A woman is silhouetted against a desert sunset

Get ready for a great year!

By

Penny Walker

Alonzo Jones has one of the best jobs at Arizona State University: associate athletic director for inclusion and championship life.

Who doesn’t want to lead a championship life?

Jones is in charge of the “life skills” programming for student-athletes at ASU, teaching them how to balance all parts of their busy lives.

“It’s a wraparound for the student-athlete to ensure that for as much as they’re giving their institution, their institution is giving as much back to them,” said Jones, who graduated from ASU.

Alonzo Jones and a student write on a whiteboard
Sun Devil Athletics' Alonzo Jones and ASU freshman defensive back Alex Perry talk about the concept of "45." Photo by Jarod Opperman/ASU

An energetic and motivating speaker, he tailors his message to the age of the athlete — freshmen learn about decision-making, stress and wellness, while sophomores become engaged in the ASU community.

“After the sophomore year, it’s all about, ‘What are you going to be doing the day after graduation?’” he said.

A little verbal shortcut that Jones and the department have come up with is “45” — reminding the young adults that one day, they’ll be 45 years old.

“It’s a reminder that students must prepare now for a good quality of life later,” Jones said.

His advice? You have different identities and must wisely choose which one to wear and when.

There’s plenty of time for social interests and fun, as long as “the intellectual self is the lead guardian of your life,” Jones said.

“Your social side is obsessed with the moment. It’s obsessed with fun. It marks milestones by Fridays. It thinks about three hours out. … So I ask the students: Will you one day be 45?”

It’s good advice for everyone of any age: Have fun, but make sure you’re also thinking past Friday. To that end, we’ve gathered advice from a variety of ASU experts on ways to prepare for a better year ahead. There’s one tip for every month, with two in January — just so you can hit the ground running.

January

Change your passwords

Although you should be changing your passwords more often than once a year, it’s a good way to start the new year off right.

“Sometimes the number of passwords we need to keep track of can seem overwhelming,” said Kim Jones, director of New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences’ Cybersecurity Education Consortium. “This unfortunately makes things so much easier for the bad guys.”

If it’s something you find really difficult, you may want to consider purchasing password management software, such as LastPass or KeePass.

Look up

The winter offers a particularly bright and clear sky for stargazers. Patrick Young, an astronomer in the School of Earth and Space Exploration, encourages stargazers to appreciate the stellar life span they’re witnessing.

“As the year begins, go outside when night has fallen and look to the south to see the constellation Orion. The darker your sky, the better, but you can see the bright stars even from the city; short of the sun and moon it’s the easiest thing in the sky to recognize,” he said.

“In a moment you’ve connected with the entire span of a star’s life from the newborns nestled in the nebula that appears as the middle star of the sword to bright red Betelgeuse teetering on the edge of a violent death.”

February

Campus orange harvest
Vitamin C supplements or citrus can help ward off illness. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now

Do flu season right

About 30 percent of Americans have low vitamin C status, so ASU nutrition Professor Carol Johnston recommends considering supplements during the winter months to ward off nasty bugs.

“Research at the School of Nutrition and Health Promotion at ASU reports a 45 percent reduction in colds and cold symptoms in young adults taking 1,000 milligrams of vitamin C daily during the winter months,” said Johnston, associate director of ASU’s Nutrition Program.

As a bonus, the supplementation also increased physical activity levels of participants compared with the placebo treatment.

Johnston also recommends favoring fist-bumps over handshakes during flu season, along with frequent handwashing. 

March

Data ‘spring cleaning’

How much data is sitting around on your devices that you never use?

“March is a great time to clean that data off of your systems and free up space,” Jones said.

Also take the time to shut down old accounts for applications you no longer use and clean those old apps off of your devices.

April

Lend a helping hand

April is National Volunteer Month — it’s a good time to spring into action, says Victoria Ames, professor in the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. She believes everyone has talent that can benefit their communities.

“Volunteers come in all shapes and sizes and can make a big difference by donating just a few hours of time,” said Ames, who noted that there is no shortage of volunteer opportunities in the Phoenix area, including the Arizona Legal Center at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law. “Volunteering has the added benefit of bringing people who share like-minded values together for the greater good.”

MLK Day of Service
STEM elementary education major David Benjamin bags apples to hand out during a Produce on Wheels Without Waste event. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now

Neal A. Lester, director of ASU’s Project Humanities, says the long-running homeless outreach program “Service Saturdays” is a good way to get in touch with your humanity.

Every other Saturday he helps volunteers organize in downtown Phoenix to distribute various items — including clothes, toiletries and books and magazines — to the homeless as part of an effort called “Humanity 101.”

