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Showing posts with label lifestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lifestyle. Show all posts

Saturday, March 1, 2025

Color Health and Safety Tips for Seniors


 


How often have you used your sense of color to navigate through your day, and not been conscious of your actions? 

This post presents ideas about color characteristics and how being color savvy as you age, can improve the quality of daily living. 

Learn how your color choices help you stay out of danger, create a mood, safeguard health, and encourage you to get back on track.




1.    Red is an energetic color, one that attracts attention.





Research indicates that red is a color that’s most easily seen by everyone, even from a long distance away. Stop signs, curb edges, and red clothes are just three of the ways red can attract attention. 

Play it safe. Keep a red night light on in a darkened room, including the hallway and bathroom. Red light is easier to see, than white light.

When you look at red, it speeds up reactions, and stimulates the appetite. Fast food restaurants choose it for their logos and feature it in their dΓ©cor. 

If you need to put on a few extra pounds, decorate with red accent colors in your kitchen or dining room, because it increases your desire to eat more food. 

See additional information about how to Use Color Ideas to Cultivate Happiness.


2.   Yellow is a happy, easy to see color.



Yellow is the color of essential road signs, like a no passing zone or a warning sign that signals an obstacle or curve in the road. 

Yellow is a lively color, but when you focus on this color too long, it can cause eye strain. This happens because light is reflected by bright colors, resulting in excessive stimulation and irritation of the eyes. 

Lighter shades of yellow create a sense of cheerfulness and ease, and creamy yellow painted walls create a restful atmosphere. Soft yellow paint applied to walls in a small room makes that room appear larger. 

Yellow is the color most often associated with the solar plexus chakra. Learning how to use its color energy can empower you.


Use Yellow Color to Empower Yourseelf



3.   Color is an important clue to consider for food freshness and safety.

When you prepare, serve, and eat a food product, notice its color. 

Fresh produce is vibrantly colored, so shop for or grow fruits and vegetables in an array of colors including red, dark green, yellow, orange, and purple. 

Set the intention to let the food you eat provide essential nutrients, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and fiber, rather than try to get nourishment from supplements.




Eat at least 5-7 servings of a variety of colorful fruits and vegetables a day, as it’s money in the bank for disease prevention, maintaining strong teeth and bones, and providing energy to work and play. 

If you’re ill or out of commission from a fall or other injury, remember it’s especially important to eat the rainbow to heal. 

A study from the National Institute of Health (NIH)  indicates why increasing fruits and vegetable consumption improves muscle strength in older adults (for that matter, anyone of any age).


4.   Certain colors warn of danger.


Molds are microscopic fungi that live in plant or animal matter. Unless you know for sure that a mold on food is intentionally grown, like those on blue-veined cheese such as Roquefort or Gorgonzola or the white mold on Camembert cheese, don’t eat it. 




When you suspect a food is spoiled, return it to the store for a refund or discard it. That old adage it’s better to be safe than sorry applies here. 

Several types of food mold can make you feel queasy, produce allergic reactions, or respiratory problems.


5.   Contrast helps colors stand out from their background.

 

As you age, the ability to recognize the differences in color shades may diminish slightly. Compensate for this by remembering not to put yellow, blue, and green in close proximity. These colors may become increasingly difficult to tell apart. 

If you arrange clothes in your closet or dresser by color, put contrasting colors next to each other.


MedlinePlus at the NIH advises seniors. “As you age, it gets harder to tell apart blues and greens than it is to see the difference between red and yellow."

Read details at MedlinePlus to discover possible ways vision can be affected as you age.


                       
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Notice how often your color choices support, protect, relax, delight, or excite you. Take advantage of each color’s unique characteristics to help you lead a more colorful, satisfying life!

 

***This post is offered for entertainment and information purposes only, and is not intended as health or safety advice.***

Please comment in the comment section below.

What is your favorite color? When you see it, how does it make you feel?

Are you mindful about the way colors affect your sense of enjoyment?

I welcome comments, and read every one. Just be aware that if you put a link in your comment, I won't be able to publish it that way.

If you like what you see, please spread the word on social media. THANKS. 





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Sunday, December 15, 2024

Best New Year Quotes to Get Off to a Fresh Start

 Happy New Year at Colors4Health



Curious about which quotes can help you see and appreciate the personal and/or professional progress you've made this year, and inspire you to continue advancing toward goals and aspirations for the New Year? 


Happy New Year Quote



This year many may feel they need extra encouragement to get off on the right foot in 2025. Each quote I provide is intended to fill you with hope and optimism for the year ahead.


New Year Quote


New Year Quote


New Year Self-empowerment Quote




New Year Mindfulness Quote



New Year "Wonder" Quote


Each new day, week, or month is a fresh start, and I use the first few weeks of the New Year for reflection. 


I often find guidance and direction for the future by connecting with my inner peace and pondering the inspiring words of others. 


The New Year can be a fresh start for you as well. Why not envision the days ahead, and  color them with as spectacular, serene, exciting, or low key elements as you want them to include?


Which of the quotes above are meaningful to you? Please comment below. Do you have a favorite motivational quote not mentioned in this post? Please share that too.


Best wishes and thanks to all who read www.colors4health.com. I'm grateful you visit and invite you to please come back again.



