A healthy lifestyle is important if we want to live longer and age gracefully and with dignity. In order to do that, many people adopt certain habits. A 2024 survey conducted by Amway and Ipsos showed that the majority of Americans engage in healthy habits. 73% of the respondents said they try to drink enough fluids, 57% said they exercise regularly, 55% claimed to try to adhere to a regular sleep schedule, and 50% reported eating a healthy diet.

However, not every habit we adopt might benefit us in the long run. We might already know that too much social media or bottling up feelings is no good for us. Yet, recently, one netizen asked healthcare, fitness, nutrition, and mental health experts online: "What's one 'quiet habit' you see all the time that is secretly wrecking people's long-term health?" Read on to find out why keeping your wallet in your back pocket and using toothpaste with charcoal might be detrimental to your health!

Discover more in 49 Habits That Might Seem Insignificant But Can Affect Mental And Physical Health Long-Term

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#1

Woman practicing plank exercise indoors using a laptop, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. Having an “all or nothing” mentality when it comes to habits. 5 minutes of exercise is always better than 0, one serving of fruits or vegetables is better than 0, etc. it doesn’t have to be big to be impactful.

Unhappy-Ad9177 , EyeEm Report

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    #2

    Man resting head on arms over closed laptop showing effects of habits on mental and physical health long-term. The mentality that working until you burn out is admirable.

    SHughes54 , Vitaly Gariev Report

    #3

    Person holding a smartphone with TikTok app open, illustrating habits that affect mental and physical health long-term. UK Based here, I've been working in Mental Health for the last 4 years. I'm noticing especially with the younger generations of adults (18- say 24), it's social media. Especially TikTok. I'm working in Inpatient Care and they share ideas on eating disorders, how to avoid taking their medication etc. It takes over their lives.

    brownabout , cottonbro studio Report

    #4

    White swirling smoke patterns on a black background representing habits affecting mental and physical health long-term Thinking vaping is safe.

    Total-Use7157 , Pascal Meier Report

    #5

    Woman practicing stretching exercise on floor mat at home promoting mental and physical health habits. Some physical skills you should work to maintain as you age are:

    -Being able to get up from a chair without using your hands.
    -Being able to sit down on the floor and get up from the floor without help.
    -Being able to stand on one foot.
    -Being able to touch your toes (or as close as possible).
    -Being able to pick things up off the floor.
    -Being able to reach far overhead or far to the sides without loss of balance.
    -Being able to walk backwards a few steps without loss of balance.

    As long as you can do these things, your fall risk is incredibly low.

    Related recommendation: Yoga is great. But if yoga is too hard for you, start with Tai Chi. It is gentler on the joints while still helping with flexibility, core strength, and balance.
    Source: Occupational Therapy Professional.

    ETA, since some people can’t actually touch their toes: Just get as close as you can.😊.

    User , Getty Images Report

    #6

    Doctor in white coat consulting patient about habits affecting mental and physical health during medical appointment Stopping a medication for a chronic condition when you think the condition is “fixed”. I see this shockingly often.

    They stop their blood pressure meds because their blood pressure has been normal every time they check it. Yep, that was the meds doing their job, now your pressure is 200/110 and you’ve had a stroke.

    They stop taking their insulin or metformin because their a1c is normal. Yep, that was the meds doing their job, now your blood glucose is 600 and you’re in DKA or HHS.

    They stop their blood thinners because they had afib “a while ago” but haven’t had any issues from it. Yep, that’s because you were on blood thinners, now you’ve thrown a clot and had a stroke.

    It’s a “quiet” decision because they usually think it’s a benign choice but my god does it cause complications. PLEASE talk to your healthcare team before making medication decisions.

    Note: inability to afford or access medications is a whole other, incredibly serious issue, and that’s not what I’m talking about here. I have horror stories about that and it enrages me.

