Assuming that tomorrow will be the same as today is poor preparation for living. It equips us only for disappointment or, more likely, for shock. To live well, to be mentally healthy, we must learn to realize that life is a work in process.
I buy smoked mackerel in a vain attempt at being healthy. I do actually really like it, and you don't have to cook it, which is handy.
I'm not a flag waver for obesity. It's not healthy, and you have a crap life because there is such a downer on it.
Deep frying a Twinkie makes it healthy, right?
You need to make sure everyone is healthy first and foremost.
I continue to see a healthy PC market, very healthy. The machines will continue to morph; you'll see smaller machines that have more capability.
You don't have to be rich to be healthy. That's such a misconception.
When it comes to kids, it's just not hard to get them healthy. I don't find it hard and don't understand why people find it hard.
Let's just say I believe in healthy love.
I only eat healthy food, and I only want healthy love!
Because I don't really work out, I have to eat very healthy if I want to maintain my figure.
We also call for a healthy food system that prioritizes sustainable healthy local food production.
When Cuba lost their fossil fuel pipeline when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1990. Overnight they had no choice, they had to transition to clean energy, they didn't have any fuel to burn, and they also had to transition to a healthy food system, an organic system - their economy is crashing, this was not a planned transition. This was a crisis, but a crisis nonetheless, in which pollution went away. And it's very instructive to see what happened to their health.
With living wage jobs, basically 20 million of them to help jump-start a sustainable and healthy economy, with an insured, just transition, for example, for workers in both the fossil fuel and in the weapons industry, because they all need to transition to sustainable forms of production. This is also our answer to the departure of manufacturing jobs and good jobs by creating the manufacturing base here for clean renewable energy and the efficiency systems and public transportation to put these workers to work in jobs that are actually good for them.
We are subsidizing healthy food instead of subsidizing food that is definitely not healthy for us.
There's always criticism in any process and I think that's a healthy thing.
The way I work with my people is totally different. I never wanted to compare myself, in a healthy way to Jillian [Michaels] because she did what she did, and I respect that. Now I want to do what I do.
To be connected to the real world is healthy and important.
The Railway Man was a particularly intense and immersive experience. I definitely got carried away. I lost about 35 pounds. I really was incredibly skinny and also quite unwell while we were filming. It wasn't very healthy. I don't recommend it. But then also doing the torture scenes, the water boarding stuff, there wasn't really any other way just to do it really.
Dissension is healthy, even when it gets loud.
I had a healthy appetite [being pregnant]. I got more healthy as time goes on, and they grew. I never let myself go.
It's one thing to lose weight, but it's another thing to eat healthy.
The idea is to be healthy, not to wear yourself down or to try and be a twig or change yourself drastically.
I don't think I got thin. I think I got healthy.
Subsisting on a diet drawn from one food group isn't healthy or gratifying. Even eating cupcakes 24/7 eventually would get old!