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JANUARY 5, 2024
AIKEN-AUGUSTA’S MOST SALUBRIOUS NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED IN 2006
HABITFORMING This is the time of year when many people try to start good new habits and stop bad old habits. The start of a new year makes it easy to chart progress: Pick a day down the road, any day, and with a quick glance at a calendar you can easily say, “As of today I haven’t eaten a Twinkie in six weeks.” Followed by, “Well, except that one.” Which raises a question: exactly how long does it take to truly establish a habit, a pattern of behavior that will reliably guide us in the direction of our visions and away from our vices? It depends. Variable factors include how difficult a goal is to reach, how motivated the potential habit-former is, how rewarding achievement of the habit will be, and how much support is available. If those aspects fall short of the ideal, determination may fizzle long before the habit has been etched in, well, sand. Not in stone because, after all, relapses should be expected. Traditionally, folk wisdom has held that it takes 21 days of focused behavior to establish a habit. Therein lies a key: focused behavior. Put another way, consistency builds strong habits more quickly than inconsistency. Skipping planned exercise days, for instance, isn’t helpful in habit-building, but hits and misses are inevitable. After all, whatever it is isn’t a habit yet. And even when it is, life will sometimes intrude. Accept that after two or three or ten steps forward there will be the occasional step back. Keeping the progress going will keep the habit-forging process on track. That point illustrates a basic truth about forming habits. Every habit is different, as is every prospective habit builder. There is no magic number that behavioral scientists have discovered that marks the point at which a habit has been formed. But the chances of success are improved by setting realistic, measurable goals that take a slow, step-by-step approach to the ultimate habit aimed for. Just as you have to get to Atlanta before you can reach California, you have to lose 5 lbs before you can lose 50. It is commendable to set goals whose achievement will result in beneficial new habits. Pat yourself on the back and keep going despite setbacks, and you will form those good new habits. +
AUGUSTARX.COM
6 WAYS TO REDUCE HEALTHCARE COSTS
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verything seems to be going up in cost. Some increases can be avoided; just don’t use or buy those items. Other things are not optional; they are absolutely essential for life and its enjoyment. Food. Shelter. Netflix. Price increases in these areas is known as inflation, of course. But when price hikes affect access to healthcare, the term experts use is salubrinflation, defined by Webster’s (possibly) as “increases in the cost of living a salubrious lifestyle.”
Salubrinflation can force people to make extremely difficult choices, like having to choose between food and medicine. Saying no to either calls to mind another word in Webster’s (definitely): unsalubrious. While both inflation and salubrinflation may be beyond the control of ordinary citizens, there are strategies anyone can employ to minimize their negative effects and continue to live the most salubrious life possible. We list a few of them on page 4. +
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