Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - BITESIZE | How to Reinvent Your Life This Summer: 5 Simple Habits That Really Work | Dr Rangan Chatterjee #570
Episode Date: July 3, 2025The summer months have a different flavour and feel to the other months of the year; there’s something different about our energy, motivation and willpower. And, if we can harness those differences,... we have a golden opportunity to make meaningful changes in our life. Feel Better Live More Bitesize is my weekly podcast for your mind, body, and heart. Each week I’ll be featuring inspirational stories and practical tips from some of my former guests. Today’s clip is from episode 468 of the podcast which was a solo episode from myself all about the summer months and how we can embrace the qualities of this particular season to help us make meaningful change. In this clip, I share five simple but powerful ideas you can consider introducing into your life that could help you make the most of the season ahead. Thanks to our sponsor https://www.drinkag1.com/livemore Show notes and the full podcast are available at https://drchatterjee.com/468 Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com. DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to constitute or be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified health care provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
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Welcome to Feel Better, Live More Byte Size, your weekly dose of positivity and optimism
to get you ready for the weekend.
Today's clip is from episode 468 of the podcast, which was a solo episode from myself all about
the summer months and how we can embrace this particular season to make meaningful changes
in our life.
There's something different about our energy and motivation during this
time of year. And in this clip, I share five simple but powerful ideas that you can consider
introducing that could help you make the most of the season ahead.
So, first tip, change up your morning routine.
Okay, you may or may not think you have a morning routine, but all of us do.
We all have a routine that we do.
Now, we're not always intentional about it, but we absolutely have a routine.
So your routine could be that you are lying in, you're scrolling in bed, you're looking
at the news headlines, you're getting up late, and then you're rushing around until you get to work.
Or your routine could be more intentional where you get up and are doing some proactive
things for your health like meditation or journaling or exercise or whatever it might
be.
Whatever your current routine is, I want you to think about changing it up in the summer.
And in particular, what I've seen work really, really well is to get up a bit earlier than
usual and get outside.
Now, of course, this will depend where you live.
Here in the UK at the moment, it's getting light at about 4.30 in the morning.
Okay?
I'm not saying you have to get up at 4.30, but if you're living somewhere where it gets light earlier, this is the perfect time
if you're here to take advantage of that. Okay, set an alarm, get up, maybe even before
coffee or tea or whatever drink you like to have in the morning, get outside, embrace
the morning lights and maybe go for a 15 or 20 minute walk. More if you can, but even
10 or 15 minutes can make a
really big difference. Now, why does it make such a big difference?
The first thing it does is set your body's circadian rhythm. Your circadian rhythm influences
so many systems in your body. Getting natural light first thing in the morning sets a timer
for certain hormones in your body, which will help you sleep in
the evening.
A lot of people don't think about that when it comes to sleep.
They're concentrating on what they do just before bed, but actually what you do first
thing in the morning influences your ability to sleep at night.
You're getting that natural light exposure, which helps your circadian biology.
That's really, really important.
Number two, if you're going outside for a walk in natural light at that time, you're
getting movement in. We know that simply walking will improve your mood, will improve your
insulin sensitivity, will improve your focus. It's also a bit of solitude for you if you
do this by yourself. Solitude is a really important daily practice, I think, arguably the most
important practice for our health and our happiness, because it allows us to reflect
on our lives. Often we're stuck in our lives, we never step outside with solitude to think
about how is our life going? How could I change things? Am I nourishing my relationships?
Am I nourishing my health? Et cetera, et cetera.
You need a practice of solitude to be able to do that.
And I think a 15 minute walk every morning gives you that natural light.
It gives you your movement and it gives you a daily practice of solitude.
Now I had a patient a few years ago who thought that they were a night owl.
They never wanted to get up before 7 a.m.
They said they were always tired in the morning. And I persuaded her in the summer months to get up at 5am and go for a 30 minute
walk every morning. I said, try it for at least seven days and see what happens. The
change was remarkable. She found it hard at first, definitely. The alarm went off. She
didn't want to get up, but she committed to
it. Not only to me, she committed to herself that this was a behavior she was going to
do. And she found within days, her body clock was starting to align. Within a few days,
she was starting to get up just before her alarm. She was getting that natural light
in the morning. She was getting that time to herself. And this lady found that when she came back, she was much more present with her children. She felt that she
was ahead of the day. She felt it much easier to engage in other helpful behaviors for the
rest of the day. And it all started with that 30 minute walk at 5 a.m. So I want you to
think about that. You may already be doing that, but if you are not doing that already, and perhaps you
find it hard to do that in the autumn months and the winter, and I get it is hard, embrace
the season, embrace the fact that it is light at that time.
