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Elevate Your Step

Did you know that taking the stairs can improve heart health, bone, joint and muscle strength, increase longevity, reduce your carbon footprint, and even save you time? Don't believe us? Read more about the many benefits of taking the stairs. 

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Get Moving with Music

Looking for some good tunes to "Elevate Your Step"? Look no further! Healthy Lifestyles has put together hits from the 80's to today that are sure to give everyone a little "Pep In Your Step"! 

Active Commuting & Saving The World - One Step At A Time

Similar to active commuting, taking the stairs instead of the elevator can reduce your carbon footprint by reducing greenhouse output from power plants. Interested in more ways to help the planet and improve your health? 

Looking for more ways to move throughout your day? Check out this video! 

Taking the Stairs Counts as Fitness

It is recommended that you get 150 minutes a week of moderate exercise. Research shows that any amount of movement is beneficial, just like taking the stairs instead of an elevator or escalator. Other movement ideas that are practical and fit into everyday activities would be parking farther away from your destination, take short movement breaks throughout your work day, doing yard work, housework, desk stretching, the list goes on!  

Movement: A Way to Reduce Stress

Moving your body increases your overall health and your sense of well-being, which tends to put more pep in your step every day. It also has some direct stress-busting benefits. 

  1. It pumps up your endorphins (the feel-good hormone). 
  2. It reduces the negative effects of stress and allows you to work through those feelings of fight or flight. 
  3. It is meditation in motion. As you begin to regularly shed your daily tensions through movement and physical activity, you may find that this focus on a single task is now resulting in more energy and optimism. 
  4. It improves overall mood. Regular movement can increase self-confidence, improve your mood, help you relax, and lower symptoms of mild depression and anxiety. 

Movement for Heart Health

Taking the stairs, parking further away, active transportation, designated physical activity times, scheduling walking breaks, gardening, cleaning - any form of movement does the heart good.