{"id":500,"date":"2001-09-05T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2001-09-05T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/celebrities-what-these-celebrities-are-really-thankful-for\/"},"modified":"2001-09-05T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2001-09-05T00:00:00","slug":"celebrities-what-these-celebrities-are-really-thankful-for","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/celebrities-what-these-celebrities-are-really-thankful-for\/","title":{"rendered":"What These Celebrities Are Really Thankful For"},"content":{"rendered":"
Here are intimate answers from celebs, writers, and other famous folks on what they're grateful for, what scared them most, and what the best health advice they ever got was.<\/p>\n
Whats the most helpful health advice you ever received?<\/strong> “I eat very well and exercise around three to five times a week, but I let stress in life affect me too much. I was learning to surf recently when the ocean was particularly rough. I kept trying to jump over the waves. The surfing instructor told me I was putting myself in front of the strongest part, taking on the full strength of the wave: 'If you dive under the wave, the roughest stuff passes right over you.' Good advice for real life. Now, when I start to feel completely overwhelmed by mounting demands, I imagine myself diving under and letting them roll over.” — Samantha Brown, host of Travel Channels Passport<\/em> series<\/p>\n "'Let's try not to eat until we feel physically ill anymore.' It's a pact I made recently with my friend, Iva. So simple it should seem obvious, but feasting to the point of pain is an old habit for me, and one that I probably can live without in the future!” — Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love<\/em><\/p>\n “The best advice I got was that food is nutrition for the body, not a comfort or social activity, or just something that makes you fat. I am learning to look at food as the fuel I feed my body so that it can be as miraculous as it is. The human body is incredible. After doing so much research on cancer for a loved one, I am seeing that it is imperative that we help our body and all that it does by feeding it the right things so it can do what it does naturally. Our body is constantly repairing itself, healing itself, and regenerating. I now look at food as something to help that process.” — Carrie Ann Inaba, judge on ABCs Dancing With the Stars<\/em><\/p>\n
“I think it was getting the advice that I cant tell patients what to do unless I myself do it. Ive tried to listen to that. I cant tell her at 50 she needs a colonoscopy, unless I tell her at 50 I had my own colonoscopy." — Judith Reichman, MD, author of Im Not in the Mood<\/em> and Im Too Young to Get Old<\/em>, and, most recently, Relax, This Wont Hurt<\/em><\/p>\n