Your body wants to be up in that light.
You may have to push through for a few days, but I honestly would recommend you try it
for at least seven days, and I'm would recommend you try it for at least seven days and I'm
pretty sure you're going to feel better.
The second thing I want you to think about is a social media detox.
We hear all the time about social media and how it's controlling our lives, or it certainly
is for many of us, but many of us feel that we can't do much about it or it's difficult.
We're tired, we're stressed in the evenings,
we just like to go on Instagram and scroll for a few hours. I get it. What I want you
to consider in the summer months, and this is something that I've been doing now for
maybe five years, is take a real break from social media in those summer months. Now,
I want to acknowledge that not
everyone is going to be able to do this. Okay? You might have a job where you need to be
on it. I get that. You may have a business where you're the only one running it and you
have to be on it. If that applies to you, sure, it may be more challenging. But for
many of us, we just keep doing in the summer what we've done in every other season.
And I want you to really embrace the change in the season.
I think we respond as human beings
to these changes in rhythm, okay?
I do think in the winter months,
when it gets certainly here in the UK,
it can be dark at 8 a.m. and darkam and dark at 4pm again. No, you want to
hibernate. You don't want to be as active. That's natural at that time of year. Think
about what animals do at that time of year. But in the summer months, it's very, very
different. And I think we really need to lean into those differences. The modern world makes
it hard for us to do that. We have the same work times, the same schedules, but I want you to think about what can you do differently in the summer
months than you do for the rest of the year? And I think a social media detox is one of those things.
Okay. What might that look like? First of all, it depends on your relationship with social media.
But I think so many of us are simply not aware of how much our thoughts are influenced
by the world around us. In fact, I'd go as far as to say that many people don't really
know what they think anymore. They're so used to getting up in the morning, picking up their
phone and consuming. Okay? So we're having very little time to be present
with our own thoughts. That's why tip number one, the morning walk. And I forgot to say
that morning walk without a phone, if you can, or even if you have a phone with you, don't look at
it. You want to be with your own thoughts. Allow your inner most thoughts to come up and process
them. Once you start consuming material from the outside world,
you've kind of lost the opportunity.
Your thoughts, your feelings, your behaviors
are often downstream from the content you're consuming.
Right?
So, what I would recommend, if you can,
get on your smartphone, if you've got one,
and delete your social media apps.
We know that if you make a one, and delete your social media apps. We know that
if you make a behaviour difficult, we do it less. If you make a behaviour easy, we do
it more. I mean, that applies to anything. It applies to Netflix, to exercise and movement.
If you have to go to the gym, that's 10 minutes away to do your workout, you're less likely
to do it than if you can do a five minute workout every day in your kitchen in your own clothes. All the human behavior research
supports this. Make it easy, you'll do it. Make it hard, you won't.
If you delete those social media apps from your phone, yes, for the first few days, because
I do this every year, you pick up that phone and you sort of, you feel that urge. You haven't quite
got used to it yet. You're wanting to press and see because you're used to doing it. But
within, I would say within three days, that urge has gone. And before you know it, you
feel a lot calmer. You feel more relaxed. You feel more in tune with your own feelings
and your own thoughts. I really would encourage you to do it. For me, it's been life changing. Many people I've shared this with on Instagram over the past
years and they do it as well. And they say, oh my God, I didn't realize how good I could
feel when I was off social media. And the key about deleting off your phone is you make
it harder to go on. Now, technically you could go on your laptop
and go onto that social media platform, but you're probably not going to do it as often.
And again, if you've got people in your family, let's say a partner who can do it with you,
but that can be really powerful. It is something that has really changed the way I experience my summers each year. And once it gets to April or May,
I'm actually starting to look forward
to my social media detox,
which typically I start in the middle of July.
As I say, I get that not everyone can do it.
Again, it's just an idea I want to share with you.
I've experienced the benefits.
People have reported back to me the benefits.
And I just want you to at least give it a try to see if you also experience those benefits.
Again, I tend to do it for four, maybe six weeks now, but I started off doing it for
just one week.
