Family having fun outside

Family Focus in June

Welcome, Happy Activists! A Happy Activist is someone who, through kind words and intentional actions, strives to make the world a better place. Live Happy invites you to join our #HappyActs movement! On the 20th of each month, we encourage everyone to incorporate kindness into your daily lives by participating in each month’s planned activity. The more who join the #HappyActs movement, the more positive impact we'll all have on our homes, workplaces and communities. What you think and do matters! June’s theme is family. Positive relationships, especially with those we’re closest to, are one of the five key elements of Martin Seligman, Ph.D.’s, PERMA theory of well-being. Our June 20 Happy Act is to help families thrive. This month, we are featuring the Steve & Marjorie Harvey Foundation, a mentoring program for at-risk youth and single women, and volunteering at The Stewpot, an organization that supports families experiencing homelessness. 3 Steps on How to Prepare for a Happy Act: Research what charitable opportunities are near you. Contact the organization and discuss how you can help. Plan a time to go volunteer and/or determine what you can donate. Learn more: Develop family strengths. Common ways to do that are through nurturing relationships, establishing routines, adapting to challenges and connecting to communities. Tell family stories. Family narratives can help kids forge their own identities in the world and weave together generations. Summer is here; enjoy! 33 ideas of what to read, do, watch and listen to for summer togetherness. Play games! From Parcheesi to Ping-Pong, tiddlywinks to tag, games teach sportsmanship, communication and other social skills. Create a happiness board. Dream about your next vacation, focus on goals, plan volunteer outings as a family with a Family Happiness Board. Five Tips to Increase Family Bliss: Unplug. Unless you’re expecting an urgent message, stash your phone and tablet and focus on your family when you’re together. Divide and conquer. If siblings aren’t getting along, give the relationship some space and spend an afternoon on separate activities to help give everyone a break from a bickering patch. Maintain family routines. For special traditions like family meals, game nights or bedtime reading routines, keep everyone together and at ease by providing a predictable framework and making everyone feel welcome. Focus on what’s going right. Family togetherness can translate into too much of a focus on messy rooms, uncleared dishes or curfews violated. Don’t forget to point out the daily wins and acts of kindness that you’d like to see more of. Greet with a hug and part with a kiss. Huggingproduces happy neurochemicals such as endorphins, oxytocin and serotonin. Take the time to give your family a warm hello and goodbye even if you are in a hurry. Additional Resources: Steve and Marjorie Harvey Foundation The Stewpot March of Dimes Boys and Girls Clubs of America Big Brothers Big Sisters
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Rediscover Your Authentic Self

