Article

Total Health

Topic: Fitness and ExerciseBy Danielle VindezPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 914 legacy views

The Quest for Total Health.
Fitness and health are not the same, but they share some common behaviors. They both include regular exercise, adequate sleep, a nutritious diet, abstaining from substance abuse, an ability to cope with stress, an ability to relax, and, practicing both safety habits and preventative care habits.

The distinction to be made is that health also includes a mental and emotional well-being, not merely the absence of disease or the delay of death. While physical fitness itself will not guarantee a healthy life, it is a vital part of the total healthy person.
Physical fitness typically includes cardiovascular endurance, body composition, flexibility, muscular strength, and muscular endurance. The better our performance in these five components of fitness, the lower our risk of disease and the greater the quality of our life.
Depending on your personal goals, and your present fitness and health status, here are some basic healthy behaviors for n
Adequate levels of strength
Resistance exercise - 2 to 3 times/week

Flexibility
Static stretching - daily

Aerobic exercise
Regular, vigorous, large muscle action, 3 to 6 times a week n
Healthy levels of body fat
Balanced caloric intake and expenditure n
Trunk flexibility and integrity
Abdominal and lower back exercises, coupled with stretchesn n
If you are a beginner to regular exercise see your physician before starting out.
Then reflect on taking small measurable steps, in each of the above components.
Your goal is to make exercise a part of your life without making it displeasing and de-motivating.

Start your resistance training, (anaerobic), strength training, with two 20-minute sessions. In a gym setting, consider getting the advice of a qualified trainer. At home, search the Internet for information on home-based muscle work exercises, and proper form guidance.

Your aerobic exercise, the exercise for a strong heart and healthy blood vessels, can be 10 to 30 minutes per session, depending on your present ability. Shoot for everyday, and you’ll find that if you miss a few days you are still doing yourself good. Use the “talk test” to determine the intensity of your walk, jog, cycling, hiking, rowing, or skating program. If you can talk without taking a breathing break, between each word, you can go for more time and intensity.

If you are a veteran to aerobic exercise, (exercise fueled by the oxygen in your cells), and anaerobic exercise (exercise fueled by molecules in your muscles), then you want to stretch your present limits. Challenge yourself to cross train, or do intervals of greater demand, walk or run faster, go uphill, or in the sand, and add more weight resistance to your muscle work.

Taking a five minute stretch break instead of reaching for a candy bar when faced with a stressful situation not only disassociates your mind from the stress, but it makes your body feel better too. While sitting some muscles are in constant contraction, and this leads to lower back stiffness, shoulder, upper back, and hand discomfort. An object in motion stays in motion, and object at rest stays at rest, so move it or you’ll lose it.

Can eating less make you live longer? More and more studies are showing that caloric restriction acts as possible damage control for aging and disease. This is certainly true for regular exercise. Make a promise to yourself this week that you are going to eliminate one nasty food source.

Forget the six pack in the frig and start visualizing six pack abs. Remember dissociation clearly works. Train yourself to relieve your daily stress with a new ritual, one that crunches your abdominals and not your chops. Couple this with a gentle back exercise.

Become your own hero. Take new action on your path to your own health and you will strengthen not only yourself, but also all those you influence.

Article author

About the Author

Danielle Vindez holds the vision of optimal health, conscious eating, proper exercise, and mental balance, for all those seeking to transform their lives. Danielle is a graduate of UCLA, and Coach University. She holds certifications from International Coach Federation, American College of Sports Medicine, the National Strength and Conditioning Association, the American Council on Exercise, and the Arthritis Foundation. For more see www.defineyourself-coaching.com

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Carrying excess weight doesn’t just affect how you look — it can quietly reduce your energy, confidence, and bedroom performance. When a man gains too much belly fat, it can lead to lower testosterone levels, poor blood circulation, and reduced stamina. These changes may make it harder to maintain strong vitality, control, and endurance when it matters most. The good news? Small lifestyle changes can make a powerful difference. By focusing on better nutrition, regular mov

March 10, 2026

Article

Are You 40+ And Feeling…rnSlower metabolism? Stubborn belly fat? Low daily energy? Body stiffness or joint pain? You’re not alone — and you’re NOT “getting old.” Your body just needs a smarter strategy. Introducing The 40+ Fitness & Wellness ResetrnA simple, realistic system designed specifically for men and women over 40 who want to: ✅ Burn belly fat naturallyrn✅ Rebuild lean musclern✅ Boost energy levelsrn✅ Improve heart healthrn✅ Feel confident again

February 18, 2026

Article

Feel tired, inconsistent, or stuck on your fitness journey? This eBook is your gentle reset. rnMany people above 40 notice that weight gain, tiredness, and body weakness no longer respond to the things that worked before. rnThe truth is: the body changes with age, and health routines must change too. rnI recently came across a digital health guide on Selar, created specifically for people 40+, focusing on simple daily habits that fit our lifestyle. rnI shared the details here

February 14, 2026

Article

Movement is one of the most honest forms of self-connection. The body never lies. It holds stress, records emotion, and reveals when something feels off. For many, this is why exercise has always been more than fitness; it’s therapy through motion. But not all movement heals. Some styles exhaust, others distract. True healing often begins in the slow, intentional kind, the kind that lets the body lead and the mind follow.rnThat’s where precision-based training, such as re

November 6, 2025