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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Get By, Get Better
Tough economic times can actually foster healthier lives.
By Quinton Skinner |
October 2008 |
Hidden Opportunities
The Underside of Affluence
Invest in What Matters
When Eva Emerson accepted a job offer in Washington, D.C., and prepared to
relocate from Los Angeles, she decided to give up her car. She knew D.C. had
better public transit and she wouldn’t be driving it every day. But, frankly,
she didn’t want to deal with the gas, insurance and maintenance costs anymore.
The Los Angeles native had relied on her car for a decade, so she was as
surprised as anyone when the only thing she found herself missing was her
drive-time dose of National Public Radio. What surprised her even more were the
unanticipated benefits of being carless. “My apartment is just a few blocks from
the Metro,” she says. “But some days I’ll walk to work or walk home. It takes 40
minutes, and it’s a really nice walk. I get some exercise, I get to unwind after
my day, and I get to know the city. Not to mention the fact that it definitely
saves me money.” Most of us are feeling some pain in our wallets these days.
And, like Emerson, many Americans are rethinking the choices they make as they
navigate this perilous economic terrain. Yet, while lean times bring with them
very real, and not always pleasant, limitations, they also can offer new
opportunities. In difficult times, we’re prodded to more carefully parse our
values, make more discerning choices and broaden our perspective. And that can
yield unexpected — and profoundly positive — benefits for our personal health
and the health of the planet.
Hidden Opportunities
“My parents went through difficult financial times
when I was growing up,” says Steven Gdula, author of The Warmest Room in the
House: How the Kitchen Became the Heart of the 20th Century American Home
(Bloomsbury, 2007). At first, says Gdula, “I remember thinking that it was
humbling, almost humiliating for them.” But he also recalls how his parents (one
Slovak, one Hungarian) relied on the whole foods and simple ingredients of their
traditional ethnic cuisines, used and preserved local produce, and shared
recipes and food with their neighbors. His feelings of embarrassment faded as he
began to appreciate the simple goodness and community spirit those hard times
produced. “We ate fresh vegetables from our backyard garden in the summer,
and my mother canned food and kept it on the shelf for the winter,” says Gdula.
“And people tend to be more generous during difficult times. They shared with
their neighbors, swapping recipes, swapping things from their gardens.”
Once-coveted yet nutritionally bankrupt packaged foods gave way to much simpler
and more fulfilling — both bodily and spiritually — meals. Choosing to eat
out less often and cook more at home, cutting back on meat consumption, or
cycling to work can help us improve our health and drop unwanted weight. Similar
positive health effects can result from the decision to quit or cut back on
expensive habits like smoking, or to cancel high-end cable packages and take on
active pastimes instead. Reducing our consumption “also leads to a greater
sense of balance and quality of life overall,” says Lisa Wise, executive
director of the Center for the New American Dream. “Instead of being on the
‘work-and-spend’ treadmill, we have an opportunity to get more of what really
matters in life.”
The Underside of Affluence
Ironically, many aspects of American affluence,
and the consumption it affords, have made it more difficult for us to enjoy an
enriched and happy existence. We’ve had ample opportunity to eat to excess, buy
machines to do work that would otherwise exercise our bodies (cars, riding
lawnmowers, even garage-door openers), and consume entertainment that robs us of
time spent with family and neighbors. University of Southern California
economist Richard Easterlin, PhD, has studied individual well-being and
concluded that income plays much less of a role than health, education and
marital status. It’s not only possible to make do with less, in other words, but
there’s no reason these changes can’t improve our lives and help us establish
good habits that we can preserve when we find ourselves with more money in the
bank. Dan Buettner, author of The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer From
the People Who’ve Lived the Longest (National Geographic, 2008), concurs. For
the most part, he says, the world’s longest-lived people are on the lower end of
the economic scale. “The only long-term way for people to improve their
physical health is through changing their environment,” Buettner says. “By
buying a bicycle, getting rid of power tools, mowing your own lawn. All of these
things save you money, but they also have an enormous overall impact to your
health.” In this way, affluence isn’t necessarily the clear road to health
and happiness that we’ve been led to believe. And while reducing our consumption
has often been presented as a moral endeavor, perhaps it also can be seen as a
way to vivify our lives. “American affluence corresponded with a
skyrocketing of chronic diseases,” Buettner says,
noting that the key change we can all make is “simplifying your home life and
your community life.” Even simplifying your food is to your advantage:
People with the longest life expectancy tend to eat locally grown whole foods. Ask new
D.C. resident Emerson to weigh how much she misses the independence her car
once granted her, and she’ll glowingly describe her new handcart and how easy it
is to bring groceries home from the store on foot. “Oh, no,” she says. “I
haven’t missed it.” Simple eating, more exercise, more connection and time
spent in one another’s company: It turns out that many of life’s most beneficial
activities are also the least expensive. And no one has ever gone broke pursuing
them. Quinton Skinner is a Minneapolis writer.
