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New Study Shows Hobbies Help People Find More Meaning in Their Jobs

You can feel it in everyday conversations: the coworker you meet on Monday who’s already counting down to Friday, that friend who cancels plans because they’re “exhausted.”1 There’s no question about it — more and more people are struggling with chronic fatigue and work-related stress. In fact, 6 out of 10 employees in major global economies now report rising levels of workplace stress.2

In response, many of us try to regain balance by eating better and moving more. But beyond these familiar strategies, there’s a surprisingly simple habit that might offer greater benefits: hobbies. While people often turn to them as a way to unwind, new research suggests they do more than just lift your spirits.3

Leisure Crafting Positively Affects Workplace Performance

A study by researchers at the University of East Anglia and Erasmus University Rotterdam4 examined leisure crafting — this involves using a hobby more intentionally through small goals, learning something new, or connecting with others. Published in the journal Human Relations, the study explored how this intentional approach to hobbies might shape people’s daily experiences.

The researchers aim to remind people that it is possible to use their hobbies to enjoy work more or possibly be more creative. Lead author and Associate Professor of Work and Organizational Psychology at Erasmus University Rotterdam, Paraskevas Petrou, Ph.D., said:5

“It’s already known that hobbies are good for your well-being, but our study shows that hobbies don’t just make you happier, they can also help you feel more fulfilled and creative at work. This goes beyond just relaxing or having fun — like binge-watching Netflix — and turns the hobby into something that helps people grow.”

• The study followed nearly 200 working adults — Participants were mid-career employees with an average age of 46. Adults aged 61 and older were included as well, to explore how hobbies affect people at different life stages.6

• How the five-week hobby program worked — One group watched a short hobby-focused intervention video that guided them to approach their hobbies more intentionally by setting personal goals for their hobby, learning something new through it, and building social connections by practicing their hobby with others. Meanwhile, a control group did not watch the video and did not receive any guidance or planning tools.7

• A surprising boost in meaning and creativity — Each week, participants reported how their hobby practice was going, and their answers were compared to that of the control group. The researchers found that those who followed leisure crafting reported greater meaning and creativity at work.8

“We were surprised to see that leisure crafting had a stronger effect at work than in people’s personal lives. We had expected equal benefits in both areas … One possible reason is that people who took part in our study were already fairly satisfied with their lives outside work, but their work life had more room for improvement,” Professor George Michaelides, a study co-author from UEA’s Norwich Business School, said.

• Why do these findings matter? As more workplaces focus on well-being, this study is “the first to be conducted among a mature working population and to demonstrate that leisure crafting can be understood, learned, and displayed by employees.”9 The researchers point to practical steps organizations can take, such as offering hobby-related masterclasses and allocating development funds for learning outside work.10

Get Creative and Be Kind to Your Mind
If you’re thinking about trying a new creative hobby, you’re not just adding something fun to your routine — you’re giving your mind something new to play with. Writing by hand, dancing, painting, or even simple coloring encourages your brain to spot patterns, make new connections, and stay more engaged day to day.

• Creativity can be a ‘fountain of youth’ for your brain — Researchers from the Global Brain Health Institute11 published a major study in Nature Communications, examining nearly 1,500 adults across 13 countries to see whether creative engagement might slow brain aging. Participants ranged from tango dancers in Argentina and musicians in Canada to visual artists in Germany and real-time strategy gamers in Poland.

Creative individuals showed “younger-looking” brain function, with brain imaging and machine learning pointing to stronger connectivity and greater mental flexibility compared to non-creatives.

• Strategy games stimulate the brain — In a second arm of the study,12 non-experts completed 30 hours of training in StarCraft II, a complex real-time strategy game. Within three to four weeks (about five to 10 hours a week), their brain activity showed measurable improvements in areas tied to planning, focus, and learning. A comparison group trained on Hearthstone, a simpler, turn-based game, did not show the same gains.

