Stop Your Business From Ruining Your Health

Short temper, weight gain, and high stress: Your business is doing this to you. Make these simple fixes to boost your mental and physical well-being.
By Jessica Stillman | Dec 22, 2011

As Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail recently reported, many entrepreneurs put their businesses before their health. Citing a new survey from Manta, the paper claims that the touch business climate this year has led to less healthy living among owners. One in three told pollsters they are working out less. Twenty-two percent have gained weight and 14 percent admitted to being more short-tempered due to the strain.

These statistics might shock a personal trainer or a dietician, but they won't come as a surprise to many coffee-swilling, desk-bound young entrepreneurs, many of whom are all too well aware they don't have the time to hit the gym or eat healthily. You probably can't do much about how hard you work in the short-term, but that doesn't mean there's nothing entrepreneurs with expanding waistlines and shrinking tempers can do to improve their health despite their long hours.

Katie Morell, for example, recently gave tips on the American Express OPEN Forum blog. Some, like "have a plan" and stick to it, are probably familiar to you and not terribly helpful, but a few of the tips she relays from personal trainer Don Miguel, bear repeating. Morell writes:

Miguel and Morell aren't the only ones with tips to help entrepreneurs. Freelance Switch also had tips and reminders recently, including:

What tips and tricks do you have to keep (relatively) in shape while starting up a business?