If I become vegetarian do I get the hot salad chick in the video? ;-)
LOL!
Your advice is generally very good but one thing people need to realize is that there is no way to guarantee good health. Sometimes people with excellent health habits have awful luck, like tennis player Arthur Ashe who was an excellent athlete and, as far as I know, a clean living person. He had a heart attack in his thirties and then contracted AIDS through a blood transfusion. I have met people in their 90s who drank and smoked all their lives.
There's no doubt that a lot of our health outcome is just down to good or bad genes or environmental factors that we
have little control over. There are a lot of babies for example that are born with syndromes or even get infected at birth
with things like AIDS.
However it's important to maximize your chances of staying healthy. This video is about what we
can control. We can control some of the risk factors, but obviously not all of them, and everyone does eventually die no
matter how healthy of a lifestyle they lead. However you want to be as healthy as you can for the longest duration you can and you want to live a long life so you can work longer to make it a better world for others and to do as many good things as possible.
Just because you can't guarantee a good outcome doesn't mean you shouldn't control what you can.
In my own life, I used to run marathons, never smoked, had a decent diet, drank little if any alcohol, did not engage in gambling or most other vices. This year I was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. While hopefully, it will not ruin my life it is certainly not something I expected. The cause of it is not known, so if I did something to bring it about I have no idea what that is. So in conclusion follow all the good advice but remember that life has no guarantees.
I'm so sorry you have to go through that and got such bad news! It was probably nothing you did or didn't do. That's a very common disease that happens to a lot of people with no apparent reason behind it. My grandfather on my dad's side had that and I've seen a lot of other people with it too. I think that if there is a silver lining to it, it's that you have it in a time when there has been a lot of medical progress being made (especially in places like Israel) so you have more of a chance than previous generations did that you will have access to effective treatments. Also don't think that your healthy
lifestyle has been in vain. You have Parkinsons, but thank God you don't have Parkinsons and any other major disease along with it.