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Wellness isn鈥檛 that complicated.
Wellness isn鈥檛 that complicated. (Photo: Marta Pantaleo)
Notecard Guide to Fitness

We’ve Reached Peak Wellness. Most of It Is Nonsense.

Here's what actually works

Published: 
Wellness isn鈥檛 that complicated.
(Photo: Marta Pantaleo)

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In Silicon Valley, . In New York, . In the Midwest, the Neurocore Brain Performance Center brain training for everything from ADHD, anxiety, and depression to migraines, stress, autism-spectrum disorder, athletic performance, memory, and cognition. And online, companies like Goop promote 鈥溾 and a 听meal kit, complete with 鈥渘utritional supplements, probiotics, detox and beauty tinctures, and beauty and detox teas.鈥 Across the country, everyone is looking for a cure for what ails them, which has led to a booming听billion-dollar听industry鈥攚hat I鈥檝e come to call the Wellness Industrial Complex.

The problem is that so much of what鈥檚 sold in the name of modern-day wellness has . Which doesn鈥檛 mean that wellness isn鈥檛 a real thing. According to decades of research, wellness is a lifestyle or state of being that goes beyond merely the absence of disease and into the realm of maximizing human potential. Once someone鈥檚 basic needs are met (e.g., food and shelter), scientists say that wellness emerges from nourishing six dimensions of your health: physical, emotional, cognitive, social, spiritual, and environmental.听According to published in 1997 in The American Journal of Health Promotion, these dimensions are closely intertwined. Evidence suggests that they work together to create a sum that is greater than its parts.听

Nourishing these interrelated dimensions of health, however, does not require that you buy any lotions, potions, or pills. Wellness鈥攖he kind that actually works鈥攊s simple: it鈥檚 about committing to basic practices, day in and day out, as individuals and communities.

Unfortunately, these basics tend to get overlooked in favor of easy-to-market nonsense. That鈥檚 because,听as听many marketers (including in the self-help space)听are fond of saying,听鈥淵ou can鈥檛 sell the basics.鈥澨齀 think that鈥檚 naive. We鈥檇 be much better off if we stopped obsessing over hacks听and instead focused on evidence-based stuff that works. Here鈥檚 how to get started.

Physical: Move Your Body and听Don鈥檛 Eat Crap鈥攂ut Don鈥檛 Diet Either

(Marta Pantaleo)

Decades of research shows that just 30 minutes of moderate to intense daily physical activity lowers your risk for听,听, , and many types of听. While this can certainly mean training for a marathon or setting CrossFit records, it doesn鈥檛 have to. Hiking, gardening, and even fast-paced walking can potentially听provideall the same benefits. Basically, anything that makes your breathing labored for a sustained period does the trick.

Another simple way to think about physical activity comes from physician and physiologist听. 鈥淢ove your body every day,鈥 he says. 鈥淪ometimes very hard.鈥 Based on a new study in the online journal听Scientific Reports, I鈥檇 add:听try to do at least some of it outside.听Researchers have found that people who spend at least two hours outdoors in green spaces every week have better mental and physical health than those who don鈥檛.听

The other aspect of physical health is nutrition. Here again, the best advice is听the simplest: ignore diets and supplements and, instead, just aim to cut out junk like processed and fried foods. A study that was just published in the reviewed data from hundreds of clinical trials involving nearly a million people and found that 16 of the most popular supplements and eight of the most popular diets have virtually no benefit鈥攁nd some cause harm.

Emotional: Don鈥檛 Hide Your Feelings, Get Help When You Need It

(Marta Pantaleo)

Another big issue with what passes for modern-day wellness is that it creates the impression that everyone is happy all the time and that you should be, too. But听like selective sharing on social media, this is not the reality of being human.

People get sad. Psychologists that hiding and repressing that only makes it worse. Studies show that the more you hold something back or try to force it away,听. On the contrary, the more vulnerable you are鈥攂oth with yourself and others鈥攖he better. Researchers at the University of Mannheim, in Germany, call this the 鈥渂eautiful mess effect.鈥 Through multiple experiments, they鈥檝e that even though sharing your feelings may seem like a weakness to you, to others听it seems courageous and builds trust and connection. In other words: stop trying so damn hard to be invincible, and just be yourself. Most听people will be receptive and caring. And those who aren鈥檛?听Screw 鈥檈m.听

If something feels way off, don鈥檛 be scared to get help. Mental illness can happen to anyone, at any stage of life, and in any context. I know firsthand that this is terrifying, but with professional assistance, rates of recovery are actually quite high.听

Social: It鈥檚 Not All About Productivity;听Relationships Matter, Too

(Marta Pantaleo)

The roots of a redwood tree only run six to twelve听feet deep. Instead of growing downward, they grow out, extending hundreds of feet laterally and wrapping themselves around the roots of other trees. When rough weather comes, it鈥檚 the network of closely intertwined roots that allows the trees to stand strong. We are the same.

In 2010, researchers from Brigham Young University completed a comprehensive that followed more than 300,000 people for an average of 7.5 years and learned that the mortality risks associated with loneliness exceeded those associated with obesity and physical inactivity and were comparable to the risks of smoking. More recent听 shows that digital connections can be beneficial in certain circumstances (e.g., to stay in touch with geographically distant friends and family), but they cannot replace in-person ones and the value of physical presence and touch.

