In her book Positivity, Barbara L. Fredrickson writes, “You are constantly changing — not just your clothes or your hairstyle, but your inner core, the very essence of your being. Change is the rule, constancy the rare exception. Consider the change underway within you at this very moment. What you know as ‘you’ is actually trillions of cells living and working together. Most only live for a few weeks or months. When they die, they are replaced by new cells. This cycle continues for as long as you live. The pace of cell renewal varies by body part. Your taste buds live only a few hours. Your white blood cells live about ten days. Your muscle cells live about three months. Even your bones are made anew time and again. Considering these differences, scientists have suggested that you replace about 1 per cent of your cells each day. That’s 1 per cent today, another 1 per cent tomorrow, amounting to roughly 30 per cent by next month and 100 per cent by next season. Seeing yourself and your cells in this way, every three months you get a whole new you. Perhaps it’s no coincidence that it takes around three months to learn a new habit or make a lifestyle change. Perhaps we can’t teach an old cell new tricks.”

And with the cells in our brain and body changing so rapidly, what does this mean for our health and mindset?  How can we flush the unhealthy cells and rejuvenate the healthy ones?  How can we rewire our thoughts?

Positivity changes everything. Barbara goes on to say, “More fascinating still is the discovery that the pace of cell renewal doesn’t simply follow some predetermined script. It varies depending on what you do and how you feel. A key signal that tells your cells whether to decay or grow, for instance, is movement. A sedentary lifestyle hastens cell decay. An active lifestyle hastens cell renewal. This is true for both your body and your brain.”

This would explain how a brisk walk clears the mind.  How we all know that one person who is still moving through the world like a teenager when they are in their senior years. They tricked their cells into continuing to renew with their attitude and action.

What a gift to see a walk as a medication for our cells.  Or a ten minute meditation as a prescription for peace.

If our cells are replaced that frequently, what will we let our ‘new you’ do tomorrow?