• Handwriting helps boost memory function — Handwriting supports stronger memory because the physical act of forming letters activates multiple senses and engages brain regions involved in motor control and perception, helping you recognize shapes, process words more deeply, and build lasting neural connections.13

• The colorful benefits of painting — Painting isn’t just about making something pretty; it’s a chance to express yourself. It’s also beginner-friendly, with endless room to grow, no matter your skill level. And when you paint with others, the social connection becomes just as enjoyable as the art itself.14

Enjoy Reading More Books

As more people look for calming ways to unwind, many are rediscovering their love for reading; The Sun15 even dubbed it “the hot new hobby for 2026.” But beyond the trendiness, reading has always been one of the most satisfying and affordable pastimes you can get lost in.

• Reading gives your brain a daily workout — Reading sharpens critical thinking, sparks creativity, expands vocabulary, and deepens knowledge — all while stimulating imagination and keeping your mind active and resilient.16

• Reading can delay Alzheimer’s disease by up to five years — A 2021 study published in Neurology17 followed 1,903 seniors over seven years and found that those who engaged in cognitively stimulating activities like reading developed Alzheimer’s five years later than those who didn’t. Participants with high cognitive activity developed dementia at an average age of 94, while those with low activity saw onset around age 89.18

• It protects you against cognitive decline — A 14-year longitudinal study in International Psychogeriatrics found that older adults who read at least once a week were significantly less likely to experience cognitive decline. The researchers found out that:19

“[T]hose with higher reading frequencies (≥1 time a week) were less likely to have cognitive decline at six-year (AOR: 0.54), 10-year (AOR: 0.58), and 14-year (AOR: 0.54) follow-ups … across all educational levels.”

Reading has also been known to help people sleep better, improve their eyesight, and even reduce gadget use. To learn more about these findings, check out “The Surprising Benefits of Daily Book Reading.”

Cook Up a Storm at Home

Cooking isn’t just a practical skill; it’s a fun, relaxing way to get creative and make meals that you’ll love eating. Even if you’re new to the kitchen, there are plenty of easy, enjoyable ways to get started. No matter how you begin, cooking is a rewarding, confidence-boosting hobby. It’s also a more enjoyable way to eat healthy and be able to avoid eating ultraprocessed foods every day.

• Cooking may support your mental health — Beyond saving money or improving nutrition, cooking at home may offer real mental health benefits. A 2021 meta-analysis published in Frontiers in Psychology reviewed 13 studies involving over 11,000 participants to explore how home cooking affects psychosocial outcomes like self-esteem, mood, and overall well-being.20

“Cooking at home is associated with higher diet quality and nutrient intake … Biological pathways through which improved diet might enhance mental health and well-being include improvements in markers of inflammation, increased intake of antioxidants, which reduces oxidative stress, and changes in the microbiota gut-brain axis,” the authors explained.

• Experiment with ingredients and get comfortable — Start with simple, easy-to-follow recipes that use just a few ingredients and basic techniques. As you get more comfortable in the kitchen, you can experiment with more complex flavors and dishes. Try adding herbs like oregano, ginger, or dill to your next meal — not only will they add depth, but offer health benefits as well.

• Make time for tea — Sipping a cup of tea daily could help lower your risk of diabetes. Researchers from the University of Adelaide found that regular tea consumption may improve blood sugar control, making it a small but powerful dietary habit.21 As the world’s most-consumed drink after water, tea has been valued for centuries.22

One standout variety is Pu-erh, a fermented dark tea also known as Chinese black tea. Its unique fermentation process increases levels of bioactive compounds, including polyphenols, amino acids, and polysaccharides, offering antioxidant and anti-inflammatory benefits.

You can also sip on some green tea or matcha to help you feel more relaxed. Green tea is rich in antioxidants and, like black tea, contains potent polyphenols — especially a catechin called epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), which has been shown to have even stronger antioxidant activity than vitamins C and E.23

Dance Freely and Move with Intention

Free-form dance is more than art or fun; it’s a powerful and accessible form of exercise that supports both physical and mental health. Unlike structured workouts, this unchoreographed style engages the whole body and brain, allowing for emotional expression, spontaneity, and cardiovascular conditioning all at once.