    Trinket90 , National Cancer Institute Report

    #7

    Person sitting with head down and arms crossed over knees, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. Loneliness. People underrate what a protective factor community is, especially when things get tough. Relationships may not solve everything, but it tends to make so many hardships more bearable, like grief, poverty, divorce, depression, etc. It also helps with accountability when it comes to taking care of ourselves physically (fitness, diet). Having someone check-in when it looks like there’s something going on, be it physical or mental, goes a long way. A positive network also tends to push us to try new things, like hobbies, fitness classes, etc. Avoiding discomfort usually feeds isolation, and bleeds into our health, fitness, and social lives.

    Ok-Pin-7867 , Carolina Report

    #8

    Man looking thoughtfully out a window with blinds, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. Second hand trauma. My whole team is deeply impacted by it. We work with the homeless and so many of them have experienced absolutely horrifying things.

    ChippyPug , Ethan Sykes Report

    #9

    Man lifting weighted barbell in gym, demonstrating habits that impact long-term mental and physical health. Strength training is just as important as cardio - your bones need more support as you get older. Smoking is the worst thing you can do. Please get all of your cancer screenings.

    SilentDisco87 , wirestock Report

    #10

    Group of people leaning on colorful railings outdoors, illustrating habits that affect mental and physical health long-term. When you are standing in a line, waiting for something, allow yourself to not be entertained. Don't reach for that phone. Sit with your thoughts, or talk to someone nearby. At Thanksgiving, everyone who wasn't watching TV was buried in their phone.

    No conversation, and shallow interaction between people, if any.

    And we wonder why people are feeling more lonely than ever?

    BonoboBananaBonanza , Xiang Qiu Report

    #11

    Young adults enjoying pizza and drinks at a table, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. Eating when full. No, you don’t have to finish the plate. Stop. Eat it later or just don’t eat it.

    elbay , Yunus Tuğ Report

    #12

    Person writing notes at a wooden table with a cup nearby, illustrating habits that affect mental and physical health long-term. I feel like I can predict who’s gonna get dementia based on how they respond to learning new things. We have a payment terminal in our office and there are patients who take one look at it and decide that they don’t understand how to use it before they even try it. It vaguely resembles a computer, but all they really have to do is type in their date of birth and their bill come up. That’s it. That is all they have to do. And they still want us to do it for them. If you start youngish with not challenging your problemsolving skills, you will pay for it later.

    anebje , Unseen Studio Report

    #13

    Dimly lit hallway with potted plants along walls, symbolizing habits affecting long-term mental and physical health. I work in a psychiatric hospital.

    The amount of comparisons people make, whether upwards or downwards, healthy or toxic; it's just too much.

    The amount of distractions we make to keep ourselves from having conversations and making peace with ourselves internally is staggering.

    Anecdotally, people also fundamentally don't understand what forgiveness and acceptance are. They confuse forgiveness with reconciliation and confuse acceptance with liking something.

    Forgiveness is to let go of anger; reconciliation is to rebuild relationships. Acceptance is to see things as they are without judgment, not as we want them to be.

    SpeaksYourWord , İsmail Efe Top Report

    #14

    Close-up of smiling mouth with teeth, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. Teeth whitening, bleaching specifically. It's not such a thing anymore, thank god. But repeated bleaching and abrasion (charcoal toothpaste etc.) erodes enamel which sets the stage for tooth decay and a resuling cascade of issues, which is strongly linked to cardiovascular disease.

    CharlesAvlnchGreen , SpecialistAd1954 Report

    #15

    Person in white shirt placing black wallet in back pocket, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. I'm a massage therapist, and one of the smallest habits that causes big problems is keeping your wallet in your back pocket all the time. It's terrible for causing sciatica issues.

    Switch it to your side pocket and make it a habit.

    SailorVenus23 , GENTCREATE Report

    #16

    Two people relaxing on wooden chairs under a beach umbrella, enjoying peaceful mental and physical health benefits. As a massage therapist I always, ALWAYS, see that when people take a vacation their health improves. I think a 'quiet habit' that is wrecking people's health is not taking time to rest, relax and refresh. People so often forsake downtime for continuing to grind through life and work. I know a lot of travel and selfcare is expensive, but taking the time to get away in anyway or even cultivating the vacation mindset can help people's health in real positive ways. Stop and smell the flowers. Book the trip. Book the self care session. Call out sick. Sleep. Eat. Laugh. Turn off your phone. Leave space for spontaneity.