Invest in What Matters
Here’s a guide to investing in what matters most
when the economy is faltering and money is tight. Don’t Scrimp on the Essentials: It’s wise to keep up preventive dental and
health care even when times are lean. Preventive care helps head off big
health crises that can really break the bank. Make practical, crisis-prevention
decisions in other areas, too: Think about letting go of your second car, but
don’t wait on getting that leaky roof repaired. Quality Trumps Quantity: Buy simple, whole and filling foods instead of large
quantities of cheap, processed items. A bag of produce from the farmers’ market
keeps your family healthier than a hatchback full of processed food from the
discount megastore. Do It Yourself: Cook at home rather than buy expensive takeout. Mow your own
lawn and shovel your own sidewalk and driveway. Create inexpensive handmade
gifts rather than buy pricey baubles for the people you care about. Multitask: Look for efficient things that accomplish more than one goal at
once. Cycle to work to save money and get fit. Read library books to your kids
instead of watching expensive cable TV.
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Get By, Get Better
Tough economic times can actually foster healthier lives.
By Quinton Skinner | Insight Department, October 2008 |
Hidden Opportunities
The Underside of Affluence
Invest in What Matters
When Eva Emerson accepted a job offer in Washington, D.C., and prepared to
relocate from Los Angeles, she decided to give up her car. She knew D.C. had
better public transit and she wouldn’t be driving it every day. But, frankly,
she didn’t want to deal with the gas, insurance and maintenance costs anymore.
The Los Angeles native had relied on her car for a decade, so she was as
surprised as anyone when the only thing she found herself missing was her
drive-time dose of National Public Radio. What surprised her even more were the
unanticipated benefits of being carless. “My apartment is just a few blocks from
the Metro,” she says. “But some days I’ll walk to work or walk home. It takes 40
minutes, and it’s a really nice walk. I get some exercise, I get to unwind after
my day, and I get to know the city. Not to mention the fact that it definitely
saves me money.” Most of us are feeling some pain in our wallets these days.
And, like Emerson, many Americans are rethinking the choices they make as they
navigate this perilous economic terrain. Yet, while lean times bring with them
very real, and not always pleasant, limitations, they also can offer new
opportunities. In difficult times, we’re prodded to more carefully parse our
values, make more discerning choices and broaden our perspective. And that can
yield unexpected — and profoundly positive — benefits for our personal health
and the health of the planet.
Hidden Opportunities (Back to Top)
“My parents went through difficult financial times
when I was growing up,” says Steven Gdula, author of The Warmest Room in the
House: How the Kitchen Became the Heart of the 20th Century American Home
(Bloomsbury, 2007). At first, says Gdula, “I remember thinking that it was
humbling, almost humiliating for them.” But he also recalls how his parents (one
Slovak, one Hungarian) relied on the whole foods and simple ingredients of their
traditional ethnic cuisines, used and preserved local produce, and shared
recipes and food with their neighbors. His feelings of embarrassment faded as he
began to appreciate the simple goodness and community spirit those hard times
produced. “We ate fresh vegetables from our backyard garden in the summer,
and my mother canned food and kept it on the shelf for the winter,” says Gdula.
