Since 2003, the International Council on Active Aging has celebrated Active Aging Week. It’s meant to remind people over 50-year-old to stay healthy and take an active role in their lives!
As the weather cools off, people are venturing back outdoors. After a whole season where you’ve retrained your brain to dress for fun in the sun, or stay out of it entirely, it’s time to rethink how you dress.
Wednesday marked the first day of fall. Your weather might be cooling off. With a little bit of chill in the air, fall is the time to get back outside and enjoy yourself while the weather is not too hot and not too cold!
Most of us want to stick to an exercise routine. However, that can be difficult. New research has found a way to help people get into a healthy exercise routine that lasts.
Inflammation can increase insulin resistance. When it’s hot out, we’re less interested in walking. But, knowing a 20-minute walk can lower inflammation might make you more interested in getting out for a walk.
New research says chocolate and cheese are heart-healthy foods. While dairy is known to have benefits and flavanols from chocolate have perks, is the headline too good to be true?
Sometimes you feel like you’re doing really well: you’re eating right and exercising, but you’re tired all the time. If that’s been happening to you, you may be overdoing your “healthy” lifestyle.
If you’re tired, hot or out of breath, there’s the urge to just sit down and relax instead of stretching. However, stretching after exercise really does do your body good. And, there are potential risks related to not stretching.
August 25 is the National Park Service’s 105th birthday and a free day. All the parks are free to the public. But, right now, they are packed, and some require reservations. They all require masks. And facilities like bathrooms may be closed.
We like seated exercise because it’s a way of working out that lowers the danger of falling. We appreciate yoga for how it aids flexibility, breathing, mental health and reduces pain. When you combine the two, you can get the best of both.
Kaatsu has been getting a lot of attention during the Olympics. It’s the practice of restricting blood flow to your muscles while exercising, it’s gaining traction among ordinary people exercising, but the question is, is it safe.
When it’s hot, it’s incredibly tempting to remain sedentary. However, new research might strengthen your resolve to do low-impact exercise like yoga: it can improve bloating, lower stress and boost gut health.
Swimming is an excellent form of exercise that can help you stay cool, fit and may help you maintain healthy blood sugar. It’s aerobic exercise that doesn’t put pressure on your joints.
Getting outdoors is an integral part of staying healthy. In hot weather, exercising outdoors can be too much. One way to enjoy being outside and in the shade is through bird watching.
A study that wanted to examine the link between sleep and physical activity followed more than 380,000 middle-aged people for around 15 years. Researchers found that exercise may counteract the physical harm done by poor sleep quality.
If you want to enjoy a walk with others, you need to be compatible. That way, you can have a great workout — not too slow or fast. The Sloth Hiking Team, whose motto is “We’ll get there when we get there,” know about picking the right group.
We all know that walking is excellent for your health. New research says that walking after meals may aid blood sugar and offer both short-term and long-lasting benefits.
Did you know that stretching specific parts of your body can help what ails you? It’s true, stretching your back can help you manage stress.
Our national parks are beautiful land meant for everyone to enjoy. The Seven Principles of Leave No Trace can help you minimize your impact on the park to ensure that they are gorgeous for generations to come!
Yo-yoing weight seems, to most of us, to be almost inevitable. Now, researchers have done one of the first in-depth studies to figure out the science behind keeping weight off after a diet. Their results might change the way we view weight maintenance.