    User , Bjorn Boonen Report

    #17

    Bowl of oatmeal topped with frozen berries and nuts, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. Not enough fiber. Fiber is a real magic bullet. Fiber cancels out sugar, regulates insulin, provides healthy gut biome which in turn helps brain functioning. It becomes a feedback loop in either direction so neglecting it results in fatigue, weight gain, inflammation, mental health problems, colon cancer, and diabetes .

    Wallaby8311 , Aneta Pawlik Report

    #18

    Rows of dumbbells in a gym with a woman exercising in the background promoting habits affecting mental and physical health I own a gym. What I have coined as the "gym shark era" of teenagers and younger people in the gym that will inject crazy amounts of anabolics into them, and they STILL dont even look like they have lifted weights. They are so obsessed with becoming IG or TikTok famous yet they cant be bothered to train hard or eat correctly to build muscle. They are going to pay for hard for it someday.

    User , Danielle Cerullo Report

    #19

    Woman stretching on a yoga mat at home practicing habits that improve long-term mental and physical health. Neglecting stretching. Include yoga classes in your life if you can. At the very least, stretch on your own regularly. Seeing how many people (people who aren’t even that old) that can’t lay flat or raise their arms above their head is nuts.

    blugreenworld , syda_productions Report

    #20

    Grilled steak on a blue plate garnished with rosemary, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. PA here: people that are all on the carnivore diet for extended periods of time are going to have heart disease later, primarily those with family history of heart disease. When that happens, all of these influencers and pseudoscientists will not be held accountable and that’s unfortunate.

    User , Curated Lifestyle Report

    #21

    Teen boy sitting cross-legged on a couch using his phone, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. As a therapist, cancelling plans, avoiding social gatherings that you’re not 100% interested in, living in neighborhoods with high privacy fences everywhere, etc.  Basically doing anything else to “protect your peace” and shutting yourself off from others.  Loneliness is incredibly damaging to all aspects of health.

    NameWonderful , EyeEm Report

    #22

    Person typing on laptop at wooden table with coffee cup and notebook, highlighting habits affecting mental and physical health long-term Sitting. People do way too much sitting. Sitting is a habit as routine as they come. Wake up. Sit in car to work. Sit at work. Sit in car going back home. Sit on couch. Bed. 

    This is a real routine for too many people. 

    Movement is medicine. .

    SuaveKwame , LAUREN GRAY Report

    #23

    Person inserting a blue earplug indicating habits that might affect mental and physical health long-term. Use hearing protection - as an audiologist.

    You know the feeling you get of reduced hearing and stuffiness in the ears after a really loud concert? Yeah, that’s a temporary sensory hearing loss induced by noise exposure. It comes back let’s say 99%. But there’s still that 1%. It adds up over time. Then your hearing permanently sounds like that. Then you see me for hearing aids.

    wheatley_cereal , Mark Paton Report

    #24

    Healthy meal bowl with grilled chicken, avocado, quinoa, broccoli, and fresh vegetables promoting long-term mental and physical health. Diet. 


    It's **always** diet. 


    From metabolic disorders ... to cardio/vascular issues ... to cancers ... to poor injury repair/recovery ... to frequent injury (connective-tissue joint/tendon/ligament) ... to skin conditions to gut conditions to stomach/GI issues to gall bladder/gallstones kidney stones ... to gout to brittle bones /osteo maladies ... to poor strength, poor endurance ... bad sleep and sleep-patterns/discipline ... to tooth decay ... to immune system issues ... to macula degeneration ... to ... virtually almost everything folks complain about in old age


    It's **EXACTLY** what they told us all along. We are, in fact, "what we eat" and 97% of us are Junk. 


    Diet, folks.


    It matters. .

    User , feridaydin1 Report

    #25

    Three men engaged in a discussion, highlighting habits that can impact long-term mental and physical health. Cutting people out of their life the minute someone makes a mistake. Is it a pattern? Sure cut them out. Is it particularly egregious? Sure, cut them out. But “cutting toxic people out of my life” too often means jettisoning people who made one small mistake or who may be good friends still in area A even if you no longer trust them in area B. And no one will ever be a perfect friend, so you are going to end up burning all your bridges.

    revolutionutena Report

    #26

    Silhouette of a person looking out a window, representing habits that affect mental and physical health long-term. People telling themselves horrible things about themselves

    "I cannot trust myself."