• Free-form dance has the same intensity as traditional cardio workouts — A new study in PLOS ONE24 found that free-form dancing can match the intensity of traditional aerobic exercise. The research involved 48 adults ages 18 to 83, who were asked to dance freely in five-minute sessions at both moderate and vigorous effort levels.

The participants reached an average of 76% of their maximum heart rate, and vigorous dancing hit 7.5 metabolic equivalents (METs) — like jogging or cycling — while moderate dancing reached 5.6 METs.

• What sets this study apart? Most earlier studies looked only at formal styles like ballet or hip-hop, leaving out how every day, improvised movement might help regular people — this study finally tackled that. The findings indicate that even without strict choreography or a flashy studio, free-form dancing has its benefits, especially when you set weekly movement goals.

Finding a Hobby That You Love

In an article in The Guardian, Daisy Fancourt, professor of psychobiology and expert in social prescribing, explains that hobbies do far more than just pass the time. If you’re thinking of starting one, it helps to reflect and ask yourself:25

• How much time did I actually spend on a hobby last week? Compare this to how much time you wish you’d spent. Noticing that gap can help you be more intentional going forward.

• What aspect of my health am I hoping to improve? If you’re seeking calm, exhilaration, connection, or a sense of purpose, clarify that upfront. The more specific your goal, the easier it is to find a hobby that fits.

• What did I love doing as a child — or wish I’d pursued as a career? Old passions can offer clues. If you dreamed of performing, try local theater. If you wanted to work with kids, look for volunteer roles or intergenerational activities.

• What do I need to get started? You might need a taster session, a how-to video, or just a friend to come along. Local newsletters and social prescribing directories can help you find options.

• Which core needs are currently not being met? Think about what’s missing: autonomy, creativity, physical movement, fun, or purpose. Choose something that balances what your work or daily life lacks.

• What kind of challenge would I enjoy right now? Look for “moderate novelty” — something slightly outside your comfort zone but not overwhelming. That sweet spot tends to deliver the most joy and fulfillment.

Trying out a new hobby always comes with learning curves, and yes, it can feel awkward at first. Hobbies aren’t performances, and they aren’t about perfection. So be proud that you started and go at your own pace.

Supporting Your Health While You Explore New Hobbies

If you’re trying new hobbies, routines, or ways to add purpose to your day, keep in mind that the same intentionality you apply during your free time should also be reflected in how you take care of your body.

1. Rethink your cooking oils — The oils you use in your meals have a major impact on how your cells make energy. Seed oils like canola, soybean, sunflower, safflower, corn, and grapeseed are high in linoleic acid (LA), which can interfere with mitochondrial function. Swap them for more stable fats like grass fed butter, ghee, or tallow.

Poultry and pork are also high in LA, so choose grass fed beef, lamb, or wild-caught fish to support cleaner energy production at the cellular level. These small changes help you feel clearer, steadier, and more energized throughout the day.

2. Nourish your body with the right carbs — Your brain runs best on glucose, but the type of carbohydrates you eat makes a difference. Start with easy-to-digest options like fruit and white rice, then gradually reintroduce root vegetables, legumes, and whole grains. Aiming for around 250 grams of clean, whole-food carbohydrates per day can support steady energy.

3. Don’t sit your life away — Prolonged sitting and a sedentary lifestyle make you a moving target for conditions like hip pain and osteoarthritis. That’s why I suggest walking at least 7,000 steps a day. You don’t need high-intensity workouts; walking, light strength training, or stretching can do the job.

4. Enjoy the sun — Get direct sun exposure on bare skin each day, ideally without sunscreen for short, safe periods. However, if your diet is high in canola, soybean, sunflower, or generic vegetable oils, you may be flooding your tissues with LA, which builds up in your skin and oxidizes easily.

