Health

Can You Really Drain Your Lymphatic System, And Should You?

Did you know your body has an inbuilt sewerage system? It’s called the lymphatic system, and is a crucial part of how your body fights infection and disease....

Health Topics

Introduction to Kundalini Yoga

6 stretches to warm up and cool down

6 exercises to increase your strength

Keep headaches at bay

Six ways to define your waist

7 easy moves for strength

Hung Yoghurt with Pomegranate, Mint and Seeds

Green Energy-
Booster Smoothie

16 moves for stronger, sexier legs

Eat right for your baby

On the germ trail

Bananas help fight against HIV

Hurry up on healthy food

Peanut allergy linked to worse asthma in kids

Antiseptic baths help fight ‘superbugs’

A sensitive topic

Is it you or the dog?

Calcium may help you live longer

Altruism a sinking quality

A taste for fat

Autism awareness

Plant-focused diet may curb breast cancer risk

Carrot and Raspberry Muffins

Light helps keep spinach full of vitamins: study

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Being healthy is a dynamic process because it is always changing. We all have times of good health, times of sickness, and maybe even times of serious illness. As our lifestyles change, so does our level of healthiness.

Those of us who participate in regular physical activity do so partly to improve the current and future level of our health. We strive toward an optimal state of well-being. As our lifestyle improves, our healthiness also improves and we experience less disease and sickness.

When most people are asked what it means to be healthy, they normally respond with the four components of fitness mentioned earlier (cardiorespiratory ability, muscular ability, flexibility, and body composition). Although these components are a critical part of being healthy, they are not the only contributing factors. Physical healthiness is only one aspect of our overall healthiness.

The other components include: social, mental , emotional and spiritual health.