6 Ways to Rediscover Your Authentic Self

Quick two-question quiz. 1. What things did you love to do before marriage, kids or increasing work responsibilities, including side hustles to help pay the bills? 2. How many of those things do you still do now? For many of us, spending time doing the things we love the most gets sidelined for the big “r” word—responsibilities. Sure, we’d love to take in a matinee on a Saturday, but kids’ soccer games and a trip to the grocery store take priority. Readers we asked miss spontaneity, creative projects, cranking up the music, reading and the indulgence of sleeping in. While not always doing what you want to do is just part of adulting, drifting away from what you love can erode happiness and cause you to lose sight of who you really are. How do you maintain the daily grind of responsibilities and stay connected to what you love? Rediscover your authentic self with our list of tips. Facilitate your own wake-up call Sherianna Boyle, author of the new book Emotional Detox: 7 Steps to Release Toxicity and Energize Joy believes focusing on the present can facilitate your own wake-up call and increase awareness. “No doubt getting married, raising children and becoming a homeowner gives us a lot of extra things to think about. When we worry, stress and overthink, the less energy we have. Choose to focus on the now and your energy will grow,” she says. Let yourself feel your emotions and use them as guideposts. Don’t let busy become an obstacle Obligations can interfere with what’s calling to us. Jen Sincero, best-selling author of You Are a Badass: How to Stop Doubting Your Greatness and Start Living an Awesome Life, says, “When you constantly deny yourself the people, food, things and experiences that make you feel the most alive, that sends a pretty lousy message home.” Decide you are worth doing the things you love. She suggests making a conscious decision to increase your joy in whatever capacity you can. Plan the trip you’ve always wanted to take. Pursue a goal you fear. Spend an afternoon with a friend, dance at an outdoor music festival or buy an impractical pair of shoes. Don’t let busy win. Sure, you might not be able read in a hammock for four hours straight, but can you read every day for 30 minutes? Put yourself first Are you one of those people who never focuses on yourself? Start putting yourself first and trust that doing so will make you even more fulfilled and better able to give back to others. Investing in yourself is not selfish. “We drift away from doing what we once loved because it doesn’t fit our new lifestyle anymore or our partner doesn’t like the activity,” says Pat Pearson, a family therapist and author of Stop Self-Sabotage: Get Out of Your Own Way to Earn More Money, Improve Your Relationships, and Find the Success You Deserve. “You don’t sing at the top of your lungs because the baby is napping. Life and love is a cost-benefit analysis. If the cost is too high and the benefit too low, we give up even enjoyable activities.” She suggests asking yourself this critical question: What do I want? “If it’s important to your well-being, you shouldn’t give it up. Find the place where you can have your joy and your spouse can have his/hers. Never give up on what you love if it feeds your soul. Negotiate on the time and space to make it happen.” Do not delay As writer Anne Dillard wrote, “How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.” While it might be comforting to promise ourselves “later” for those activities we love, the reality is we have to get them on our schedules in order for them to happen. Big life events—the death of a parent, a milestone birthday, an illness—can stir us awake and fuel our desire to pursue our passions, but without daily habits in place we often fall back into old routines. Seize the day. Tag team The obstacles to writing the next great novel or reveling in the joy of dancing alone in your house can be a matter of practicality. To give yourself more time, set up time swaps with your significant other. One of you has the kids, the other gets half a day to work on a personal goal. Switch places the next day or weekend. Do a date night swap Another practical fix is teaming up with friends to create windows of adult time. Gone are the days when babysitters are inexpensive. Instead of doing away with date nights or spontaneity due to the costs, swap date nights with another couple. This is an easy solution that will make your kids and wallet happy. Now you can date your spouse again. If you want to continue your education, get a massage, paint like you used to, start a side business or kayak in a new body of water, the most important first step is directing your attention to what you desire. Create a life with a rich blend of responsibilities and top interests.
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Live Happy Magazine Publishing Changes

Hello Live Happy Community, I’m so grateful for every minute you spend with Live Happy—reading articles and shopping for gifts in our store at livehappy.com, tuning in to Live Happy Now podcasts, sharing Happy Acts on social media and reading our award-winningLive Happymagazine. To best serve you on your happiness journey, we’re making some changes. We’re moving from a bi-monthly print magazine schedule to a yearly print “bookazine” (yes, it’s both a magazine and a book!) brimming with inspiration, expert tips and research. Our first special print edition (thicker and wider) will be Winter 2018, available on newsstands in September. This special edition will look great on your coffee table. We will also be creating more digital content, an expanded store product line (releasing in July) and a new format for the Live Happy Now podcast season (August).Plus, you’ll continue to find your favorite how-to articles, including the latest in positive psychology science, happiness trends and hands-on advice on livehappy.com. Happy Activists like you are the heart of our growing and ever-evolving Live Happy community. And we’re excited about the new things that we will be releasing in the months to come. Deborah K. Heisz Live Happy CEO, Co-Founder and Editorial Director P.S. We will no longer be taking subscriptions. The bookazine will be available on newsstands and at the Live Happy Store. If you have any questions or comments please contact us atcustomerservice@livehappy.comor 1-888-297-2094 (M-F 8a-8p CST).
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May's Happy Act is spring cleaning.