    "I don't deserve good things."

    "I am unlovable.".

    User , Damir Samatkulov Report

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    #27

    Person sleeping peacefully in bed, demonstrating habits that impact long-term mental and physical health. Not sleeping.

    FunMoose74 , Andrej Lišakov Report

    #28

    Young woman sitting on floor covering her face, illustrating habits affecting mental and physical health long-term. Holding their feelings in.

    Chemical_Egg_2761 , EyeEm Report

    #29

    Woman sitting with a pillow, listening attentively during a mental and physical health consultation session. As a therapist, the things your think to and about yourself *really do* shape your reality. I know, it doesn’t feel comfy or true to think kinder or more accurate things about yourself, but it’s the uncomfiness of growth, which I think is far preferable to the pain of being stuck in a toxic mind.

    _cedarwood_ , Kateryna Hliznitsova Report

    #30

    Woman drinking coffee in a modern kitchen, representing habits that affect mental and physical health long-term. I work in the gym. People drink too much caffeine.

    I am one of those people.

    Conradical13 , cottonbro studio Report

    #31

    Stress and lack of self care. I treat mostly pre partum and postpartum women, I get a lot of women beginning of menopause and post menopausal too. It is so hard for them to do self care because all of my moms put themselves last and it wrecks their body long term.

    Temporary_Thanks_358 Report

    #32

    Not trying to learn about their chronic illness/not willing to make lifestyle changes so they end up hospitalized for the same things over and over and over. I’m a CNA in cardiac stepdown and we have a *lot* of patients who come in regularly for the same issues as their bodies deteriorate.

    On one hand, I understand that health literacy and education are lacking in the US. But my unit has a solid education program in multiple different languages. I also see nurses explaining the same things repeatedly, and I see patients arguing during each of their admissions. I’m also not talking about people who can’t afford meds or can’t access healthy food/cook for themselves, etc.

    I still have empathy for them because their situations are truly unfortunate. Nobody wants to have their limbs slowly amputated piece by piece due to diabetes, or be bedridden due to deconditioning before they’re even 60.

    Seriously, when you get diagnosed with a chronic illness, read about it and do your best to follow your doctor’s instructions. It might be a hard adjustment but your life can still be fulfilling, especially now with all of the available treatments for a lot of these common problems.

    melxcham Report

    #33

    Person lying on a couch browsing a smartphone, illustrating habits that affect long-term mental and physical health. Is avoidance a habit? Because avoidance.

    davesnotonreddit , pavel-karpov Report

    #34

    One thing that hasn't been mentioned is succumbing to social pressure too much.

    At least in the US, you can't be a passive "go with the flow" type person and be healthy. You have to learn to say "no" to the coworkers who insist that you have another office breakroom donut. You have to ignore family who make fun of you for making time to work out. You have to tune out all the advertisements telling you to eat greasy, salty, sugary, addictive foods. You have to be OK with people's negative reactions when you tell them you walk/ride your bike everywhere. You also have to be strong enough to resist caving into someone's insistence that you have another drink or smoke...and then have the courage to stop associating with them if they give you a hard time.

    It is hard to be a people-pleaser and be healthy. People will have you stressed out of your mind if you let them. You have to say "no" to some requests and invitations for the sake of your sanity. And you also have to learn how not to care about every single person and prioritize yourself. Yes, you will hurt somebody's feelings if you don't whatever it is they want you to do. But you have every right not to literally break your back moving furniture for someone who is too cheap to hire a mover. You can help someone without sacrificing your body and mind for them.

    autotelica Report

    #35

    Sugar consumption.

