In cigarettes, there is this substance called "nicotine." This substance is the reason for addiction. It causes your brain to feel relaxed whilst smoking, then for a while after you remove the cigarette, you feel happy and relaxed. But, this doesn't continue. After a while, it stops and is replaced with feelings of nervousness, anxiety, and anger as well as many other uncomfortable emotions.
These emotion cause the smoker to want to relax, therefore, they grab another cigarette.
Cigarettes are very harmful to one's body. They can cause skin cancer, lung cancer, and teeth problems. See anyone with bad yellow teeth and bad-smelling breath? It is most likely that they smoke. Though, not everyone who smokes gets sick. There is this thing called "second-hand smoking" that occurs when a person is around a smoker. It happens because the non-smoker breathes in the fumes and smoke of the cigarette the smoker is smoking. It is juts as bad as normal smoking.
Now, you might think eCigarretes are good for you...but they are not! They cause almost- if not exactly- as much harm to your body that a normal cigarette would.
Never try smoking. It will lead to an addiction that is neither attractive, or healthy!
I'd say that the doctor would recommend to 1: to start a low-calorie, low-fat diet, 2: devote time to follow a workout plan, and possibly 5: Join a weight-loss support group, but I'm not sure about that one.
The reason the doctor wouldn't recommend 3 is because you're supposed to eat several servings of fruit per day, not once a week, and the reason the doctor wouldn't recommend 4 is because an increase in food consumption would add on to the patients problem of being overweight rather than help it.
A chronic illness and a communicable disease
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Always inspect your food before you eat it or otherwise you could get a disease like that. Hope this helps
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Research links the growth mindset with many benefits, including: greater comfort with taking personal risks and striving for more stretching goals; higher motivation; enhanced brain development across wider ranges of tasks; lower stress, anxiety and depression; better work relationships; and higher performance levels