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eat and how you sleep. With these changes you should be able to fall asleep with ease, stay asleep all night,
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and wake up feeling energized. Your mind will be clear and sharp. and you’ll get more done in less time,
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massively increasing your productivity and your success in college.
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You now understand that a certain level of stress is to be expected. Chronic stress, however, is damaging to the
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body, so it’s important to have a variety of tools to manage stress. Practicing mindfulness, deep breathing, and
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gratitude can have a powerful impact on your emotional, mental, and physical health.
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At the beginning of this chapter, you were introduced to a simple way of thinking about your health—nutrients
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in, toxins out. This means eating plenty of fruits and vegetables and avoiding junk food, soda, and other
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sugary beverages. If you move often throughout the day, drink plenty of clean water, and prioritize your sleep,
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you will help your body detoxify. Reduce your exposure to toxins by paying attention to what you put in and on
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your body. If you wouldn’t eat it, don’t put it on your skin or hair. A helpful way to remember to take care of
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your health is to follow the rule of eights: aim each day for eight hours of sleep, eight servings of fruits and
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vegetables, eight glasses of water, eight minutes of mindfulness, and eight meaningful connections, and
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incorporate any one of these eight ways to move—walking, aerobic exercise, strength training, yoga, Tai Chi,
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stretching, HIIT, or dancing.
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Career Connection
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Is putting in longer hours at work an effective strategy for meeting workplace demands? Read this article
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about managing your energy instead of your time (https://openstax.org/l/manageyourenergy).
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Rethinking
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Revisit the questions you answered at the beginning of the chapter, and consider one option you learned in
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this chapter that might make you rethink how you answered each one. Has this chapter prompted you to
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consider changing any of your habits?
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Rank the following questions on a scale of 1–4. 1 = “least like me” and 4 = “most like me.”
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1.
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2.
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3.
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4.
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I eat enough fruits and vegetables every day.
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I get enough sleep.
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I have, for the most part, healthy relationships with friends and family.
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I feel like I know how to manage stress.
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Where do you go from here?
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It’s easy to lose focus on your own health and wellness during the tumultuous first year in college. But the
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benefits of developing strategies to improve and maintain your emotional, physical, and mental health will
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only increase as you age. What would you like to learn more about? Choose a topic from the list below, and
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create an annotated bibliography that would direct further research.
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• simple strategies to improve physical health
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• daily opportunities to maintain and improve emotional well-being
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• mental health risks and warning signs
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368
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11 • Where do you go from here?
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• steps to take to be more safety conscious
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Access for free at openstax.org
|
12 • Introduction
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12
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Planning for Your Future
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Figure 12.1 Credit: Stig Nygaard / Flickr / Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC-BY)
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Chapter Outline
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12.1 Why Worry about a Career While I'm in College?
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12.2 Your Map to Success: The Career Planning Cycle
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12.3 Where Can You Go from Here?
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Introduction
|
Student Survey
|
How ready are you to plan your career? Take this quick survey to figure it out, ranking questions on a scale of
|
1–4, 1 meaning “least like me” and 4 meaning “most like me.”
|
1.
|
2.
|
3.
|
4.
|
I am feeling certain about my major (or my ability to choose a major soon).
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I know what kinds of jobs I can get with my major.
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I have a good idea of what I need to do in each year of college to achieve career success as I graduate.
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I am aware of what resources are on campus to help me create a career plan.
|
You can also take the Chapter 12 survey (https://openstax.org/l/collegesurvey12) anonymously online.
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STUDENT PROFILE
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“A lesson I have learned throughout my college career is that changing majors is okay. Fresh out of high
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school, I always wanted to be an FBI agent. I wanted to be in those forensic shows—like Criminal
|
Minds—that we all see on TV. So I decided to go to college and major in criminal justice with an emphasis in
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forensic science. When I started to take criminal justice classes, I noticed that my passion and
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determination were focused on something else: helping others and changing people’s lives so they do not
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have to struggle as much as I did. I quickly decided to talk to a career counselor and let him know that I
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wanted to change majors. We discussed the long-term plans and where I would see myself in the future. I
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369
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370
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12 • Planning for Your Future
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changed my major to a related one, sociology. And with that, I want to be a counselor, as I want to help
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others achieve their goals.”
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—Carlos Espinosa
|
About This Chapter
|
In earlier chapters of this book (1, 3, 4), you learned more about setting the foundation for college and career
|
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