So maybe just start there.
One week without any social media.
Tip number three, can you do all of your movement and exercise outdoors?
Okay, remember everything here is about embracing
the change in the season.
Again, this is something I do,
it's something I've been recommending to patients for years.
It's how can you make things feel a bit different?
So for me, I always want to be outside at this time of year,
even if it's cloudy, as it often is
in the UK.
So, I will leave a skipping rope outside, outside my office, outside my kitchen, and
several times in the day, I'll just go there and I'll skip.
Okay?
Now, I get many people love the gym.
If you love the gym, I'm not necessarily saying stop doing it, but could you change it up? What kind of movements
and exercises that you do in the gym could you do outside? Being outside is very, very
good for our health. As I mentioned in tip one, it's good for your circadian biology,
it's good for your sleep. But we know that the more time we spend outside, the better
able we are to deal with stress, the better our sleep
quality, the better our moods. We have evolved outside over tens of thousands, hundreds of
thousands of years. And so many of us spend our days indoors. Now I get it in the winter.
It's tricky. It could be cold. It could be rainy. It could be snowing. You may not be
motivated to go outside, but in the summer, depending on where you live
in the world, it's very, very different.
So I want you to lean into that.
Can you do your movements outdoors?
Skipping is a great one.
I mentioned walking.
Instead of walking on a treadmill or running on a treadmill, can you do it outside?
Okay.
Instead of biking at the gym, can you get on your bike and go out onto a trail or
a local forest or a local park? Swimming, instead of swimming inside, do you have access to
some open water? If it's safe to do so, if you're equipped to do that, really it's about
embracing the season and getting as much movement in as you can outdoors. It could be a nice
challenge you say to yourself, you know, maybe for one month over the summer. Can I do all
of my movement outdoors? If so, what would you do? You can do weights outdoors. You can
do kettlebells outdoors. You know, in my garden, I've got kettlebells and dumbbells that live
outside. And again, throughout the day, I'll go out, I've got kettlebells and dumbbells that live outside.
And again, throughout the day, I'll go out, I'll do 10 minutes here and 10 minutes there.
And I love it.
It makes me feel so much more alive than being indoors in a gym under artificial lighting.
So again, embrace the season, see if you can do all of your movement outdoors.
The fourth tip is to give yourself a mini challenge. I think this is a really
great thing to do in the summer. Motivation and willpower tends to be higher at this time
of year. Why? The weather tends to be better. There's more light. When light is out there,
we are wired to be awake. That's one of the reasons why light in the evening, especially artificial light, can keep us up for longer and disrupt our circadian rhythms
and disrupt our sleep. So your motivation is high. Let's implement
changes at this time of year. I've always found this with patience over the last
two decades. Honestly, I found January at New Year, it's not the best time for
people to make changes, particularly in a country like the UK. It's Year, it's not the best time for people to make changes, particularly
in a country like the UK.
It's cold, it's dark, it's wet, it's rainy.
It's not really the kind of environment that's going to stimulate us to make these big lifestyle
changes.
And I think it's one of the reasons why so many New Year's resolutions fail, because
it's the wrong time of year.
But the springtime
and the summertime is completely different. Motivation tends to be higher. So why don't
you set yourself a mini challenge? Okay. What could that look like? Well, of course it's
going to depend on your own preferences, your own passions, the things that you want. Here
are some ideas though that might get you thinking. It could be that you've never run a 5K before.
Okay?
In the UK, we have something called Parkrun.
These community 5Ks every Saturday.
Depending on where you are in the world, there may be something like that.
But even if there isn't, you may go, by the end of the summer, by the end of August, let's
say, I want to have completed 5K.
Ideally running, but maybe I have to walk a bit of it as well.
It doesn't really matter whether you achieve the challenge or not.
The challenge gives you a sense of urgency.
It gives you direction in what you do.
And I'm a huge fan of mini challenges.
I think far too often we give ourselves these big, huge things to do like running a marathon.
Hey, nothing wrong with that. If you want to do that, that's great.
But I think we forget about many challenges and I think they can be really, really helpful.
So it could be that you want to run a 5K and maybe that you want to bike or cycle 5K.
It could be that you're doing some lengths in your local pool. I know I said to do all
your movement outdoors, but maybe you want to stay in your
pool.
You don't feel confident doing open water swimming or maybe you don't have that option
available to you.