Make Someone’s Day Great in May

Welcome Happy Activists! A Happy Activist is someone who, through kind words and intentional actions, strives to make the world a better place. Live Happy invites you to join our #HappyAct movement! On the 20th of each month, we encourage you to incorporate kindness into your daily life by participating in each month’s planned activity. The more who join the #HappyAct movement, the more positive impact we’ll all have on our homes, workplaces and communities. What you think and do matters! May’s monthly theme is reflection, which involves considering what’s most meaningful in life and focusing your time and energy on what matters most. Our May 20 #HappyAct is spring cleaning. We’re diving into our closets and cabinets to savor and appreciate what we have and to share gently used clothes and household items that we no longer need with others who can use them. Learn more: “Does it spark joy?” Marie Kondo’s signature question in her book,The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Upinvites you to keep only what you really need.Learn her six basic steps to tidying up. What if we dedicated one day of the week to reflecting and reconnecting?Read howweekly downtime, borrowed from the Jewish tradition of Shabbat, can help renew your soul. 33 ideasfor finding purpose in life. Listen to our podcast with Niki Brantmarkaboutlagom, the Swedish art of living a balanced, happy life. Tune into our podcast with Amy Blanksonon how to declutter your digital life and how organization contributes to your overall happiness. 3 steps to spring cleaning: Shop your closet and cabinets and keep only what you would buy, wear and use today. Clean gently used items and check for missing buttons or wear. Choose a cause to benefit from your donated items or plan a neighborhood garage or yard sale, then donate the proceeds or reinvest in home maintenance. Enjoy peace of mind and a peaceful view in your living space. Donate your items to a local business or charity: I Am Butterfly Goodwill Industries International Inc. PickUpMyDonation.com Habitat for Humanity ReStore Dress for Success ThredUP Once Upon a Child
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Syrian chocolate factory in Canada

Syrian Family Spreads Peace Through Chocolate

For a Syrian refugee family now living in Canada, the link between chocolate and happiness is especially sweet. More than three decades ago the family’s patriarch, Isam Hadhad, made a dramatic career switch from civil engineer to chocolatier. He got into the chocolate-making business precisely because he realized how much joy it could bring people, explains his 26-year-old son Tareq. “He wanted to make the world a happier place,” says Tareq, who speaks English and is his family’s spokesperson. “(My father) says that if you want to build a connection to someone, you go and give him a piece of chocolate.” Then came the war in Syria and the family lost their chocolate factory—the second largest in the Middle East—to a bombing. But just two years after arriving in Canada as refugees, they have rebuilt with the help of a small, rural community in their adopted home country. Naming their new venture “Peace by Chocolate,” the family is using their success as an opportunity to serve up peace and happiness in each bite. “We feel that in every piece of chocolate we make, there is a taste of peace,” says Tareq. “We left our home because we lost peace in the community, in our homeland, so we felt that we should promote this great value in our new home country.” A small-town welcome After fleeing Syria in 2013, the Hadhad family lived for three years in Lebanon, reminded every day of what they had lost. What they didn’t know was that a tiny town on Canada’s East Coast was preparing to welcome them. When they heard about the Syrian refugee crisis, volunteers in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, decided to sponsor a family to come to Canada. Community members raised money, rented a house and recruited volunteer translators and English teachers. “It was a tremendous, overwhelming response from the community. People all wanted to contribute,” says Lucille Harper of Syria-Antigonish Families Embrace, the organization that sponsored the family. Starting anew The Hadhad family arrived in Antigonish, a college town of just 10,000, in the dead of a Canadian winter. But it wasn’t long before they had proved their resilience. Just two months after arriving, Isam started making chocolate out of their rented home and selling it at local farmers markets. Soon, he needed more space for production, and local carpenters, plumbers and electricians all volunteered their time to help build him a tiny shop. Business boomed, and finally, in September of 2017, the Hadhads opened a real factory. Kindness begets kindness As the family found success in their new home, they made giving back a core part of their company’s mission. When wildfires ravaged the town of Fort McMurray in Western Canada, they donated some of their profits to support those who had lost their homes. Shipping across Canada and making plans for U.S. distribution, Peace by Chocolate also quickly began making an economic contribution to a region that traditionally lags behind the rest of the country. The company has created jobs for more than two dozen employees. The Hadhads’ ambition of spreading peace and happiness through chocolate has already stretched beyond Canada’s borders. In 2016, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shared their story at a United Nations summit on refugees as an example of the contributions newcomers have made to the country. Tareq says he hopes the company’s efforts will help to counter the bias and xenophobia that refugees often face around the world. “Whenever anyone hears any negative stories, they should check out Peace by Chocolate’s story. They will learn more about how kindness begets kindness.”
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India

