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Secret to a long, healthy life? Change your environment

WASHINGTON The secret to a long life doesn鈥檛 involve years of perpetual dieting and intense exercise regimes.

According to Dan Buettner, it鈥檚 all about adjusting your environment.

For several years, Buettner, a National Geographic Fellow, traveled around the world and studied communities where people live long, healthy lives. He dubs these five locations Okinawa, Japan; Loma Linda, California; Costa Rica鈥檚 Nicoya Peninsula; the Greek island of Ikaria; and the Italian island of Sardinia 鈥.鈥

It was in the blue zones where he discovered the key to longevity.

鈥淭he secret is getting away from the notion that we can change our behavior,鈥 said Buettner, author of the new book 鈥: Eating and Living Like the World鈥檚 Healthiest People.鈥

鈥淢odifying our behavior through diet or exercise programs sometimes works in the short-run, but it universally fails in the long-run. What does work and we learned this in all blue zones people who are making it to 100 are not doing so because they are trying to do so, they鈥檙e doing so because their environments are set up in the right way.鈥

In these communities, the cheapest, most accessible and delicious foods happen to be the healthiest. Residents are nudged to move every 20 minutes 鈥 and not just because they are trying to get in their 鈥渟teps鈥 for the day, but because it鈥檚 a way of life.

They also live in tight-knit communities where being lonely isn鈥檛 possible.

鈥淭he option to implode in your suburban home in the basement on the computer just doesn鈥檛 exist [in the blue zones],鈥 Buettner said.

Currently, Buettner, along with a team of researchers, is taking lessons learned from these global communities and applying them to 42 American cities. He鈥檚 working with local governments to adopt policies that favor healthy foods and people-friendly streets, and with restaurants and schools to serve more naturally healthy foods.

Of course, it鈥檚 also up to individuals to implement a few 鈥渂lue-zone friendly鈥 changes at home. Here鈥檚 Buettner鈥檚 advice for doing just that:

Diet

Put the low-carb diet to rest. Buettner says all of the blue-zone communities eat diets that are heavy in carbohydrates. In fact, about 65 percent of blue-zone diets consist of carbohydrates.

The difference is, the carbohydrates that blue-zone residents eat aren鈥檛 preservative-laden; they鈥檙e plant-based, complex carbohydrates.

Another thing blue-zone communities have in common is their intake of nuts and beans. Residents in blue zones eat about a handful of nuts and about 1 cup of beans every day.

鈥淎nd if you鈥檙e eating about a cup of beans a day, it鈥檚 probably adding about three or four years to your life expectancy,鈥 Buettner said.

Other familiar foods include sweet potatoes, fresh fruits and fresh vegetables.

Selecting your social network

The social network Buettner refers to in 鈥淭he Blue Zones Solution鈥 doesn鈥檛 have anything to do with your Facebook account or Instagram followers. He鈥檚 talking about the people you interact with on a daily basis.

For starters, Buettner says having friends is an important part of living longer. In fact, having three close friends people you can call up on a bad day will add about eight years to your life.

It鈥檚 also important that the friends you surround yourself with are healthy individuals. If your closest friends are overweight or obese, there鈥檚 a higher likelihood you will be as well. Surrounding yourself with people who enjoy eating healthy and moving more means you will likely do the same.

Another tip of Buettner鈥檚: If you belong to a faith, it鈥檚 a good idea to show up. Many religions have built-in communities of support.

Building activity into your life

In many of the blue-zone communities, gym memberships do not exist. Residents get exercise through daily activities.

Since many modern American jobs require more time spent at a computer than plowing the fields, Buettner recommends finding other ways to build activity into your daily life, such as through gardening and taking public transportation.

鈥淧eople who do this get more physical activity and reduce their chances of heart disease by 11 percent,鈥 Buettner said about taking public transportation.

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