I find this article amusing and interesting that's why am sharing it LOL, have a good read
Are you sitting down while reading this? Well that could be shortening your lifespan.
Let’s be honest: From the moment we’re born, we’re all dying just as we’re living. But certain mundane things we do every day
may actually be helping us get there faster. None of this means we
should even try to eliminate these behaviors from our lives entirely,
but it’s proof that overdoing
anything, even when seemingly innocuous, can have serious impacts on our
health. Below we’ve rounded up 11 everyday things you’re probably doing
that could potentially shorten your lifespan.
1. You’re having a hard time finding love.
Having
a difficult time finding a mate can shave off months of your life,
while being single for prolonged periods of time could cost you a whole
decade. A study found that communities with gender ratios skewing
significantly more male or female caused the minority sex to have
shorter lifespans. Even when exposed to short time frames of
competition, such as attending a high school entirely of one gender, participants were found to have generally shorter lives.
On top of all this, another study
found that never getting married could increase risk of death over a
lifetime by 32 percent, and led to the previously mentioned loss of a
decade.
8. You’re having a dry-spell.
A
study among men found that failing to orgasm for extended periods of
time can potentially cause your mortality rate to be 50 percent higher
than for those who have frequent orgasms. This result was found even
when controlling for factors such as age, smoking, and social class. On
the opposite spectrum, orgasms have been linked to quite a few
additional health benefits.
9. You’re putting up with annoying co-workers.
Missing
out on strong connections with your co-workers can also potentially
mean missing out on a longer life. Peer social support, which could
represent how well a participant is socially integrated in his or her
employment context, is a potent predictor of the risk of all causes of
mortality. Although having feelings of encouragement coming from bosses
and managers didn’t seem to affect the subjects’ lifespans, those who
reported feelings of low social support at work were 2.4 times more
likely to die over the study period.
10. You’re not sleeping enough (or maybe too much?)
Harvard
Medical School points out that research has shown that life
expectancies significantly decrease in subjects who average less than
five or more than nine hours a night.
Most of us suffer from too
little rather than too much sleep, but research suggests there truly is a
sleep “sweet spot” — at least if you’re primarily concerned about
living for as long as possible.
Chronic lack of sleep is
associated with a greater risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, some
cancers, dementia, cognitive and memory problems, weight gain and early
death. And some research shows that too much (dramatically, unusually
too much) regular sleep could be problematic as well.
Research
has also shown that we need an average of eight hours to function
optimally, but another, somewhat controversial study found that getting
more than seven hours of sleep a night has been linked to shortened
lifespans.
11. You’re fearing death or that you won’t live for as long as you’d like.
This
is a painful paradox. A fear of a shortened lifespans, or
Thanatophobia, can potentially end up causing – a shortened lifespan. A
2012 study on cancer patients ended up finding that, “life expectancy
was perceived as shortened in patients with death anxiety.”Outside
of cancer patients, an intense fear of death can also lead to a three
to five times increase in the risk of cardiovascular ailments, according
to research on Americans who feared death from another terrorist
attack following Sept. 11, 2001. Although a slight fear of death has
been shown to have positive benefits, like an increase in exercise and
healthy eating, the fear has been shown to significantly affect
lifespans, especially in adults nearing the age of being considered
elderly. These effects can also be correlated to especially paranoid
people having weaker connections with society and increased feelings of
alienation – the negative effects of which were both discussed above.
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/53553.html
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