Choosing Happiness

Spring might be taking its time in getting to the United States this year, but happiness was blossoming around the world for the International Day of Happiness (IDOH). In 2012, the United Nations officially named March 20 the International Day of Happiness, and since 2013, Live Happy has encouraged people to create Happiness Walls where people could post a card that explained how they celebrated happiness. In 2018, Live Happy founders Jeff Olson and Deborah K. Heisz set a goal of having 500 walls worldwide—and surpassed that number by 200. Deborah went to Facebook to express her gratitude to everyone who made this goal possible. “I want each of you to know that you made and are making an amazing difference in the world,” she posted. “You are part of a movement and you are leaders in that movement. I can’t thank you enough for caring enough to make the world a happier place.” This year’s Live Happy celebration saw walls in every state in the U.S. and in more than 20 countries, ranging from bulletin boards in homes, schools and nursing homes to large free-standing walls that served as the centerpiece of festivals and daylong celebrations. Happy Dance, USA In Texas, happiness visited The Shops at Willow Bend in the Dallas suburb of Plano on March 17. Throughout the day, singers from the Septien Entertainment Group serenaded mall visitors. Shoppers were brought to smiles by the movin’, groovin’ and hula-hoopin’ that went on throughout the day. Children colored their happiness with the help of the newly openedCrayola Experience. Of course, since it fell on St. Patrick’s Day, the day wouldn’t have been complete without a tribute to ol’ St. Pat himself courtesy of the young dancers from the Maguire Academy of Irish Dance. Deb Johnsen volunteers for the Plano event every year, and one of her roles is to urge people to participate. She says some people initially have a hard time coming up with something to write down, but one man did not hesitate to say how happy he was to be with the same woman for more than 50 years. “That was a nice moment to hear him speak that gratitude out loud,” she says. Giddy as Goats Damp weather in Nashville, Tennessee, moved festivities inside, but baby goats brought their own special brand of joy to the event. In addition to the Happiness Wall, the main attraction of the celebration were baby goats (in pajamas) from Shenanigoats Yoga. “Happiness and baby goats just go together,” explained Jamie Codispoti, co-owner of the goat yoga company. “It’s immediately relaxing to hold a baby goat, and everyone is happy. It’s like a form of therapy.” That was evident from the smiles and selfies taken with the four-legged guests, but the overriding message of the day wasn’t lost on people stopping by the wall. “We just don’t take time in our daily lives to think about all the things that bring us joy,” said Nashville resident Kourtney Hennard. “This is great, because it makes us mindful of the things that already make us happy and reminds us how we can bring more happiness into the lives of others.” Viva Feliz Since IDOH is an international holiday, Live Happy took its show on the road and hosted a wall in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, at the first-ever Happiness Fest created by Luis Gallardo, who also serves on the council on the United Nations International Day of Happiness. The weeklong event featured happiness guides and experts from more than 40 countries, including Jennifer Moss, Raj Raghunathan and Amy Blankson. “We are very proud about the magnificent experiential learning community that gathered in San Miguel de Allende to share and manifest a world with more happiness and less misery,” Luis says.
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Educational Activity Guides

