Is your neighborhood hazardous to your health?

When you’re buying a home, its impact on your health may not be the first thing on your mind, but perhaps it should be! The data is clear that your health and well-being are significantly impacted by the people with whom your spend your time, and since most of us spend a good deal of time with our neighbors, picking the right street counts for more than curb appeal.

Neighborhoods “influence the extent to which people adopt and maintain behaviors linked to obesity,” says Dr. Mahasin S. Mujahid of Harvard University’s School of Public Health in Boston. “Even highly motivated individuals will find it very difficult to be more physically active and eat healthy foods if they live in environments that do not help support these lifestyles.”

You know the saying “When in Rome, do as the Romans do.” From Dr. Mujahid’s quote above, it appears the same could be said for neighborhoods! Once you move in, you are very likely to adopt the lifestyle practices that those in your neighborhood uphold. That means if there’s a daily running group at 5AM or a Thursday night volleyball league, you just may be inspired to join them. Likewise, if the normal Friday night involves all you can eat nachos and margaritas at the local Mexican place, you’re likely to adopt the same practices yourself.

So, when you are looking for a new home, consider looking for clues such as: Who is out running, biking, or walking at various times of day? Is there a pool? Is there a basketball court (or lots of driveways with hoops)? Tennis courts? Is there a gym or fitness center close by?

If you have been able to attend a party or two in the neighborhood before you move in, what is the food like? Is it a healthy spread with salads and fruits or is it unhealthy burgers, brats, and chips? What restaurants are close by and how many of them serve fast food? Pay attention to these clues to get a preview of what life as a resident might be like.

Of course you can have a positive influence on your surroundings as well. No running group? Start one! Bring a big salad to the block party and introduce your neighbors to your healthy lifestyle. But if you want to make it easier on yourself, you’ll choose a healthy neighborhood up front. Doing so can make a big difference in your own health and well-being, which means it’s worth keeping an eye out for healthy neighbors along with that 3 car garage and finished basement!

Sauteed Zucchini with Parmesan

I have memories from my childhood of our kitchen counters covered with varying sizes of green zucchini squash…and my mother clucking over them deciding what on earth to make next.  (We had the same issue with tomatoes, but that’s another post!) After we’d run through a Bubba-Gump-esque list of options (Zucchini Pie, Zucchini Bread, Zucchini Fritters, Zucchini Pancakes, Zucchini Lasagna….) we’d usually concur that simpler was better. This sautéed zucchini with parmesan fits the bill. If you find yourself with a bumper crop of zucchini this year, give it a whirl. Simply perfect.

 

Sauteed Zucchini with Parmesan

serves 4-6

Ingredients:

4 medium zucchini – cut in half lengthwise and sliced into 1/2-inch slices

1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil

1 large yellow onion, cut in half and sliced into 1/2-inch slices

kosher salt and fresh ground black pepper

1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese

 

Directions:

1. Heat the olive oil in a large saute pan over medium-low heat. Add the onions and cook for 10 minutes, until they start to brown.

2. Add the zucchini, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and 1/8 teaspoon pepper to the pan. Cook, stirring occasionally, for 10-15 minutes, until just cooked through.

3. Sprinkle with the Parmesan and cook for about 30 seconds more. Serve immediately.

What are your Big Rocks?

Stephen Covey died today. He was the author of the highly acclaimed “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People” as well as “First Things First” and many other motivational books. If you carried around a daily planner before the days of the smartphone, chances are it was a FranklinCovey version, through which he brought his time management system to life.

Perhaps more impressive, he was a father of nine, a grandfather of 52 and a great-grandfather of two! He died from complications of an injury he sustained while riding his bike this spring – at the age of 79. Seventy-nine and out bike riding. Love that.

I had almost forgotten how many of the little mantras I mutter throughout the day to keep myself on track came from him, a man I’ve never met in person, but whose words and ideas were so powerful I’ve carried them with me and made them my own.

“Begin with the end in mind.”

“Is my ladder leaning against the right wall?”

“Seek first to understand, then to be understood.”

“Put first things first”

Covey famously illustrated that last gem with a demo using big rocks, smaller rocks, sand, and two buckets. He’d have a participant in one of his seminars fill up a bucket with sand and then see how many big and small rocks she could fit in. (Hint: Not many!) Then, he’d have her fill a second bucket STARTING with the big rocks, followed by the smaller ones, and ending by pouring in the sand, which sifted easily through the cracks to fill the spaces in between the rocks. Result? Everything fit. His analogy was simple; in your day, put the big rocks in first – your family, your most important projects, your health. Without that level of prioritization and focus, they may be squeezed out by far less important tasks.

I can’t tell you how often this has helped me as I face my own sandpile of to-do items. Making my health, my husband, and my children non-negotiable priorities followed by my most important projects (professional or personal) is a habit that serves me. Without it, I could get sucked into the Facebook/Pinterest/NYTimes.com abyss. I could cross twenty unimportant things off my list, leaving the one or two that would really make a difference undone. I may feel “productive” but would my productivity have an impact?

So today, will you identify your own BIG ROCKS? Will you make a list and take care of those rocks before you do anything else? What a way to honor Stephen Covey’s legacy – and build your own in the process.