Need To Make A Healthy Change? Start With Self-Care Sprints

You needn’t run a marathon to improve your wellness.
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Jordan Siemens via Getty Images
Is starting a health or fitness routine overwhelming? Try out new healthy habits for five minutes at a time to see if they stick.

Day after day, you’re deluged with all manner of media pushing you to do this or that to achieve your holy grail of optimal health and well-being. Guzzle the green shake, hit the hot yoga, hold a five-minute plank or unplug for an hour. Despite repeated efforts to do what the guru de jour is advocating, you keep falling down on your behind, feeling defeated by what’s beginning to look like mission impossible.

Instead of an overhaul, why not start small, so that you’re not overwhelmed? I like to think of it as a daily self-care sprint. Rather than investing tons of time upfront, try out new healthy habits for five minutes at a time to see if they stick. That way, whether you’re time-starved, sleep-deprived or otherwise overburdened, you can get past excuses or fears and finally take that first step toward establishing a healthy lifestyle. Do what you want – and what you need.

Commit to performing just one daily sprint in each of three areas – improve your mind, eat well and strengthen your body – and work on each new habit until it sticks. Heck, that’s just 15 minutes a day at the very least. You can do this! 

To help get you started, I’ve created just a few guidelines:

  1. All devices and screens should be turned off unless required for the sprint.

  2. Do as many sprints as you wish throughout the day.

  3. Stepping it up: If you’re just beginning, limit any new habits to five-minute sprints. Once you get in the groove, you can expand any five-minute sprints that “stick” to 10 or 15 minutes and add more sprints. Finally, as you advance, you can continue to increase the amount of time you spend on a self-care sprint and the number of sprints you do.

To get started, here are some ideas of self-care sprints you might try. Of course, feel free to create your own lists that focus on areas you’d like to improve or address.

Improve Your Mind

  • Meditate or pray.

  • Write in a journal.

  • Take five deep, cleansing breaths.

  • Sit silently and be mindfully observant of everything around you.

  • Write a list of five things for which you’re grateful.

  • Write a list of five things that bring you joy.

  • Integrate at least one thing that brings you joy into each day.

  • Laugh out loud.

  • Play with a pet.

  • Read a book.

  • Listen to music.

  • Watch the sunrise or sunset.

  • Send texts, emails or handwrite a brief note of friendship, love or gratitude to a friend or loved one.

  • De-clutter a messy home or work area.

  • Write down five terrific things about your body, appearance or performance.

  • Make plans to go out with friends or family.

  • Soak in a tub.

  • To wind down before you go to sleep, spend five minutes laying in muted light reflecting on one positive highlight of your day.

Eat Well

  • Remove processed or refined foods from your kitchen.

  • De-clutter your kitchen and eating area.

  • Chop vegetables.

  • Make a smoothie.

  • Learn how to read a nutrition label.

  • Pack your lunch or snacks.

  • Create a lovely ambiance for eating – a place setting, music, table flowers, or whatever else you wish to include; it’s worth reiterating, the TV and all other devices and screens should be turned off.

  • Write your grocery list.

  • Identify three to five foods you might binge on and substitute in a tasty, healthy substitute for each.

  • Sign up for a food-tracking app or program.

  • Learn a new recipe.

  • Pull out the best china for tea or coffee, and savor.

  • Schedule a family or friends shared meal date.

  • Log your foods in a journal or on a tracker.

Strengthen Your Body

  • Get up and move your body for five minutes after 45 minutes of sitting.

  • Take a five-minute walk.

  • Walk stairs.

  • Walk hills.

  • Crank up the music and dance.

  • Jump rope.

  • Choose a wearable tracking device.

  • Do a combination of one or more exercises, such as bent-knee or total body push-ups, wall squats, standing on one leg until you can’t any longer, planks or bridges.

  • Strength train using one or more body parts, such as your back and biceps.

  • Do ab exercises.

  • Do yoga poses.

  • Do pilates.

  • Run in place, on a treadmill or outdoors.

  • Use any cardio equipment, such as an elliptical, a treadmill, a cycle or a rower.

  • Choose new exercise music.

  • Register for a charity walk, run or bike event.

  • De-clutter your workout clothes closet area.

  • Launder and organize your workout clothes.

  • Pack your gym bag.

  • Stretch.

Happy sprinting!

Need To Make A Healthy Change? Start With Self-Care Sprints was originally published on U.S. News & World Report.

Before You Go

6 Of The Best Butt Exercises You're Probably Not Doing
Squat To Sumo Squat(01 of06)
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A wider stance with the toes slightly turned outward recruits smaller lower-body muscles into your squat while working the big ones even more. Combining the sumo squat with a more traditional one turns this into a superset of sorts. With your weight in your heels, sit back and down, keeping the chest up, until your thighs are parallel with the floor. After returning to standing, rotate the toes out about 45 degrees and squat again. That’s one rep. Aim for three sets of 15. (credit:Damon Dahlen/Huffington Post)
Glute Press(02 of06)
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Start on your hands and knees. While balancing on one leg, flex the other foot and press the heel toward the ceiling. Imagine you’re balancing a glass of water on that raised heel to help you keep it level. When your thigh is just past parallel to the ground, lower your leg back to a neutral position without letting it touch the ground. Try for 12 on each side, and work up to three sets. (credit:Damon Dahlen/Huffington Post)
Standing Kickback(03 of06)
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Standing tall, balance on one leg and lift the opposite leg straight back. Keep the lifted leg as straight as possible, focusing on squeezing the muscles on that side. Hold onto the back of a chair if balancing feels tough. Completely 15 on each leg and work up to repeating three times. If it gets too easy, try it with a cable machine for added resistance. (credit:Damon Dahlen/Huffington Post)
Stability Ball Wall Sit(04 of06)
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Leaning back onto a stability ball not only adds a bit of core work as you keep yourself balanced, it also helps support good upper-body form throughout this move, which, without the ball, would basically be a squat. With the ball around your lower to middle back, move your feet about six inches in front of your body. You should feel like you’re leaning back at an angle. Lower your body as your back rolls along the ball. Your butt should move slightly under the ball. When your thighs are parallel to the floor, stand back up. Try for three sets of 15. (credit:Damon Dahlen/Huffington Post)
Single-Leg Bridge(05 of06)
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There’s no reason not to go for a classic glute bridge, but balancing on one leg kicks the move up a notch, and requires some additional core work to boot. Lying on your back with your arms by your sides, plant your right foot on the floor and extend the left leg straight toward the ceiling. If your hamstrings are tight and keeping that leg straight is tough, extend it at a 45-degree angle like this instead. Pressing through the right heel, lift the hips until your spine is straight. Then gently lower the hips back to starting position. Try for 12 on each leg, and work up to completing three sets. (credit:Damon Dahlen/Huffington Post)
Curtsy Lunge(06 of06)
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You also can’t go wrong with a classic lunge, but this variation gets deep into those glutes and outer thighs. Start with your feet hip-width apart, then step the right foot behind the left, as if you were curtsying before a queen. Bend the knees and lower your body until the left thigh is parallel to the ground. Keep both knees bent at about 90 degrees and the chest and shoulders up and back. Try 12 curtsies on each side and work up to three sets. (credit:Damon Dahlen/Huffington Post)

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