Lessons for a Life of Happiness A powerful and effective way to integrate character skills, this workbook aligns with a whole school program that enhances the ongoing efforts to make schools psychologically safe and higher-performing environments for students, staff, caregivers and communities. We identified the most practical ways to live a happy life. From expressing gratitude and discovering your character strengths to finding more energy, tackling a problem and spreading happiness, this guide will offer reflections and activities that can be completed alone, with parents or a trusted adult, in class, or with friends! The Live Happy workbook has been created with four key purposes: Help children learn and build on individual character skills Encourage quality interactions between parents, teachers and children Develop links between schools and families Develop positive character traits and inform parents/caregivers at home The Live Happy Activity Guide is for students of all ages (3 levels available: Elementary, Middle and High School) and abilities which can be used with each school’s current character education program or as a take-home workbook. A powerful and effective way to embed character skills and strengths, the workbook aligns with a whole school program that enhances the ongoing efforts to make schools psychologically safe and higher-performing environments for students, staff, caregivers and communities. For details and pricing (digital/print, individual schools/full districts) contact Ian Picken at ipicken@livehappy.com. This guide is a great stand alone tool. It is also part of a full curriculum program that imbeds positive education into the whole school with quantitativemeasurements and results including mapping against academic improvement. "It is now possible to teach your students your subject and increase their well-being resulting in higher well-being and most importantly in achieving higher academic goals.”—MARTINSELIGMAN, PH.D.
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Coping skills for teens

6 Tools to Help Children and Teens Develop Coping Skills

Imagine your mind uncluttered, happy and free, loving whatever you are doing to the point that you lose track of time, limitations and stressors. Psychologists refer to this frame of mind as flow. Many scientists believe that children operate in a naturally flowing mindset up to about age 5. However, you can regain your mental flow at any age and teach your children to nurture (and keep) theirs! This helps them develop coping skills that will empower them for life, increasing the “ups,” decreasing the “downs” and making joy a part of every day. I have spent much of my career helping people find ways to cope and operate at the top of their games. I’ve found that much of coping has to do with how you manage your mental and physical energy. What you are looking for is balance. You don’t want to be too activated or you’ll feel jumpy; too placid and you won’t have enough oomph to perform and feel your best. Your mind flows when sparked by high-quality energy and personal motivation. The two go hand-in-hand. When they do, you feel “lit.” Encourage Positivity Positive energy attracts positive action. Helping your child grow a happy mind begins with being open to the positive energies in life, and there’s no better way to start than to make yourself a model. Life is full of beauty, love and excitement. We can capture a burst of natural beauty wherever we are and download its good energy. For example, if you and your child are out on a walk or in the middle of any outdoor activity, talk about what environmental details bring you pleasure. Refer to specifics. After, ask him: What do you find exciting? What sights, sounds or scents make you feel good? It’s important for children to see life as good and to be able to identify examples of life’s magnificence and joy around them. They don’t have to be blockbuster examples—a tiny flower, glistening ocean wave or a single, sparkling star on a full-moon night. Our minds love images. They sweeten your thoughts and keep your coping resources charged, even when you’ve been treading in rough waters. Children can learn that uplifting, peaceful and joyful energies are everywhere. All they have to do to shift their attention—open their senses—and feel the energy. Self-Awareness Self refers to who you are, what you feel on the inside. As parents, we can help our children become more aware of who they are and to discover their unique qualities. “I love to dance,” says one 13-year-old who has danced since she was age 2. “When I dance, I dance with my heart. I can’t ever imagine myself not dancing.” Her 11-year-old sister plays the piano. She says, “Playing piano makes me happy,” but adds, “You don’t have to be Shakespeare to love writing, and you don’t have to be Mozart to be happy playing music.” Self-awareness is about being attentive to who you have been in the past, who you are now and who you want to be in the future. Ask your child how their most self-connected activities fit into that sequence. For example, did you enjoy music before playing the piano? How does music affect other things you do? By doing this, you are helping them find intrinsic reward for their actions and not rely on or become co-dependent on someone else’s judgments of what should or shouldn’t feel good to them. You are helping them understand it is possible to sync internal and external world activities that mean a lot to them. The more they do this, the more rewarding their life will feel, the more motivated they will become and the easier it will be to enter and sustain a flowing, happy mind. Tools to Get Started 1. Incorporate a morning activity that launches you into a flowing mindset. Play a tune on your favorite instrument, sing, dance, take a walk in nature. Flow transfers into other activities. 2. Balance your energy before and after daily activities. Pick two songs from your favorite tunes, one that activates you and another that calms. Put them on your phone or other device. Decide what kind of energy you need to feel (activating or calming) for balance in the morning before you leave home, at lunchtime and again when you get home. Then just hit “play.” 3. Organize the night before. You’ll wake up happier you did. Include something nice to look forward to in the morning such as a colorful article of clothing or a fun, new morning activity. 4. Give yourself permission to keep your mind flowing. Lessen daily pressures by telling yourself you can think about non-urgent recurring concerns or conflicts “later.” You can pick the time or day. 5. Get a good night’s sleep. Make it a habit to turn lights off at the same time each night. You need sleep for higher-level thinking and to keep your mind flowing. 6. Each day, think of something nice to do for someone. Plan who you will help, compliment or surprise, then do it!
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#HappyActs

