¡°Bad Habits¡± That Are Actually Good for You
Added: (Sat Apr 02 2011)
Pressbox (Press Release) -
So many people have more or less bad habits in their lives. It is known to all that bad habits are bad for your health. However, scientists have found that ¡°bad habits¡± are actually benefits to your health. Some people will suspect what I said. Here I would like to give your the explanations.
First, the Loud music can stimulate your brain. It might be good for brain power when you head off to rock festivals, or simply turn up the volume on your home amplifier. According to researchers at University, music fans are stimulating part of the inner ear known as the sacculus, which responds to the beat in music. This gives the brain pleasure and makes us feel good¡ªduring the music and afterwards.
Drinking more fizzy drinks can combat dementia. Despite concerns about rotting teeth and obesity, drinking two cans fizzy drink a day might help you avoid Alzheimer¡¯s and improve your memory by 20 percent. Some scientists said as well as the elderly who were struggling with short-term memory loss, people studying for exams could benefit¡ªperhaps because of the sugar rush.
According to a survey fidgeting can fights obesity. It may be irritating at the theatre, but natural fidgets are doing themselves a favor. Researchers have found that people who always seem to be on the go are more likely to be slim¡ªand may spend two more hours a day being active than their tubby friends. The extra motion, whether it is twitching, stretching or yawning, accounts for an extra 400 calories a day.
Researchers at Kingston University think that being untidy could prevent Asthma. Unmade beds are the bane of many a mother¡¯s life, but they might be the answer to asthma. The research suggests that house dust mites¡ªthought to cause asthma¡ªcannot survive in the dry exposed conditions found in an unmade bed. Normally, the average bed houses 1.5 million house dust mites, which feed on scales of human skin; the mites¡¯ waste contains allergens which are easily inhaled during sleep and can particularly affect those with allergy problems such as asthma. An occupied bed, or a made one that retains the warmth and moisture after the person has left it, is the ideal home, but house mites are less likely to thrive when moisture is in short supply.