This increases your sensitivity to sun damage, especially during peak hours between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. To protect your skin and support healthy vitamin D production, remove seed oils from your diet for at least six months before spending extended time in high-intensity sunlight.

Leisure isn’t about checking out or doing nothing; it’s time meant to help you reset. But when most of it turns into scrolling, napping, or zoning out, you often end up feeling more drained than restored.

Leisure crafting offers a better alternative: it’s low-effort but still intentional, giving you a way to unwind without slipping into habits that sap your energy. And when you choose how to spend your downtime instead of letting it disappear, you create a fuller life — one that supports your health, strengthens your relationships, and leaves your days feeling more intentional than wasted.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) About Hobbies and Leisure Crafting

Q: What is leisure crafting, and how is it different from having a hobby?
A: Leisure crafting means approaching hobbies with intention — setting goals, learning something new, or doing them socially. Research shows this purposeful mindset can boost meaning, creativity, and even work satisfaction.

Q: Can hobbies improve mental and brain health?
A: Yes. Studies show that creative hobbies like dancing, painting, reading, cooking, and even strategy gaming are linked to better mood, stronger memory, and brain function that looks biologically younger.

Q: I’m not artistic. Can I still benefit from creative hobbies?
A: Absolutely. Creativity isn’t about talent; it’s about engagement. Handwriting, doodling, rearranging your space, or even making tea with intention can all activate the brain and support mental well-being.

Q: How can I find the right hobby for me?
A: Start by asking what made you happy as a child, what kind of energy you want more of, and what gently challenges you. The best hobby is one you’ll enjoy enough to return to.

Q: What are some small lifestyle shifts that support my hobbies?
A: Simple changes like walking daily, cutting back on seed oils, getting sunlight, and eating nutrient-dense whole foods can improve energy and focus — helping you stay present and engaged in the hobbies you love.

More Evidence That Exercise Is as Effective as Medication in Treating Depression

Depression is characterized by persistent low mood, loss of interest or pleasure in daily activities, disrupted sleep, low energy, and impaired concentration. When it goes untreated it raises your risk of disability, chronic disease, and early death.

You feel it before you name it — the weight that settles over you when the alarm goes off, the way phone calls go unanswered, the dishes that pile up because standing at the sink feels like too much. Depression doesn’t just darken your mood; it steals the small actions that hold a life together.

Exercise isn’t a recent wellness trend. It’s been a serious contender in clinical depression research for decades — often outperforming the drugs many default to. For more than two decades, evidence has pointed to movement as a core therapeutic tool, and I have emphasized exercise as a primary treatment option throughout that time.

The earliest widely cited randomized trial to directly compare exercise with an antidepressant for major depressive disorder was published in JAMA in 1999 by James Blumenthal and colleagues, showing exercise performed about as well as an antidepressant in adults with depression.1 A follow-up paper suggested that people who exercised maintained better outcomes over time.2

Even earlier work, going back to the late 1960s, showed antidepressant-level effects when exercise was compared with inactive controls.3,4

Despite that history, most modern treatment pathways still begin elsewhere. Antidepressant drugs often come first, with psychotherapy added when available. Medication rarely improves physical health or energy production and frequently introduces side effects that complicate recovery. Psychotherapy helps many people develop insight and coping skills, yet access remains uneven and progress slows when the underlying biology remains strained.

Depression isn’t a mood problem in isolation. It reflects disrupted energy production, chronic stress signaling, and loss of daily rhythms that anchor wellbeing — not simply a “chemical imbalance” in the brain. When your body perceives ongoing threat — whether from work pressure, poor sleep, or metabolic dysfunction — it keeps pumping out stress hormones like cortisol.

Over time, this chronic signaling exhausts your adrenals, disrupts sleep architecture, and shrinks brain regions involved in mood regulation. Movement addresses those systems directly. That long arc of evidence is why exercise remains an essential part of depression treatment — and why it matters to examine what modern analyses now confirm.