33 Ideas for #HappyActs

1. Choreograph a new happy dance! 2. Thank someone you encounter often for what they add to your life. 3. Treat yourself to a massage, a long run or a favorite meal. 4. Create a happiness board for your long-term dreams and goals. 5.Spend time with friends and let them know you appreciate them. 6. Brighten a co-worker’s day with a word or a note of praise. 7. Be generous! Bring breakfast to work or start a cleanup campaign in your community. 8. Broaden your mind with lifelong learning. 9. Put down thephone and go fora walk. 10. Try something new that challenges you, like an adventure Meetup. 11. Start a game of dominoes or cards with friends and family. 12. Volunteer for a cause you believe in. 13. Host a happiness dinner or give a home-cooked meal to someone. 14. Spend time outside and do something positive for the environment. 15. Pick up trash in your community. 16. Give the person you’re with your full attention. 17. Rock out to your favorite playlist. 18. Get out of your comfort zone and let your curiosity run wild. 19. Make someone laugh. 20. Celebrate the International Day of Happiness on March 20! 21. Give yourself the power to forgive. 22. Call a family member just to catch up. 23. Spend quality time with a pet. 24. Invest in your community—shop local. 25. Tell someone, “I love you.” 26. Tag your happiness heroes on social media and describe why you admire them. 27. Show affection with a warm hug. 28. Paint your positivity on a rock and leave it for others to find. 29. Life is short; be kind. 30. Let someone go in front of you in line. 31. Write a hope letter about what you wish to achieve in the next year. 32. Pass along magazines you’re finished reading. 33. Leave a generous tip for excellent service.
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Live Happy Expert Fitness Tips

