able to learn quickly has become an absolute essential of survival in the workplace. We constantly need to learn new systems, new techniques, or even new ways of doing our jobs as the culture and leadership changes.


Luckily, there are proven ways to speed up your learning, so you can achieve more in less time.

1. Keep a beginner’s mind

Even if you have been studying this field or skill for years, try to approach your next learning like a beginner. When you see yourself as an expert, you tend to be blind to unusual happenings, you assume things are a certain way. Beginners are more open to alternative ways of thinking and ask more questions.


2. Use a digital brain

A whole range of apps exist on your phone – use them. Not to procrastinate or distract yourself, but to help you remember things. A digital brain is like a second brain you can use to capture, organise, retrieve, and archive information, ideas and thoughts. If you use an online calendar, or master password app, you are tapping into your digital brain, but there is so much more you can do. You can use apps to remember to do lists, facts, formulae, links to read later, and you can even record someone delivering a presentation or speech (with permission of course). Try an app such as Evernote, Bear or OneNote.


3. Spaced Repetition

You know how your high school teacher told you to revise regularly and often for exams? They were right. The best way to remember information is to recall it soon afterwards. Spaced repetition looks like this:

  • Within 24 hours of learning something, write down notes for yourself and then review them by reading those notes then looking away to recall the most important points.
  • Within 48 hours (ie. the next day), try to recall the information with minimal reading of your notes.
  • Within 72 hours, recall the information again, as you go about your day, eg while waiting in line or walking to the station.
  • A few days later, read through the information all over again.


4. Break it down

Trying to learn something new all at once can set you up for failure. Say you want to learn how to surf. Expecting yourself to be able to stand up on a surfboard right away and catch a wave will only make you feel overwhelmed. Instead, break down each task into manageable bits. For example, start by learning how to jump up from lying to standing. Then learn how to swap your feet. Practice each skill with full attention before moving onto the next.

Five Ways to Listen Better

To be truly heard and understood is a core human need, yet how often do we feel heard? And more so, how often do we take the time to really listen to someone else?


Listening does not come naturally. We want to be heard far more than we want to hear.

It’s rarely ill-intentioned. Often, we enthusiastically want to relate and show we understand or share their concern, or have had a similar experience. However, the outcome is the opposite: the relationship suffers, and the other person feels less connected, and more frustrated.

To improve your active listening, try these tips from experts:

1. Stop talking. The simplest but hardest tip of all. Give the other person space to talk, even after they seem to run out of puff. Often people only get to the real point after they have covered the superficial talk. Use the acronym WAIT to remind yourself: W.A.I.T stands for “Why Am I Talking?”

2. Clear your mind. Adam Bryant, author of The Corner Office and The CEO Test, says we should “think of listening as a form of meditation. You have to clear your mind of everything else, so you can focus entirely on what the other person is saying.” Bryant advises putting your phone down, and if you are at your desk, turning your chair around so you are not looking at the monitor.

3. Don’t jump ahead. “The best kind of listening is about being comfortable not knowing what you’re going to say next, or what question you might ask,” says Bryant. Have faith in your ability to respond naturally and sincerely to the other person, without formulating your response while they are talking.

4. Remove judgement. “Listening, done well, is an act of empathy. You are trying to see the world through another person’s eyes, and to understand their emotions,” Bryant says. Judging the other person for their words, tone of voice, actions or reactions is not going to help you achieve empathy.

5. Aim to learn. Use every conversation as a chance to learn more – about a topic, about a person. Billionaire venture capitalist and co-founder of LinkIn, Reid Hoffman, says the most important quality he looks for in employees is an “infinite learning curve.” “I’m looking for an ability to be learning constantly, and fast.”

Bryant adds, “If you show interest and energy, people will respond and share what they know and how they learned it. It’s a fast and free education, plus you’ll build relationships.”


Common listening mistakes to avoid

  • Getting distracted. Someone is talking, but you are thinking about what to cook for dinner. You could be making eye contact and saying “yeah” and “OK” in all the right places, but you are not really listening.
  • Adding your anecdote. We often want to show we understand, and that we have shared a similar experience, and so off we go with a “yes, the same thing happened to me!” story, and we have hijacked the other person’s conversation.
  • Waiting to talk. You know how it feels: you get the very clear sense that the other person is just waiting for your noise to stop, before they say their piece. They haven’t listened, they just want to make their argument, or say something clever.

How to Make Exercise a Habit

Another New Year, another set of resolutions. These may include spending more time with the family, eating more vegetables, and the popular resolution to exercise more.

Who doesn’t want to feel fitter and healthier? So what stops us, and what can we do about it?

“Wanting to make exercise a habit and actually doing it are two different things,” says James Clear, author of the bestseller Atomic Habits.

“Changing your behaviour is difficult. Living a new type of lifestyle is hard. This is especially true when you throw in very personal feelings about body image and self-worth.”

Clear recommends developing a ritual to make starting your exercise session easier.

“Habits are behaviours that you repeat over and over again, which means they are also behaviours that you start over and over again. In other words, if you don’t consistently get started, then you won’t have a habit. In many ways, building new habits is simply an exercise in getting started time after time.”

 

Habit stacking

How to make getting started easier? You can add your exercise routine on top of another, easier routine. This is known as habit stacking.

The formula is this:

Before/after/when [CURRENT HABIT], I will [NEW HABIT]. Some examples:

  • Before I get into bed at night, I will get out my workout clothes for the following morning.
  • After I get out of bed in the morning, I will put on my workout clothes.
  • After I take off my work shoes, I will immediately change into my running shoes.
  • When I see a set of stairs, I will take them instead of the escalator or lift.
  • When I listen to my favourite podcast, I will go for a walk.

Unsure of the right trigger for your habit?

Clear recommends brainstorming a list of your current daily habits – for instance, get out of bed, take a shower, make a coffee, eat lunch. You can make your list as long as you like, but what it gives you is a starting point to find the best place to layer your new habit into your lifestyle.

Clear also suggests making sure your cue is highly specific. Rather than saying:
“When I take a break for lunch I will do 10 push-ups” change it to: “When I close my computer for lunch, I will do 10 push-ups next to my desk.”

Eat Smarter

Turkey


If you only eat turkey at once or twice a year, reconsider! There’s good reason to add it to your diet all year round.

We generally think of turkey as a good source of low fat protein (and it is – it has more protein per gram than chicken). Yet we forget that it is also high in all sorts of vitamins and minerals that can boost your health.

Turkey is high in selenium, which is great for your thyroid and immunity and as a powerful antioxidant can help fight free radicals. Free radicals cause cell damage and contribute to ageing and illness.

Plus, turkey gives essential B vitamins including B3, B6 and B12, along with niacin and zinc.

You might have heard advice to eat turkey before bed because it makes you sleepy. It turns out that is not quite true. Turkey does contain tryptophan, which promotes a good sleep and a good mood by helping to produce serotonin and melatonin, but turkey is not very high in tryptophan.

To put it in perspective, a tryptophan supplement to help with sleep usually contains 1-4 grams, whereas a serve of turkey only contains around 205 milligrams.

So go ahead and enjoy your turkey for its protein and vitamins, but do not blame it for making you sleepy.