Exercise Stands Toe to Toe with Standard Depression Care

For a systematic review published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, researchers examined whether structured exercise truly reduces depression symptoms and how it compares with doing nothing, taking antidepressants, or receiving psychological therapy.5

The review analyzed 73 randomized controlled trials, the most rigorous form of clinical evidence, involving at least 4,985 adults diagnosed with depression. Some participants exercised alone, others exercised while also receiving medication or therapy, and others were placed on waiting lists or usual care.

• Exercise consistently reduced depression symptoms — Across 57 trials comparing exercise to no treatment or inactive controls, depressive symptoms dropped significantly by the end of treatment. In other words, people who moved their bodies felt noticeably better than those who did not. When the researchers looked only at the highest-quality trials, the benefit remained, just slightly smaller, showing the effect was real rather than exaggerated by weak study design.

• The rate of improvement rivaled medications and therapy — When exercise was compared directly with antidepressant drugs or psychological therapy, the review found little to no difference in how much symptoms improved.

That means exercise worked about as well as the treatments most often prescribed, without requiring a prescription or long wait times. Benefits appeared in adults with varying depression severity and across different exercise types. No single demographic group “owned” the benefit, which means you do not need a specific profile to gain from movement.

• What improved was daily functioning, not just mood scores — The researchers looked at the “gold standard” tools for measuring depression, which track specific things that interfere with your day, like how you’re sleeping, your energy levels, and your ability to focus. While the study found that broad “quality of life” scores were hit-or-miss, the fact that these core symptom scores dropped significantly suggests that exercise is hitting the very things that make depression so heavy.

• Exercise compared favorably on side effects — Adverse events from exercise were uncommon and mainly involved mild muscle or joint discomfort. In contrast, participants taking antidepressants reported diarrhea, fatigue, and sexual dysfunction. This contrast matters if you want symptom relief without trading one problem for another.

• The findings open the door to smarter personalization — Exercise was “no more or less effective than psychological or pharmacological treatments” for reducing depression symptoms at the end of treatment. That positions movement not as a “nice add-on,” but as a core option you can use actively, track, and build confidence around as you see progress week by week.

So, the debate is settled: exercise works. But knowing that movement helps isn’t enough when you’re struggling to get off the couch. The real question becomes practical — what kind of exercise, how much, and how hard? A massive 2024 analysis provides the answers.6

Which Types of Exercise Deliver the Strongest Relief?

For a study published in the BMJ, researchers examined which forms and doses of exercise work best for adults with major depression by comparing many interventions at once.7 This review pooled data from 218 randomized trials, covering 14,170 participants, allowing direct and indirect comparisons across exercise styles, medications, therapy, and control conditions.

This moves beyond “exercise works” to “which exercise gives the most return for your effort.” The findings showed exercise reduced symptoms across the board.

• Rates of improvement differed by exercise type — Compared with active controls such as usual care, dancing was beneficial, and walking or jogging produced moderate reductions in depression scores, with similar improvements seen from yoga and strength training. Mixed aerobic exercise and tai chi or qigong also delivered clear benefits. In practical terms, several paths worked, but some moved the needle more than others.

Strength training and yoga had lower dropout rates than many other interventions. People stuck with them. That matters because consistency drives results. An approach you continue beats one you abandon after two weeks.

• Intensity shaped results more than time spent — Higher-intensity exercise produced stronger symptom reductions than lighter activity, even when total weekly exercise time was similar. Intensity here refers to how challenging the activity feels, such as brisk walking versus casual strolling. This helps you focus effort wisely instead of simply adding more minutes.

• Specific groups showed different strengths — Women tended to benefit more from strength training, while yoga and similar practices showed stronger effects in older adults. These patterns support personalization. Matching the exercise to who you are increases confidence and follow-through. When effects were compared side by side, some exercise modalities outperformed antidepressants alone and matched psychotherapy outcomes.

