



Created By Stephen Tuffery
www.stephengraphics.com

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Why being healthy is more important than
being slim
The last few days have made me realise how important it is to live for the day and value your health.
One of my friends was celebrating her 70th birthday. I went to visit her and was shocked to see how much weight she had lost since our last meeting. She is fine though and eats sensibly but is just exhausted.
She is a full time carer for her husband who has prostate cancer and has also suffered a stroke, which has left him physically helpless.
He spent several weeks in hospital and my friend had a fifty mile round trip each day just to visit him.
Eventually, she put a lot of her possessions into storage, made the necessary adaptations to their bungalow and got a support system in place so she could look after her husband at home.
It was a relief not to commute to the hospital everyday but at least then she had
a break. Now she is on call twenty-
He cannot move without help and whilst his mind is alert and active, his speech is not brilliant. He is constantly tired, and his skin itches and is sore from his medication and sitting in the same position. My friend has to do everything for him and never gets the chance to sit down.
Where once she was able to socialise, relax with a good book, or get on her computer, she is now also responsible for the gardening, DIY, car cleaning, etc. My friend is really tired.
The next day we visited my in-
My mother-
She has lost interest in everything and all she wants to do is go out in the car. The
problem is she's so frail even going over the slightest bump hurts her. My father-
My father-
They've been married fifty-
Both my friend and father-
On the television this evening a very sweet little lady aged 110 years, who lives in a care home and looks amazing, gave the nation her recommendations for longevity. Her advice was eat sensibly, exercise and a glass if wine when you want to, but not too often.
It's good advice and certainly exercise is an important factor. My father-
However, his wife can't walk far, won't go in a wheelchair and he can't leave her
so such exercise is unlikely. He must therefore reduce his calorie intake, but he
is an ex chef and likes to cook. He has been brought up to enhance the flavour of
food by adding all the things the doctor has recommended he reduce, and his taste
buds have become accustomed to the taste. At the age of eighty-
It is a fact, as you get older you need to eat less calories simply because you lose muscle at the rate of ½ lb per year. Unless you actively do something to replace it your body will replace the muscle with fat, and being too fat is unhealthy, as you know.
Muscle burns far more calories than fat so unless you are prepared to reduce your calorie intake year after year you need to think about that. Whilst cutting down on the fats, sugars and salts, especially the hidden ones in packaged and processed foods will most certainly help you lose or maintain your preferred weight, you still consciously need to build lean muscle otherwise the next year you'll have to reduce your calorie intake even further.
That little old lady has the right attitude -
Jean Shaw© -
