We’ve mined the habits of healthy men to see what traits they all share – so you can benefit
1. Eat Veg at (Almost) Every Meal
Non-negotiable – but the good news is, it doesn’t have to be painful. Steaming veg retains the most nutrients, but it’s tedious and complicated. Instead try “micro-steaming” – using your microwave to cook it very lightly – which takes mere minutes.
“Just lay your vegetables in a single layer on a microwave-safe plate, then cover them with a couple of damp paper towels,” explains food scientist J Kenji López-Alt. “Microwave them on full power until the vegetables are tender enough to pierce with a fork. It’ll take anywhere between two and five minutes, depending on the veg you’re using and the power of your microwave.”
2. Have a Mini-Mobility Routine
It doesn’t have to take long, but this is what’ll see you spring (rather than lurch) out of bed every day. Here’s your minimum-effect dose – add to it as necessary.
3. Pull-Ups
They’re the back-builder that keeps you honest: if your weight’s going up alongside your strength, your numbers will stay still. “If you want a bigger back, volume is key, so do 50 to 100 reps every session,” says trainer Chad Waterbury. “If you just want higher numbers, do one or two sets to failure whenever you train.” And invest in a nice set of rings (bulldoggear.eu, £64.99) – they’re easier on the elbows than endless straight-bar reps.
4. Build Habits, Not Willpower
All the research points to one fact: willpower is a briefly-burning candle, but habits are automatic and easily followed. Break bad ones and create good ones – start simple, by just putting your running shoes out every day or drinking one sip of water with breakfast. Then build up.
5. Find a Petrol Station Back-Up
…or to put it another way, a blood-sugar-bolstering snack option that you can source at any basic cornershop or 24-hour garage. Your best bet: beef jerky or biltong, both of which typically pack 36g of protein per 100g pack. Add in a handful of (unsalted) nuts and – we’re being optimistic here – a piece of fruit, and you’re set.
6. Use Portion Control
Yes, you could weigh and measure every macronutrient, but it’s not really necessary. All you need is a safe pair of hands.
7. Put a Menu Strategy in Place
You can’t always prepare vacuum-sealed chicken and veg. Navigate eating out without stumbling into sauce-and-sugar traps with advice from Brian St Pierre of Precision Nutrition.
8. Make Their Own Salads
Pre-packaged iceberg lettuce and Caesar dressing? Not worth the bag they’re delivered in. For an easy way to pack in two or three portions of veg a day, throw rocket or dark leaves together with chopped peppers or tomatoes, and add meat (leftover chicken or bacon are solid choices). As for your dressings, “Keep squeezy bottles with the recipes written directly on them in your fridge,” advises López-Alt. “Draw a line on the side with a permanent marker indicating the proportion of ingredients.” Use this one as your fat loss go-to: ¼tbsp dijon mustard, ¼tbsp balsamic vinegar, 2tbsp olive oil, cracked black pepper.
9. Stick to Quality Coffee (at the Right Time)
You’d be forgiven for thinking that science is constantly changing its mind about the benefits (and downsides) of coffee, but actually the evidence is pretty consistent. It might reduce your Parkinson’s risk and the chance of developing certain cancers, while the evidence that it could prevent cardiovascular disease is inconclusive. The real reason you should drink it, though? It’s a proven performance-enhancer. Make it count by drinking it when cortisol naturally dips – around 10am is the perfect time for your first cup of the day.
10. Go to Sleep When They’re Tired
Getting more than seven hours decreases your risk of heart attack, improves cognitive ability and might make you thinner. Some evidence suggests that earlier is more important: in the early part of the night, deeper non-REM sleep cycles dominate, with dream-infused REM sleep taking over towards dawn. There’s a window between 8pm and 12am when you should be aiming to get to bed for the most restorative sleep – but your optimal bedtime is dictated by genetic make-up. Bottom line? Go to bed when you’re tired, and try to keep it consistent (yes, even at the weekend).
11. Keep Meals in the Freezer
Batch-cooking food makes everyone’s life easier. The below freeze well, and reheat nicely.
12. Have an On-the-go Workout
“No time for the gym” isn’t an acceptable excuse. “You can train anywhere, in less than 20 minutes,” says Gym Jones head of programming Rob “Bobby Maximus” MacDonald. His prescription, below, takes exactly 19 – attack it full-speed for a fat-burning shock to the system, or go slow for an energising pick-me-up.
13. Drink to Enjoy Life
Not because of a stressful day, or because the office party seems like a waking nightmare without it, or even because it’s “good for you”. There’s evidence that alcohol can lubricate creativity and what experts call moments of “social connection”, but the key is to drink it mindfully. Spend a month tracking your real booze intake , and look for patterns of bad behaviour. Need to cut down? Do it. Otherwise: cheers!
14. Shop Outside the Supermarket
“You’ll get better quality food at – usually – lower prices,” says transformation coach Dalton Wong. “And you’ll know where it comes from.” Here’s how to do it.
15. Keep a Team Around Them
Team Sky have a multi-million-pound coterie of helpers to bake their rice cakes and carry their mattresses. You just need one or two dedicated helpers. “Healthy people have a support team,” says St Pierre. “It might be one person: a friend or family member who gets you, your dog who absolutely insists you take him for a walk in the morning, or your kid who is always up for a game of ‘see who can run the fastest’.” This is the basis of a support system: a group of people who will help you along your fitness journey.
The next step? Identify a few friends who enjoy the same sports or hobbies as you, or maybe a cousin or colleague who’s game for a little healthy competition. Perhaps you’ve also talked to your doctor, who’s monitoring your blood levels and helping track your health improvements. Together, these people form your team. “They’re cheering you on, inspiring you, teaching you, and helping you edge forward, bit by bit. It’s powerful stuff.”
16. Rebrand
“If you describe yourself as a latte lover or a pizza fiend, people will push those temptations onto you, thinking they’re doing you a favour,” says Wong. “Do yourself a favour and rebrand: tell people you’ve got a thing about good-quality coffee and grass-fed steak. When you talk the talk, you’ll naturally walk the walk.”
17. Create Stress-Management Systems
Not all stress is bad. Some of it keeps you alert, increases concentration, or helps you rise to meet challenges. The difference? “Good” stress comes in short bursts, and is over quickly: “bad” stress is ever-present. Healthy people distinguish between the two, and the simplest fix is single-tasking: switch off any electronics you’re not directly using, and focus on one task for at least 15 minutes. Do one thing well, then move on to the next.
18. Have Water on Hand
Thinking about drinking more isn’t cutting it: from UFC fighters to CEOs, people who need to function at a consistently high level know that having water within reach means you’ll increase consumption naturally. If you’re feeling flush, invest in a filter bottle (like our pick, the Black + Blum Charcoal filter, £14.95,, but otherwise just keep a pint glass on your desk.
19. Read
It increases neural connectivity and brain function, something not even the most highbrow Netflix binge can manage. For maximum results, use the Tim Ferriss model: non-fiction in the morning (to promote creativity) and fiction before bed (so it doesn’t disrupt sleep). Here’s what should be on your list for 2016.
20. Do Long, Slow Exercise
Fitness professionals call easy efforts low-intensity steady-state (LISS) cardio, and it’s coming into fashion for several reasons. First, it’s so easy that it won’t cause your body to eat muscle. Second, it can actually aid recovery by getting blood to tired muscles. It’ll also help you metabolise oxygen more efficiently, making you better during tougher sessions.
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