• Exercise works through several overlapping routes rather than one single switch — These include improved brain signaling, better stress regulation, increased self-confidence from repeated success, and social engagement when exercise occurs in groups.

Activities with clear structure and measurable progress, such as adding weight in strength training or increasing pace during walks, supported confidence. Each completed session acts like a scorecard, reinforcing belief in your ability to influence how you feel.

• The practical takeaway focused on choice and challenge — The findings emphasize selecting an exercise you tolerate well, then gradually increasing difficulty to maintain progress. This approach manages mental load, builds momentum, and turns treatment into an active skill you control rather than a passive intervention.

How to Manage Depression with Exercise and Foundational Lifestyle Support

Research gives us the map, but you still have to walk the path. The following steps translate these findings into a daily practice you can start this week — beginning with the simplest, most forgiving form of movement and building from there.

Exercise sets the foundation, but recovery strengthens when you also address dietary fats, gut-brain signaling, light exposure, and inhibitory neurotransmitters that quiet an overactivated nervous system. Here is how to put those pieces together without overload.

1. Start with daily walking and build a stable base — Daily walking is an effective entry point because it improves mood regulation and energy production without overstimulating stress hormones. Start with 10 minutes immediately after waking — before you check your phone, before coffee, before your mind talks you out of it.

Add five minutes each week until you reach 30 minutes, then hold there for a month before building toward one hour. That daily rhythm teaches your brain that movement equals relief, which steadily reduces depressive symptoms.

2. Add simple, repeatable strength or mobility work — Once walking feels routine, layer in light strength training or gentle bodyweight movements two to three times per week. Keep the structure basic and predictable. Clear structure lowers mental load and removes decision fatigue, which often worsens low mood.

A minimal starting routine might include: 10 bodyweight squats, 10 wall push-ups, and a 20-second plank — done twice through. This takes under five minutes and requires no equipment. As this becomes easy, add resistance bands or light dumbbells.

3. Increase intensity carefully and avoid extremes — Here’s the cruel irony of depression: the very thing that helps most — movement — is the last thing you want to do. Your brain lies to you, insisting rest will help. It won’t. Start so small that motivation becomes irrelevant. You don’t need to feel like exercising. You just need to stand up.

From there, start walking and progress gradually by walking faster, adding light resistance, or shortening rest periods. Avoid pushing intense exercise too frequently. Pounding yourself with intense workouts backfires.

It spikes cortisol, fragments sleep, and leaves you more depleted than before. A simple test: you should finish your workout feeling more energized than when you started. If you feel wiped out, need a nap, or dread the next session, you’ve pushed too hard. Scale back and rebuild more gradually.

4. Reduce linoleic acid (LA) to repair mood and energy regulation — LA, a polyunsaturated fat found in vegetable oils and ultraprocessed foods, accumulates in tissues and interferes with mitochondrial energy production that supports stable mood. Mitochondria are the energy-producing structures inside every cell. When they falter, your brain doesn’t get the fuel it needs to regulate mood, motivation, and focus.

Think of them as tiny power plants — when they run low on fuel or get clogged with the wrong inputs, the whole system slows down. When you consume excess LA over months and years, it embeds itself in your cell membranes, including those of your mitochondria.

Once there, it makes those membranes more prone to oxidative damage — essentially rusting from the inside. This impairs energy production and increases inflammation, both of which worsen depression. Eliminate oils such as soybean, corn, sunflower, and safflower. Replace them with whole foods and stable fats like grass fed butter, ghee, or tallow.

Keep LA intake under 5 grams per day, ideally closer to 2 grams, to allow brain and metabolic function to normalize. To help you track your intake, download my Mercola Health Coach app when it’s available. It includes a feature called the Seed Oil Sleuth, designed to monitor your LA intake down to a tenth of a gram.

