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According to research, the smell of a strawberry candle can motivate exercisers to work harder, boosting their calorie burn by as much as 19 percent.
Never take your multivitamin on an empty stomach. You need food to best absorb the nutrients -- and prevent an upset stomach.
After brushing, use your toothbrush to massage your gums in a gentle circular motion. This will promote better circulation, which helps prevent gum disease and bone loss.
A Yale University study found that optimists -- regardless of gender, health and money -- live at least seven and a half years longer.
Instead of sitting around the conference table, hold walk-and-talk meetings to burn some calories with your co-workers.
When using sunscreen, people often overlook their feet. Apply protection generously and often to the tops of your feet -- and lather up the bottoms too if they’re exposed.
According to a new review of more than 100 studies, exercises that increase strength, flexibility and balance are the best way to prevent seniors from taking dangerous falls.
Cook with 95 percent lean ground beef instead of ground round, to cut saturated fat and calories. Your family won’t even notice the difference.
Since sports are the leading cause of eye injuries and blindness in children, be sure your kids wear safety glasses when they’re on the field or court.
Kids quickly learn they can get parental attention by picking fights with one another. Instead of meddling, let them develop their own conflict-resolution skills.
You can adopt a penguin, lemur, panda or one of 40 other animals when you make a donation to the World Wildlife Fund at the organization’s Web site.
Try geocaching, a high-tech scavenger hunt that uses a GPS unit. Go to the geocaching Web site to review coordinates and clues with your kids, and then head out for a hike outdoors.
Avoid using scented soaps and lotions, and wearing bright colors or flower prints, which encourage insects to bite. Apply repellents containing 10 to 30 percent DEET, safe for children over 2 months old.
Ditch the car and hop on a bus, train, trolley or boat. Any mode that's out of the ordinary will become a big part of your kids' vacation memories.
Even if you use a mattress cover and pad, protect your family from allergy-causing critters by stripping your bed and vacuuming your mattress twice a month.
A flirty fringe is perfect for hiding forehead lines and can make you look instantly younger -- no injections required.
Having trouble falling asleep? Fill your tub. Studies show that a 45-minute hot bath taken two hours before bedtime beats prescription medications.
This summer, resist the urge to schedule every moment of your child’s time, even if he or she complains, “Mom, I’m bored!” Boredom often motivates kids to create interesting things to do all on their own.
Gabbing to a pal immediately lowers blood pressure as well as stress hormones. Research shows that maintaining friendships can positively affect your health over time, as can being active.
Present your kids options for doing chores, such as tidying up the playroom or cleaning their room.
Frequent trips to the sink will kill cold germs -- even if you don’t use hot water. The key: suds up for at least 15 seconds (sing “Happy Birthday” twice).
Want to keep a journal but don’t have the time? Put together some quick lists, such as places you’ve seen or hope to visit. Get ideas at the Listography Web site.
Calculate the "longcut" when walking to school, the store or a friend's house. Add a few hills, stairways or secret paths through the woods too.
Talk as a family instead. Research shows that eating together actually helps improve kids’ achievement scores and reduce behavioral problems.
Fix chicken breasts tonight and use the extra to prepare enchiladas for tomorrow. Or make meatloaf and stow extra chopped onions and browned meat in the fridge for chili night.
Cut a 2-liter plastic bottle in half. Then layer pebbles, activated charcoal, Spanish moss, soil and an easy-to-maintain houseplant like a Begonia. Your kids will see life grow before their eyes!
One can of cola a day can add up to 1050 empty calories by the end of the week, so save soda for an occasional restaurant treat.
Repurpose empty plastic bottles by washing, drying and filling with dried beans to make easy musical instruments. Encourage your kids to parade around the house or block with their instruments.
Cut clothes or figures from old magazines and catalogs, and glue them to construction paper or cardboard. You can stick the clothes on the dolls with either taped paper tabs or paper clips.
When introducing young children to swimming, don’t use those inflatable arm rings. They give kids and parents a false sense of security, since they can easily fall off or leak air.
Monitor your kid’s snacks without having to serve them by filling one cabinet with healthy snack foods that he or she is allowed to eat after school.
Kids can get two chalk colors -- one light shade, one dark -- for the price of one by dipping one end of the chalk in water before drawing.
Save money by creating a child care co-op with friends or neighbors. Take turns watching the kids or share a baby sitter’s weekly time and fee.
Administer a “take home test” by interviewing prospective sitters in your home and letting the sitter watch the children while you clean another room in the house.
Turn your trip into a map-reading lesson: Before you leave, have the kids map out the route you're planning to take. Then, they can let you know when you’ve arrived.
Help your stay-at-home preschooler adjust when siblings return to school by planning school-related routines such as packing a lunch box to open at lunchtime, just like his or her older siblings.
It’s OK -- and downright healthy -- to nicely say no to requests for favors. If you must say yes, make it a qualified yes: “Sure, if you can take over next week.”
Let your child revel in royalty by putting him or her in charge of planning a menu with four of the five food groups (review them at the MyPyramid Web site).
Hang a list of chores on the fridge and encourage your kids to compete to get them done. Whoever finishes the most gets first dibs on choosing the next family outing.
Exposing your eyes to morning sunlight resets your body clock, telling your brain it’s time to wake up and boosting your energy.
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