Home   |   Site Map  |    Health Tools  |    Blogs  |  About Us  |  Contact Us  Bookmark and Share
   Submit
 
Sign up for the BlackDoctor Weekly Housecall
  
Articles
  Bookmark and Share
Michelle Obama’s Guide To Being Healthy
06-Nov-2009

(BlackDoctor.org) -- Michelle Obama. When referring to her, what can you say other than fabulous? She is beautiful, poised, stylish, healthy, physically fit and in a happy marriage with a successful man. She is the living carnation of Claire Huxtable, which is why so many women—not just black women—look up to her.

In an exclusive interview with Prevention magazine's editor-in-chief, Obama shared her secrets to a happy, healthy life:

1. Prioritize Fitness Like He Does

My "aha" moment came when our first daughter, Malia, was 4 months old. My husband’s exercise routine hadn’t changed a bit; he was still getting his workouts in, and I was getting irritated [laughs]. Then I realized he was just prioritizing it differently.

So I said, "If I get up and out before the first feeding, I will work out." That will engage my husband to do that first feeding with the baby. So I started getting up at 4:30 in the morning and going to the gym. With exercising, the more you do it, the more you get into it. And the more you see results, the more you’re pushing for the next level. That’s when it just clicked for me.

2. Find Balance as a Mother

I think my mother taught me what not to do. She put us first, always, sometimes to the detriment of herself. She encouraged me not to do that. She’d say being a good mother isn’t all about sacrificing; it’s really investing and putting yourself higher on your priority list. You can be a good mom and still work out, get your rest, have a career—or not. She encouraged me to find that balance.

3. Allow Yourself to be Happy

[Good health is] multi-faceted—it’s physical, it’s internal, it’s my diet and my emotional state. It’s all tied together. Throughout my life, I’ve learned to make choices that make me happy and make sense for me. Even my husband is happier when I’m happy. He has always said, "You figure out what you want to do," because he’s discovered that personal happiness is connected to everything.

4. Make Yourself a Priority

I have freed myself to put me on the priority list and say, yes, I can make choices that make me happy, and it will ripple and benefit my kids, my husband and my physical health. That’s hard for women to own; we’re not taught to do that. It’s a lesson that I want to teach my girls so they don’t wait for their "aha" moment until they’re in their 30's like I was [laughs]. Maybe they can experience it a little earlier.

5. Embrace Your Age

Nothing [really scares me about aging]. I look at my mom—she’s 72, and she’s happy and looks great. To me, with age, everything has gotten better. You have way more control; you know yourself better. My goal is to be a great-looking 70-year-old! I won’t mind being 70, but I want people to say, "You’re 70?" [laughs]

6. Define Your Own Happiness

You know, happiness for me really is when my kids are good and when my family is whole. Moving [to the White House], whatever stresses would be on my husband and me, we could handle; we are grown-ups. But it wouldn’t be until the day that my kids came home and said to me, "I like it here," that I’d feel like I could breathe and know that we’re all going to be okay here. And that happened very early into the year. My happiness is measured against theirs—when they’re in a good place, I feel really good.

7. Get Healthy While You’re Young

I always want to be in the best shape that I can be. What I’m discovering is that the older you get, the more work you have to do to stay there. When I was younger, I could eat whatever I wanted, as long as I exercised; or if I didn’t exercise and just watched what I ate, I’d maintain. Well, now I have to do both. I’m varying my workouts so it’s not just cardio but also includes moves to maintain my flexibility. I incorporated Pilates and do much more stretching. I try to tell young people to get in shape now, because it’s easier. If you’re 30 and want to drop 10 pounds, all you have to do is just walk [laughs].

8. Find Workouts You Enjoy

I’ll do intervals because I don’t run long and those are killer, so I’m always happy when I’m finished. I enjoy arm exercises because you can actually see what it’s hitting.

9. You Can Be Healthier than Ever After Age 40

[I’ve been in the best shape of my life] in my 40s because I’ve had more time as my kids have gotten older. There was a period, actually right before the campaign started up, that I was really in tip-top shape. I was really there. And then my husband ran for president [laughs].

10. Adjust Your Diet for New Situations

Overall [my diet at the White House is] good, but there are some great bakers here. I’m not complaining, because I live in the White House, and it’s really nice here. But if you like pie, it will be there—always—at every meal [laughs]. So for me, it’s about setting up new boundaries. I had some challenges with that, but I’m balancing out.

11. Enjoy Everything in Moderation

I try to have no absolute no's. I love French fries, I like a good burger and I like pie. And that’s okay. I would be depressed if I felt I could never eat the things that I love. I also don’t want my girls to be obsessed about food. We don’t have a "no junk food" rule—I just want them to think about their choices. When my older daughter asks, "Can I have pie?" I’ll say, "Did you have it yesterday? Well, what do you think?" And she’ll come to the conclusion that, you know, you’re right, I shouldn’t eat pie every night.

12. Do What Makes You Feel Good

I know what makes me happy. I pick the clothes that make me happy—sometimes people like them, sometimes they don’t. I try to listen to my own internal guide. My message to women: Do what makes you feel good, because there’ll always be someone who thinks you should do it differently. Whether your choices are hits or misses, at least they’re your own.

13. Reach Out for Support

When I’m unhappy with something, people know, because I don’t want to hold on to it. I’d rather deal immediately with the stuff that bothers me, so using my network—my girlfriends, my husband, my mom—I talk a lot, I vent. Even if there are no answers, sharing the emotions helps keep me stable. It’s good that I have my mom [here]. I can go up to her little suite of rooms and just say, "So, what’s going on, Mom?" And then I’ll start. Eventually we talk our way into a place of comfort.

14. Get Enough Sleep

I am a sleeper. When you wake up at 4:30 in the morning to do a workout, you’re sleepy at 8 in the evening. So I’d put the kids down, then I’d go to bed. By 10 o’clock at the latest, I’m in bed. I even usually wake up before the alarm clock. Though some of that may be nerves [laughs].

15. Nurture Your Relationship

One of the things that attracted me to Barack was his emotional honesty. Right off the bat he said what he felt. There are no games with him—he is who he appears to be. I feel fortunate as a woman to have a husband who loves me and shows me in every way.

By Candace Hall, BDO Staff Writer



Related Articles
Michelle Obama’s Guide To Being Healthy

Lower Your Blood Pressure With Exercise

What Every Black Woman Should Know About Heart Disease

Dining Out With Hypertension

Hypertension And Its Hidden Dangers

Lower Your Blood Pressure With Little Changes

8,000 Blacks Die

Hypertension: The Silent Killer


Get health tips. advice and strategies each week with BlackDoctor Weekly Housecall
Enter Email:
  
Get your daily dose of BlackDoctor.org

Add to My Yahoo!

Add to Google

RSS
Congratulations to
BlackDoctor.org!

Proud winner of the
2006 Health Care
Standard of
Excellence Award.
  Copyright © 2005-2008, BlackDoctor.org. All rights reserved Terms & Conditions