7 Expert Guides for Fitness and Health

When you pair exercise with healthy eating, you are on the pathway to fitness. Add strength training and aim for the recommended eight hours of sleep each night, and you will accelerate your progress, according to the experts. While you can’t sit down and read your way to fitness, the knowledge and expertise in these books will inspire you to start or improve upon your own journey toward health. As the popular fitness mantra states, “In order to become unstoppable, you have to start.” 1. Ask Dr. Nandi by Dr. Partha S. Nandi Dr. Partha Nandi is a practicing gastroenterologist and internal medicine physician with his own internationally syndicated television show. In his book, Ask Dr. Nandi, he asks: “What if you made your health the most important part of your life?” When we have our health, we have everything, he writes. Partha encourages readers to eat lots of fresh vegetables and fruit and make movement a key part of each day. Fit Tip: “Get up and move. Park far away from the store and walk. Take your bike instead of drive. Wash your own car. Garden. Choose purposeful movement.” 2. No Sweat: How the Simple Science of Motivation Can Bring You a Lifetime of Fitness by Michelle Segar, Ph.D. Create an active lifestyle based on your personal preferences so that you will no longer dread having to exercise. Using scientific research, author Michelle Segar, Ph.D, shows you how to stay motivated with her four-point plan. Create a personalized approach to exercise that works for you and feels like play, she writes. For fitness motivation, tap into fitness benefits like mental clarity, emotional calm, feeling strong and capable, and the joy of being in nature. Fit Tip: “Tap into how fitness and exercise benefit your daily quality of life—having more energy, less stress and an improved mood.” 3. Eat Move Sleep: How Small Choices Lead to Big Changes by Tom Rath Best-selling author Tom Rath was diagnosed as a teenager with a rare illness. He shares his discoveries made through extensive research in the areas of nutrition, exercise and sleep. Your everyday decisions significantly impact your health, Tom writes. Forget diets and exercise trends and work more movement into your life. Focus more on getting the restorative sleep your body needs and sit a lot less, he recommends. Discover numerous ways to shift your lifestyle toward activity and fitness. Fit Tip: “The real magic lies at the intersection between eating, moving and sleeping. If you can do all three well, it will improve your daily energy and your odds of living a long, healthy life.” 4. Thinner Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Female Body by Michael Matthews In this book, personal trainer Michael Matthews dispels several fitness myths and outlines a plan for using strength training to get fit. By creating more muscle, you will burn more calories—even at rest—and your metabolism will work on your behalf, Michael writes. Experience high energy levels and improve your outlook when you incorporate strength training with heavier weights and intense cardio into your exercise regimen. (Note: This book is recommended primarily  for those who already have a well-established workout routine.) Fit Tip: “What drives muscle growth?  The answer is known as progressive tension overload, which means progressively increasing tension levels in the muscle fibers over time.” 5. Mini Habits for Weight Loss: Stop Dieting, Form New Habits. Change Your Lifestyle Without Suffering by Stephen Guise If you are done with diets, this is the book for you. Focused on behavior change, Mini Habits makes a case for consistent, daily decisions that lead to lasting change. “It’s more energy efficient to automatically do something than to manually weigh your options and decide to act the same way every time,” writes author Stephen Guise. Mini Habits for Weight Loss shows you how to make dietary changes that don’t include swearing off carbs forever. Fit Tip: “We’re quick to blame ourselves for lack of progress, but slow to blame our strategies. Then we repeat them over and over again, trying to make them work. But here’s the thing—if you fail using a particular strategy more than a few times, you need to try another one.” 6. The Women's Health Big Book of Exercises: Four Weeks to a Leaner, Healthier, Sexier You by Adam Campbell, MS, CSCS The Women’s Health Big Book of Exercises focuses specifically on the techniques that work for women—from beginners to fitness enthusiasts. This encyclopedic tome is filled with tips, photos and research and various exercises. It also includes workouts from top trainers and movements to work every muscle group. Fit Tip: “Lifting weights gives you an edge over belly fat, stress, heart disease and cancer.” 7. Deskbound: Standing Up to a Sitting World by Kelly Starrett In Deskbound, physical therapist Kelly Starrett takes on the dangers of a sedentary lifestyle, specifically sitting too much. Research shows the correlation between sitting and a shortened lifespan. Kelly offers solutions for reducing the amount of time you spend sitting, such as not sitting when you have other options (like on a subway). He encourages the use of standing desks or active workstations. He also writes about how to identify and fix poor posture and prevent and treat lower back, neck, shoulder and wrist pain. Fit Tip: “Sit less. Our bodies were built for movement.” Read more: 19 Best Books to Help Achieve Your Goals Sandra Bilbray is a contributing editor for Live Happy, and the CEO and owner of themediaconcierge.net.
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