5. Rebuild gut health and circadian rhythm together — Your gut and brain communicate constantly, and poor digestion raises inflammation that worsens depression. Your vagus nerve carries signals directly from your gut to your brain. When gut bacteria are imbalanced or your intestinal lining is inflamed, those signals carry alarm messages — promoting anxiety and lowering mood.

Support this connection by eating enough carbohydrates to fuel energy production, roughly 250 grams daily for most adults, more if you’re active. Start with easy-to-digest options such as fruit and white rice, then slowly add root vegetables and well-cooked legumes as tolerance improves.

Pair this with daily morning sunlight exposure to reinforce circadian rhythm, improve sleep quality, and stabilize mood-related hormones. Aim for 10 to 20 minutes of direct sunlight within the first hour of waking — ideally without sunglasses, which block the light wavelengths that signal your brain to reset its clock. Overcast days still help; you’ll just need longer exposure.

6. Calm your nervous system by supporting GABA and daily rhythm — Depression often involves an overactive stress response and low inhibitory signaling in your brain. GABA is the primary calming neurotransmitter that helps quiet excessive neural firing. Think of it like your brain’s natural brake pedal. While other neurotransmitters accelerate thoughts and reactions, GABA slows the firing so your nervous system can rest.

Without enough of it, your brain stays stuck in overdrive — anxious, restless, and unable to settle. Supplemental GABA supports relaxation and sleep quality without disrupting brain chemistry. I recommend a dose of 500 milligrams (mg) to 2,000 mg (2 grams) daily.

Lower doses around 100 mg have also shown benefits. Combining GABA with the amino acid L-theanine further enhances these effects. L-theanine mimics GABA’s calming action, essentially fitting into the same locks that GABA opens, which amplifies the relaxation effect.

When daily movement, dietary fat quality, gut and circadian support, and calming neurotransmitter balance work together, depression loses its biological footing. This approach restores energy and emotional stability gradually, without relying on extremes that derail recovery.

FAQs About Exercise and Depression

Q: What does depression look like beyond low mood?
A: Depression commonly involves disrupted sleep, low energy, impaired concentration, and loss of interest in daily activities. Over time, these symptoms interfere with physical health, relationships, and work, increasing the risk of chronic disease and early death.

Q: How effective is exercise compared with antidepressant medication?
A: Large clinical reviews show structured exercise reduces depression symptoms to a similar degree as antidepressant drugs and psychotherapy for many adults. In direct comparisons, exercise performed about as well as medication at the end of treatment, with fewer reported side effects.

Q: Does the type of exercise matter for depression relief?
A: Yes. Walking or jogging, strength training, yoga, dancing, and mixed aerobic exercise all reduce symptoms, but adherence and effectiveness vary. Strength training and yoga tend to have lower dropout rates, while higher-intensity activity produces stronger improvements than light movement alone when done appropriately.

Q: Why is daily walking emphasized as a starting point?
A: Daily walking improves mood regulation and energy production without overstimulating stress hormones. It’s easy to sustain, supports consistency, and builds momentum. Gradually increasing toward one hour per day provides steady benefits without triggering burnout.

Q: Why do diet, gut health, and circadian rhythm matter alongside exercise?
A: Depression reflects disrupted energy production and chronic stress signaling. Reducing LA intake supports mitochondrial function, adequate carbohydrates help stabilize gut-brain signaling, morning sunlight reinforces circadian rhythm, and calming neurotransmitters like GABA help quiet an overactive nervous system. Together with exercise, these factors address depression at its biological roots.

Test Your Knowledge with Today’s Quiz!

Take today’s quiz to see how much you’ve learned from yesterday’s Mercola.com article.

What major change was made to the childhood vaccine schedule?

Fewer vaccines are universally recommended for all children

Officials reduced the number of vaccines recommended for all children and reorganized the schedule into clearer categories. Learn more.

Several vaccines were removed from national access programs
Only high-risk groups now receive any routine vaccines
Parents need to apply for exemptions before every dose