You’re never too young to age well
Aristotle said it first and best: “Good habits formed in youth make all the difference.”
But it’s tough to know at 15 that your hunched posture while texting may cause you chronic neck pain when you’re 40, or that living on diet soda and doughnuts in college can contribute to developing heart disease. The problems associated with getting older seem so far off.
The seeds of your future health are planted early. You can do a great deal as a pre-teen and teen to make sure you don’t develop premature health issues, such as Type 2 diabetes (around 5,300 U.S. kids are diagnosed a year) and high blood pressure (now affecting an estimated 3.5 percent of American children and teens).