“And people tend to be more generous during difficult times. They shared with
their neighbors, swapping recipes, swapping things from their gardens.”
Once-coveted yet nutritionally bankrupt packaged foods gave way to much simpler
and more fulfilling — both bodily and spiritually — meals. Choosing to eat
out less often and cook more at home, cutting back on meat consumption, or
cycling to work can help us improve our health and drop unwanted weight. Similar
positive health effects can result from the decision to quit or cut back on
expensive habits like smoking, or to cancel high-end cable packages and take on
active pastimes instead. Reducing our consumption “also leads to a greater
sense of balance and quality of life overall,” says Lisa Wise, executive
director of the Center for the New American Dream. “Instead of being on the
‘work-and-spend’ treadmill, we have an opportunity to get more of what really
matters in life.”
The Underside of Affluence (Back to Top)
Ironically, many aspects of American affluence,
and the consumption it affords, have made it more difficult for us to enjoy an
enriched and happy existence. We’ve had ample opportunity to eat to excess, buy
machines to do work that would otherwise exercise our bodies (cars, riding
lawnmowers, even garage-door openers), and consume entertainment that robs us of
time spent with family and neighbors. University of Southern California
economist Richard Easterlin, PhD, has studied individual well-being and
concluded that income plays much less of a role than health, education and
marital status. It’s not only possible to make do with less, in other words, but
there’s no reason these changes can’t improve our lives and help us establish
good habits that we can preserve when we find ourselves with more money in the
bank. Dan Buettner, author of The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer From
the People Who’ve Lived the Longest (National Geographic, 2008), concurs. For
the most part, he says, the world’s longest-lived people are on the lower end of
the economic scale. “The only long-term way for people to improve their
physical health is through changing their environment,” Buettner says. “By
buying a bicycle, getting rid of power tools, mowing your own lawn. All of these
things save you money, but they also have an enormous overall impact to your
health.” In this way, affluence isn’t necessarily the clear road to health
and happiness that we’ve been led to believe. And while reducing our consumption
has often been presented as a moral endeavor, perhaps it also can be seen as a
way to vivify our lives. “American affluence corresponded with a
skyrocketing of chronic diseases,” Buettner says,
noting that the key change we can all make is “simplifying your home life and
your community life.” Even simplifying your food is to your advantage:
People with the longest life expectancy tend to eat locally grown whole foods. Ask new
D.C. resident Emerson to weigh how much she misses the independence her car
once granted her, and she’ll glowingly describe her new handcart and how easy it
is to bring groceries home from the store on foot. “Oh, no,” she says. “I
haven’t missed it.” Simple eating, more exercise, more connection and time
spent in one another’s company: It turns out that many of life’s most beneficial
activities are also the least expensive. And no one has ever gone broke pursuing
them. Quinton Skinner is a Minneapolis writer.
Invest in What Matters (Back to Top)
Here’s a guide to investing in what matters most
when the economy is faltering and money is tight. Don’t Scrimp on the Essentials: It’s wise to keep up preventive dental and
health care even when times are lean. Preventive care helps head off big
health crises that can really break the bank. Make practical, crisis-prevention
decisions in other areas, too: Think about letting go of your second car, but
don’t wait on getting that leaky roof repaired. Quality Trumps Quantity: Buy simple, whole and filling foods instead of large
quantities of cheap, processed items. A bag of produce from the farmers’ market
keeps your family healthier than a hatchback full of processed food from the
discount megastore. Do It Yourself: Cook at home rather than buy expensive takeout. Mow your own
lawn and shovel your own sidewalk and driveway. Create inexpensive handmade
gifts rather than buy pricey baubles for the people you care about. Multitask: Look for efficient things that accomplish more than one goal at
once. Cycle to work to save money and get fit. Read library books to your kids
instead of watching expensive cable TV.
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