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don's report archive

by Donald B. Ardell, Ph. D.

Wellness in the Headlines
(Don's Report to the World)

A Proposed REAL Wellness Agenda For Environmental Awareness In 2009
Saturday January 17, 2009

Everyone knows that wellness seekers and promoters value fitness, nutrition, fun and a host of other positive lifestyle matters. Most people familiar with health promotion also realize that the term "wellness," though widely used commercially in varied and even contradictory ways, entails more than NOT doing high risk things, more than foo foo spa treatments and more than medical assessments of hazards existing and likely to develop.

Yes, despite the hype by many in the medical profession, a wellness philosophy entails so very much more than simply a willingness to avoid attitudes and behaviors that risk illness and disease, like smoking, overeating, remaining sedentary or being a grump. In fact, wellness—the conscious choice to pursue health and life quality well above the common standard of "normal" mediocrity, does not in its original or best sense emphasize any of these last mentioned aspects. Wellness properly described and embraced entails the study and integration of mental and physical health-enriching qualities into one's daily life, starting with fitness and nutrition but including much else. 

On many occasions, I have suggested the use of the term REAL wellness to emphasize such positive non-medical realms as the quest for added meaning and purpose, the cultivation of an increased capacity for reason, exuberance and liberty, critical thinking, applied ethics, positive psychology (happiness) and environmental awareness.

Wellness seekers and promoters need not feel remiss about advocating personal advancement via exceptional lifestyles. Such a focus does not equate with self-absorption or neglect of the commons (the larger environment): instead, it reflects a deliberate focus on what one can do for him or herself. Enjoy and go for it. Too bad more people don't do the same. If most did, the U.S. medical system would not be so bloated as to consume 17 percent of GDP.

In addition to looking after ourselves, we are wise if we also work together, with others, to promote favorable environmental priorities. What can REAL wellness seekers do about environmental awareness? What, exactly, IS environmental awareness?

On their own, there is not much any individual can do about the great physical issues we face in this country and around the world. Similarly, we are limited in what we can do about economic and social problems, which also fall in the category of environmental awareness. Yet, we cannot focus only on our own situations while the environment around us deteriorates and social and economic conditions worsen. Being happy, in top physical form, mentally acute and otherwise fit as a proverbial fiddle won't matter much if the wells go dry, the economy collapses and the air becomes toxic, for starters.

The community, state and the world need our attention. If any of these jurisdictions fall apart, individual wellness will mean little. A willingness to do one's part to safeguard and promote the greater good is a positive wellness trait. Given the serious problems in this country and around the world, wellness seekers and promoters must also focus on a selection of "green" issues of their choice. In this way, a positive lifestyle will serve as a complement to outreach efforts beyond the personal. Pressing national and global concerns very much affect the quality of an individual's quality of life. Of course, there are so many concerns, issues, problems and challenges, from economic crises to global warming to conservation and so on, that no consensus among wellness enthusiasts on which national and global concerns are most important is likely anytime soon. We must all choose our own priorities for outreach services for the general good.

What might such an agenda look like?

The possibilities are nearly endless, given the range of problems at the community, state, national and world levels. Disparate individuals will not agree on the most pressing interventions. Here is a listing of 21 topical areas in the fields of science, engineering and medicine assembled by a team at the National Academies, best known for their work last year organizing the Science Debate 2008. Which areas would you emphasize?

Stem Cell Research
Healthcare Costs and Access
Feeding the World
Ocean Health
Education and Learning
The Aging Population
Climate Change
National Security
Energy
Bioengineering
The Nation's Aging Infrastructure
Biodiversity and Extinction
Crime and Justice
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Mental Health
Space Science and Exploration
Future of Aviation
Water Resources
Chronic Disease
Toxic Agents in the Environment
Children, Youth, and Families

Well, we can't do everything, at least not right away (actually, we can't do anything right away), so to get things started, here is my own REAL wellness priority list, beginning with environmental concerns (economic and social priority areas will be listed separately).

The National Wellness Institute (NWI) could play an important role in this process. The NWI could elect to serve as a lead agent to gather, prioritize and promote the shared concerns of environmentally-conscious wellness seekers, promoters and organizations. In this role, the NWI could direct resources, energies and talents to fashion a common agenda on environmental matters large and small, local and planetary.

I propose that wellness enthusiasts, under the leadership of the NWI, adopt just such an agenda in order to connect personal and organizational wellness with wider economic and environmental advances. And to speed things along, I am willing to offer a few suggestions about the possible nature of an environmental awareness agenda for NWI's initial consideration.

But, I'm out of space for now, so look for my proposed REAL wellness environment awareness agenda in the next essay.

(Note: This essay will be filed in the archives in the MEANING DOMAIN under the skill area of applied wellness. Additional articles related to this theme may be found there.)



(Ed. Note: Views expressed in this and other columns are those of the author and not necessarily those of the SeekWellness Editorial Board.)

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