Yes, do a lot of your movement outdoors, but maybe a mini challenge could be to swim 20
lengths by the end of the summer or 30 lengths.
Maybe all you can do now is five lengths. Okay. No problem.
Set out a program. Go, okay, five lengths this week, every day or four times a week.
Next week, I'll move up to seven and bit by bit. It won't take long before you get to
20. It could be that you want to camp. You've never done camping. That could be your challenge.
Okay. I'm a bit scared.
I don't know what to do, but I think it'll be really good for me. I think I'll enjoy it.
Go on YouTube. Have a look. Look at some videos. Ask your friends. Put a date in your diary. Get
some friends together. Go for one night. Okay, that's a mini challenge. It could be that you
think about, I don't know, doing something in your garden, putting out a vegetable patch, carving out some space, clearing out the weeds.
Give yourself a mini challenge.
And here's the important point.
Whether you do it or not, I don't think it matters.
Sure, it's great to complete a challenge.
We feel good about ourselves.
We said we were going to do it and we do it.
But here's the thing.
If you set yourself that challenge for 20 lengths and you currently can only do five and you get
to 18 lengths, that's not failure. That's huge progress. Right? And you only made that
progress because you gave yourself that challenge. Right? So use these ideas, maybe they resonate with you, maybe they don't,
but use them as a jumping off point to set your own mini challenge. What I'm currently doing,
I'm going to go away with my family for a few weeks this summer. I travel with a skipping rope.
I do this every summer and I think this summer I'll set myself a goal of getting up to maybe
a thousand skips a day, okay? But that sounds a lot getting up to maybe a thousand skips a day.
Okay?
But that sounds a lot.
Maybe it'll be 500 skips a day.
But the point is when I start, if I've not been doing it, after about 50 or 60, I feel
it.
You can feel tired and breathless.
So what I'll do is I'll do 50.
A few hours later, I'll do another 50.
A few hours later, I'll do another 50. And I'll slowly 50, a few hours later I'll do another 50, a few hours later I'll do another 50,
and I'll slowly build up.
I did this two summers ago in Greece
when we were there for a few weeks.
We had a wonderful holiday,
and by the end of it I was doing a thousand skips a day.
And I felt great, I felt strong.
I felt my physique was improving.
I had more energy, more focus.
Now that wouldn't have
happened unless I set the mini challenge. It gave me a sense of urgency. It gave me
something to try and do each day and it didn't take away from my holiday at all.
Now the reason why it doesn't matter if you get there or not, as I mentioned with those
18 lengths versus 20 lengths, A, you've done
something but B, even if you fail, right, it's not really failure, it's learning. You've
learnt so much about yourself. You've learnt what you're good at, what you're not so good
at. You've learnt about your motivation. You've learnt about, did I manage to do it every
day? Did I not? You know, all these learnings happen when we push ourselves outside our comfort zone and whether we get
there or not, we still learn something.
So I hope that has sparked off some ideas of your own and inspired you to choose a mini
challenge that you can do this summer.
Fifth and final tip, what do you spend most of your year reading?
Right. I read mostly non-fiction books all throughout the year.
A. I'm a doctor.
B. I'm interested in non-fiction.
And C. I release weekly episodes on this podcast, which means I end up reading about two books
a week to prepare for each of my guests.
So what I started doing is in my summer break, I don't take non-fiction books.
I try and lean into fictional books, which stimulates a different part of me.
So again, going back to what I said at the start, it's just about trying to embrace the
season and do something different.
So that's what I do. I embrace fiction in the summer and nonfiction the rest of the
year. What's it going to be for you? A, do you read? If not, I'd encourage you to get
into reading over the summer. It's a fantastic habit. It's good for us on so many levels.
And I honestly think that reading is one of the highest returns on your investment of time
because it's hard writing books.
I've just completed my sixth book and the amount of work that goes into books is profound
because you have to condense, compress all of your ideas into a coherent narrative.
When you're actually reading a well-written book, you are acquiring a lot
of knowledge, wisdom and information. Okay, so reading is a great habit to do. What I
want to encourage you to do this summer is change up your reading habits, read a different
type of book.
Hope you enjoyed that bite-sized clip. Do spread the love by sharing this episode with your
friends and family. If you enjoyed this episode,
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I really think you're going to love it. The goal is for it to be a small yet powerful
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at DrChatterjee.com forward slash Friday five.
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next Friday.