In their book , Harvard psychiatry professors Jacqueline Olds and Richard Schwartz write that an increased focus on 鈥減roductivity鈥 and the 鈥渃ult of busyness鈥 is crowding out time for developing meaningful relationships.听This may be especially true among听millennials.听A recent poll from the market research company YouGov听听that 30 percent of millennials say they feel lonely and 22 percent said they have zero friends. This is hugely problematic, and a trend we all, together, must work to reverse.听

Cognitive: Follow Your Interests, Do Deep-Focused Work

(Marta Pantaleo)

鈥淔ind your passion鈥 is one of the most popular self-help phrases, but it鈥檚 quite misleading and sometimes even harmful. Researchers call this a fit mindset听of passion, or the belief that you鈥檒l find an activity or pursuit about which you are immediately passionate from the get-go. Although over of people hold this mindset, it rarely leads to lasting passion. People with fit mindsets tend to overemphasize their initial feelings, search for perfection, and quit when the going gets tough. Better than a fit mindset is a development mindset,听in which you understand that passion takes time to emerge, thus lowering the bar for further engagement in something from 鈥渢his is perfect鈥 to 鈥渢his is interesting.鈥 show that those who have development mindsets are more likely to end up with sustainable and energizing passions.听

And when you are working on something, regardless of what it is, eliminate distractions so you can give it your full attention. An app called Track Your Happiness has听allowed thousands of people to report their feelings in real time. The main : the more present and fully engaged you are with听what鈥檚 in front of you, the happier you鈥檒l be. It鈥檚 amazing how much听 day can do to improve your mood.

Spiritual: Cultivate Purpose, Be Open to Awe

(Marta Pantaleo)

Organized religion is on the decline in America, especially for younger people. The 2018 , conducted by Deseret News in Utah, found that 鈥渇or millennials and GenXers, the most common religion is no religion at all.鈥 This may not be problematic in itself, but for centuries, religion served as a driving purpose for many people. When nothing fills this vacuum, the effect can be a negative one. A published earlier this year in JAMA听NetworkOpen found that people without a strong life purpose鈥攄efined as a sense of feeling rooted in your life and taking actions toward meaningful goals鈥攚ere more than twice as likely to die between the years of the study (2006 to 2010) compared with people who had one, even after controlling for things like gender, race, wealth, and education level. Speaking to NPR, Celeste Leigh Pearce, one of the authors of听the study, , 鈥淚 approached this [study] with a very skeptical eye, [but] I just find it so convincing that I鈥檓 developing a whole research program around it.鈥 Alan Rozanski, a cardiology professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, in New York City, says that purpose is 鈥渢he deepest driver of well-being there is.鈥

Though purpose need not be based on organized religion, cultivating a cohesive sense of direction, core values, and connection with something beyond yourself is important. For some听this takes the form of going to church, synagogue, mosque, or sangha. For others听it鈥檚 about feeling connected to evolution, being a part of nature. (Of course, these two don鈥檛 need to be exclusive.) The work of Dacher Keltner, a professor of psychology at the University of California at Berkeley, has that experiencing awe鈥攚atching a beautiful sunset, listening to moving music, witnessing听a master at their craft鈥攍eads to self-transcendence and feelings of spiritual connection.听

What won鈥檛 lead to spirituality and true well-being? Trying to find meaning in all the stuff that modern-day wellness implicitly and explicitly promotes, such as beauty, wealth, antiaging, and sex appeal. As David Foster Wallace in his famous 2005 commencement address at Kenyon College:听

Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship. And the compelling reason for maybe choosing some sort of god or spiritual-type thing to worship …听is that pretty much anything else you worship will eat you alive. If you worship money and things, if they are where you tap real meaning in life, then you will never have enough, never feel you have enough. It鈥檚 the truth. Worship your own body and beauty and sexual allure, and you will always feel ugly, and when time and age start showing, you will die a million deaths before they finally plant you. On one level, we all know this stuff already鈥攊t鈥檚 been codified as myths, proverbs, clich茅s, bromides, epigrams, parables: the skeleton of every great story. The trick is keeping the truth up front in daily consciousness.

Environmental: Care for Your Space

(Marta Pantaleo)

Our surroundings shape us in so many ways. Yet we鈥檙e rarely intentional about them.

On a micro level, think about your acute environment daily. Is your phone always on? Are you constantly being interrupted by notifications? Are you in a space conducive to the goal you want to accomplish? Do you keep lots of junk food in the house? Do you surround yourself with junk content? The goal is to design your environment to support the behaviors you desire.

On a macro level, ask yourself these questions: Do I听live in a place that feels unlivable? Does my听commute totally suck my听soul? I鈥檓 aware that I鈥檝e got a lot of privilege to suggest moving geographically, but the kind of move I鈥檓 suggesting is one away from crazily expensive, competitive, and congested cities. I can鈥檛 tell you how many people I know who feel 鈥渢rapped鈥 in big cities like New York听or San Francisco. Move! There are plenty of places with lower costs of living, more access to nature, and good jobs. And wherever you are, take care of the planet. If we don鈥檛, everything else in this article will eventually be moot.听


This is what you need if you really want to be well. You have to cut out the crap and focus on the basics. This stuff is simple鈥攁nd though it鈥檚 not always easy, it鈥檚 not always so hard either.

Brad Stulberg () is a performance coach and writes听国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Do It Better column. He is also bestselling author of the books听and听. Subscribe to his newsletter .听

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