If you like what you see, please share on social media and have the best New Year ever!


See my Facebook page, Pinterest location, and Website too.






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Friday, November 1, 2024

November Holidays, Fun Events, and Customs



Hello November


November is a month packed full of holidays, enjoyable activities, and interesting traditions and customs. This post features those events, fun facts, and happenings that appeal to me. See how many resonate with you.

November is a unique month, in that it has two birthstones, topaz and citrine. These gemstones are admired for their colors and stunning beauty.

 

Topaz is usually made into jewelry that's yellow to amber color. However, it can be found in a variety of shades such as blue, green, yellow, orange, red, pink, purple, and brown


Blue happens to be one of the most popular topaz colors, and many times, the desired shade is achieved by heat-treating colorless topaz.


The ancient Greeks believed that topaz could make a wearer invisible. A symbol of honor and strength, topaz was also believed to bring calm, longevity, and wisdom.

 

Topaz, a Beautiful November Birthstone
yellow and blue topaz

Citrine on the other hand, ranges from a transparent pale yellow to a bold brownish variety of quartz. 


Citrine, a Beautiful November Birthstone
yellow/0range/ to brown citrine



Citrine has been a popular gemstone since ancient times and has shared a history of mistaken identities with the other November birthstone, topaz. 


One result is people thought citrine had the same powers as topaz. They believed both birthstones could soothe tempers and calm the wearer.





Now on to those things I'd like to

 Highlight during November


November 1. World Vegan Day is a holiday that was created to raise awareness of the vegan lifestyle and its benefits for people, living creatures, and the planet.


It marks the beginning of World Vegan Month, a 30-day celebration of the vegan movement. It’s a luscious month for me, because World Vegan Month falls within the prime growing season for many fall veggies and fruits. Winter squash, pumpkin, sweet potatoes, leeks, broccoli, cranberries, and pears and apples are perfect additions to a vegan meal or feast.


To reap optimal health benefits, eat vegan food that is whole food plant-based (WFPB) and includes a variety of colorful fruits and vegetables alongside plant-based proteins. 


Celebrate World Vegan Month in November
steamed greens, black-eyed peas, and grilled carrots


Be mindful about your prep and cooking methods and understand not all vegan foods are equal.


In-season organic produce is vibrant and loaded with antioxidants and nutrients. To get details see "Benefits of Eating In-Season Fruit and Veggies.




November 3. πŸ•‘ Daylight savings time ends in many states of our nation. The practice of moving clocks forward in the spring and back in the fall to make better use of daylight hours has always struck me as quirky. 


Daylight Savings Time (DST) was formally adopted during World War I as a way to conserve energy. The Uniform Time Act of 1966 made DST a legal requirement in the United States.


DST is observed in most of the United States, but not in Hawaii, Arizona, or the U.S. territories. State governments can request to change their time zone, but the Department of Transportation (DOT) must approve the change.


DST is also known as "spring forward, fall back" because of the timing of the clock changes. In the United States, clocks are moved forward one hour at 2 AM on the second Sunday in March, and back one hour at 2 AM on the first Sunday in November.


November 5. U.S.A. Election Day  falls on Tuesday Nov. 5th this year. Originally, election days varied by state, but in 1845 a federal law set a single election day for the entire country. If you haven't voted already, get to the poles the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November and be a pro-active citizen.


Vote -Every Vote Matters


At first, Election Day applied only to presidential elections, but was later extended to congressional and state elections as well. 


Hopefully you are registered to vote, may have even voted early, or plan to get out and vote. EVERY vote matters.


November 11 . Veterans Day is a national holiday that falls on November 11th each year. Veterans Day is set aside to thank and honor ALL those who served honorably in the military – in wartime or peacetime.
 


November 13. World Kindness Day is celebrated around the world on November 13th. It was first introduced in 1998 by the World Kindness Movement.
 


World Kindness Day gives us an opportunity to devote time and attention to the good deeds we do, notice kindness in the community, and remind us to share a common thread of kindness with others and ourselves all year long.

 #worldkindnessday


November 15. November’s Full Beaver Moon occurs on Friday, November 15. Read the Farmer's Almanac page about the November Moon for more information.


November 28. Celebrated on the fourth Thursday in November, Thanksgiving is a U.S. national holiday. 




Thanksgiving and Gratitude go hand in hand


How do you celebrate? My family and friends enjoy gathering round the dinner table, sharing food and conversation, and giving thanks and expressing gratitude for our lives, health, community and nation, friendships, love, and prosperity.


November is the last month of fall in the Northern Hemisphere. With me, it's a month primarily focused on celebrating my freedom, both in my country and myself. I don't take it lightly, and feel thankful for my blessings.  


No matter which holidays or special events you take part in, enjoy what you do (it's good for your health and sense of well-being). 


Please comment below to share about your favorite days in November and how you honor them.


We appreciate and read every comment, but will not be able to include those that contain links.


If you like what you see, please share on social media.Thanks for visiting and please come back again.

Wishing family, friends, and readers of Colors 4 Health a happy healthy November.


Sending special November wishes for love, peace, health, and abundance to you, your loved ones, and for our planet.



Healthy Lifestyle Tips and Ideas

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