Mindset
Mindset is the first and most important ingredient in The MEANS to an End Lifestyle. The right anti-aging mindset is needed to make the other four components work. Without it, none of the other four actions will sustain themselves over the long-term.
Mindset is an established set of attitudes, intimate beliefs, and feelings about ourselves and the world in which we live. It creates our worldview or philosophy of life. This shapes our mental attitude and determines how we will interpret and respond to any situation life throws our way. As a result, these fixed states of mind create habits, which shape our future in all aspects of life.
Our state of mind can influence our physical health. The mind-body connection is real. A body subjected to long-term negative thinking will have a higher probability for ill-health than a body congruent with positive thoughts. Chronic stress can devastate the body.
… our thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and attitudes can positively or negatively affect our biological functioning. In other words, our minds can affect how healthy our bodies are!
Our minds are in constant motion—some estimate we have 50 – 60,000 thoughts per day. Once we reach adulthood, 90 – 95% of our thoughts are the same as the day before. This becomes our personality, our mindset, who we are, and therefore, creates our personal and physical reality.
There are two overriding roles the mind plays in our health:
- The creation of our habits, and
- The shaping of our physical reality
Habits
Decisions. We make thousands of them every day. Most we make without thought, habits deeply engrained within. Some habits serve us. Others conspire against us. But where do these come from?
From the moment we’re born, our minds learn and grow. From the environment, from our personal contacts, from our daily experiences. Thoughts internalised often enough become automatic, instinctual. Habits.
The diminutive chains of habit are scarcely ever heavy enough to be felt, till they are too strong to be broken.
What if our habits don’t serve us? How can we adopt a mindset to better the odds of living a long and healthy life?
Philosophy
While each of us has a philosophy of life that is complex and unique, the starting point for a philosophy of anti-aging begins with responsibility.
Sadly, we often abdicate this responsibility when it comes to our health. We believe ads we have read or seen on TV. We take as gospel the words of a medical community with little training on prevention of disease. Taking meds is often the default first choice when confronted with a health issue. We fall for old wives’ tales or the latest fad diet or exercise.
What we need to accept is: You are responsible for you. No one else. You are where you are today in every aspect of your life—your health, your wealth, your relationships—based on all decisions you have made to this point of time.
You are responsible for you.
Who or what is responsible for your state of health? Your weight? The sore back? Your chronic condition? The old man staring back at you in the mirror every morning?
Not your spouse or your doctor. Not the government. It’s not a lack of medications, an operation, or the flu shot.
You are. You.
Don’t like where you are today?
Make different decisions. Adopt an anti-aging mindset.
It’s time to take back our minds and think. It’s time to take responsibility for our health and the quality of our future lives. How?
New Thoughts
Start with purpose. A definite purpose.
Who do you want to be? Want a new and improved you? What do you want to accomplish with the time you have left on planet Earth? Want to feel better and see a brighter future?
Find your true purpose by asking questions.
- Why is living a long and healthy life important to me?
- How would meeting my first great-grandchild affect me?
- What gets me excited enough to leap out of bed every day?
- What will do that thirty years from now?
The better the questions, the more compelling the purpose.
New Beliefs
With purpose you can change your beliefs. Jettison the thoughts of the long, slow slide into a nursing home. Don’t accept chronic disease, a fragile, overweight body, and a weakening mind as inevitable. A cane or a walker—or worse, a wheelchair. A yanked driver’s licence. Walk-in bathtubs. Meds. Adult diapers.
Banish these thoughts.
Use the leverage of purpose to reject this thinking. Replace it with optimistic beliefs about aging. About relationships. Mobility. A sharp mind. Living an independent life.
Think about it—if you are in your fifties or sixties, you have another 30, 40, even 50 years or more of life left to live. Many of these years can be productive and joyful. It starts with an anti-aging mindset and believing it possible.
New Choices
Much of what you can do is plain common sense—things you know. The entire world knows smoking devastates the human body—quitting is the only option. That daily chug of soda isn’t good for you. Eating a steady diet of processed food isn’t either. A sedentary lifestyle spent binge-watching Netflix won’t cut it. If you need to lose weight, you know it but don’t act upon it. Exercise is important but can never find the time? Prioritise it and carve out several hours a week.
Getting old is inevitable. Being old is not. Choose to believe that. Use your mind. Think your way to a healthier future you by making better choices.
To me, good health is more than just exercise and diet. It’s really a point of view and a mental attitude you have about yourself.
– Albert Schweitzer
New Actions and Behaviours
Now that you’ve made new choices, take action. Like exercising a weak muscle with weights, start small. Commit to grow every day, increasing the effort, making bigger and better choices.
Start creating those new habits today. Baby steps.
Quit something. Coke. Pepsi. Netflix. Watching the nightly news. Smoking.
Do something new. Ten squats or push-ups. Or five on your knees, if that’s all you can do. Increase it daily. Get up an hour earlier every day. Get an extra 30 minutes of sleep. Learn to play chess. Start painting. Volunteer in a local youth organisation. Eat six servings of veggies a day.
Dedicate time every day to learn. Self-improvement. Daily meditation. Take up ballroom dancing. Or coding. Revisit your high school French.
In short, take action. Action towards your purpose. Toward an anti-aging mindset.
…We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”
New Habits
Understand the rest of your life is a marathon, not a sprint. If it’s taken you most of your adult life to lose your health and fitness, it won’t come back quickly. But it will come back if you act. If you create new habits.
Action. Correct action. Rinse and repeat and it becomes a habit. It’s these habits that become your anti-aging mindset and lifestyle.
The Anti-Aging Mindset
Few of us want to die but all of us will. Even fewer of us want to end up immobile, without a mind of our own, and zero independence. Me? I always joke I want to drop dead on a soccer field after celebrating a brilliant goal scored the day after my 120th birthday.
Who wouldn’t want to live for as long as possible if your quality of life was terrific right to the end?
Your mindset—your outlook on life—is the critical first step to improving your odds of living a long and healthy life. You do it by changing your thinking. Forming new beliefs. Making new choices. Taking sensible action and creating new behaviours. The resulting new habits will serve you well.
These new habits will surprise you. Surprise you by changing your reality. By changing your health. By changing the quality of the future you.
It’s doable. It’s within your reach. Will you do it?
This is the second in a series of six articles written by The Anti-Aging Guy. They define the beliefs and habits that best serve in the quest for living a long and healthy life. This manifesto, called The MEANS to an End Lifestyle™, begins with an overview, then details each of the five component parts. Enjoy!
- The MEANS to an End Lifestyle™
- Mindset
- Exercise
- Avoidance
- Nutrition (coming soon)
- Sleep (coming soon)