    MiddleClassSoul_ Report

    #36

    Not flossing. Oral bacteria and inflammation can contribute to heart disease, Alzheimer’s, diabetes complications, and so much more.

    hygiene_queen Report

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    #37

    Not sure if it's a 'quiet habit,' but I have seen too many people absolutely ignore the side effects of GLP1s. They think it's good to be nauseous all the time. One patient had her gallbladder removed and wanted to know how soon she could get back on the med. I know obesity can be the precursor of a lot of chronic conditions, but I am concerned that people are using these instead of trying diet and exercise first, and then along with the medication to lose weight. Many also don't realize, once they stop the medicine, the weight will come back.

    Again, not knocking anyone for taking them, because I know losing weight can be a miserable battle. But they genuinely concern me.

    enchantedlife13 Report

    #38

    Use of scented products. Synthetic scents are neurotoxins. An increasing amount of evidence links them to depression and anxiety.

    Merlethe Report

    #39

    Go in for your skin checks, colonoscopies, etc, wear sunscreen, and don’t wait until that weird lump is the size of a ping pong ball before you finally get it looked at.

    User Report

    #40

    Context: I work for government healthcare, 90% of the treatments are free

    What I see the most in dentistry is that people wait until they have unbearable pain. Issues that would be solved within 15 minutes if they had come the first time they felt uncomfortable or a slight bit of pain, end up costing them weeks and sometimes having to be referred to a private clinic for treatment. I wish we had a follow up mechanism in place like they do in Europe, then small issues could be solved without getting so much bigger and s*********g.

    vixissitude Report

    #41

    I work in fitness, and I'd say bad posture. One thing in your body out of alignment causes so many injuries and pains. Please, learn what to do and do it, it will save you a world of hurt, and fix things you didn't even know could be fixed.

    Ijimete Report

    #42

    Sitting around and not moving or working out your brain.

    messagetofindout Report

    #43

    Never drinking water, its always coffee. energy drinks, or alcohol.

    con-fuzed222 Report

    #44

    Expecting other people and/or professionals to do all the work for you.

    Want to lose weight, but don't want to eat better or exercise. Want to feel better mentally, but don't want to put in the work in therapy or within yourself. Instead just put your hand out and ask for the (assumed) magic pill. Still don't feel better or make progress. Resent and blame the provider or clinician. Go to the next one. Rinse and repeat.

    People vastly underestimate their own power and abilities when it comes to what they can do and what they are capable of. A professional is meant to guide you in the right direction of what you yourself can do, for the most part. Expecting them to fix you with zero effort on your part is an attitude doomed for failure. That is unfortunately super prevalent from what I've seen in both the medical and mental health fields.

    Psychological-Bear-9 Report

    #45

    Fad dieting, which wrecks your metabolism and can cause long term health issues including intolerance to foods that you wouldn't have been intolerant to otherwise.

    Also, please remember to drink water after your Gatorade when exercising or being active in extreme heat. Sports drinks only HELP with hydration, if you aren't drinking water you're still in danger of dehydration.

    User Report

    #46

    Relying on the people in healthcare to be in charge of your health. It's your health, take charge of YOUR health. Just because the records are there doesn't mean they think about you all the time, you're not their only patient. I work in pharmacy - retail for 10 years, and the number of times someone expected us to notify them when they were out of refills blew my mind. Read the label on your bottle and don't pour your new bottle into the old bottle. Also keep your appointments because doctors won't just keep prescribing meds if you stop going to them. If people do these simple things it will prevent a lot of the phone calls pharmacies get.

    Artistic_Candy7420 Report

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    #47

    I know obesity seems obvious, but there are a lot of obese people who are active and agile and in good health otherwise. However, when you get older and get sick being bedbound and overweight makes getting better so much more difficult.

    memymomonkey Report

    #48

    Not going to the doctor because it’s “not that bad”. When I ask how long you’ve had — pain or — lesion and the patient responds 10+ years?! Well now we’re in stage two/three when this should’ve been avoidable all together.

    User Report

    #49

    “Moderation.”

    People dont own what a baseline is. For instance 5gm and up of sugar is construed as a hepatotoxin. Body sees it as so and insulin will remove from serum into tissue and cells.

    From that what is the fair dose if moderation is the modicum?

    Alcohol is a Class 1 carcinogen. What dose is moderate there [none].

    Excellent question.

    Big-Reading-4741 Report

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