“The outreach is transformative, to witness what a kind word or gesture, or a pair of shoes and socks can do for those who are without,” Lester said. “Such support to others gets us out of our heads and allows us to witness the power of both our individual and shared humanity.”

For information, visit projecthumanities.asu.edu or call 480-727-7030. 

May

Embrace minimalism

One way to make an impact on everything from your finances to your health to your environmental impact is to embrace the minimalism movement. Chris Wharton, interim director of the School of Nutrition and Health Promotion, calls it “voluntary simplicity.”

The goal, he said, is to simplify your life by buying less, eating more simply and using your body more often for things like transportation or entertainment.

“The results can be profound,” Wharton said. “So if you’re thinking about how to be healthier, skip the faddish diet or cultish exercise regime, and instead try simplifying your life. The results could be better and more multifaceted than you thought possible!”

His blog, Practically Awesome, explores minimalism in more depth.

June

Take stock

It’s halfway through the year. Are you halfway to your financial goals for 2018? It’s a good time to check in.

Money and a clock

Creating a “net worth report” is an easy way to see where you stand each year and monitor your progress, says Debra Radway, W. P. Carey School of Business lecturer as well as a certified financial planner, trustee and investment adviser.

Make a list of everything you own (house, car, investment accounts, 401(k), IRA, etc.) and put the current value of each next to it. Add it up; these are your assets. Then make a list of everything you owe (mortgage, car loan, student loan, etc.) with the amounts owed. Add those up; those are your liabilities.  Now take what you own and subtract what you owe — that’s your net worth. Monitoring this on an annual basis helps you know where you stand financially and helps you monitor progress toward your financial goals.

And if you aren’t contributing enough to your 401(k) to take full advantage of a company match, get on it and give yourself a raise, Radway says. A match of even a few percentage points could add up to $100,000 or more after 30 years of contributions and growth — and that’s free money.

July

Prepare for the worst

Summer headlines are full of natural disasters, from forest fires to hurricanes to monsoon floods. Cheryl Schmidt, a clinical professor in the College of Nursing and Health Innovation who has been a volunteer nurse in the American Red Cross since 1974, says it’s easy to become complacent, especially if you live in an area that faces less risk of natural disasters.

“But any area is at risk for man-made disasters such as apartment fires, overturned tankers transporting toxic chemicals or even terrorist attacks,” she said.

She encourages everyone to make a written plan of what they might need if they had to leave their home on short notice and never return. At a minimum, people should have a “go-bag” containing:

• one week’s worth of daily medications, or at least a list of medications

• copies of important papers (or scanned documents on a USB drive) such as proof of insurance for house and vehicle

• water and non-perishable food

• first-aid kit

• flashlight with extra batteries

• small, battery-powered radio

• change of clothing

• personal hygiene supplies

Each individual and family should personalize their lists and supplies, preparing them to quickly evacuate the area or to shelter in place. Find more information at www.redcross.org and www.ready.gov.

August

Improve your vocabulary

Back-to-school time can be a good motivation to expand your own mind.

“The key to learning new vocabulary is excitement,” Regents’ Professor of English Elly van Gelderen said.

She recommends looking for new words in your own areas of interest to keep you motivated. There are plenty of resources online, such as World Wide Words, where you can find “great-sounding words” and click to find out their meanings. 

“Select new words to memorize, keep a list of the ones you like, put them in a sentence, and review them,” she said.

Also, learning about the history of language is a good supplement to vocabulary and can help keep you engaged. For example, the words “cool” and “glacial” are related.

September

Try opera — no, really

Many people have a view of the opera as stuffy, loud and indecipherable. But that’s not true, says Brian DeMaris, artistic director of Lyric Opera Theatre.

“Operas come in all different shapes and sizes,” he said. “Not all are big, scary and intimidating. Many are quite funny, and most are absolutely beautiful.”

DeMaris discovered the opera in college and says he was surprised by how entertaining and relevant it was and still remains. Phoenix has several to offer, including ASU’s own Lyric Opera Theatre in the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, producing two operas and two musicals per year. 

October

Backing up data

Back up your data

Take it from Kim Jones: “Nothing ever goes wrong with technology … until it does.”

The upcoming holiday season is a great time to make sure all of your data is backed up and stored in a secure fashion.

“Do not depend exclusively on cloud-based services to store your critical data,” he said. Instead, invest in a local external hard drive and keep a copy of your data locally.

November

Be on high alert for scammers

More security advice from Jones — keep this in mind this month as well as in April.

“As tax season and holiday season approach, scammers increase their efforts to relieve you of your sensitive data,” Jones said.

He advises being extra cautious of suspicious emails and phone calls, and making sure your security software is up to date.

December

Stop and listen

When the holidays’ hectic pace gets to be too much, find a spot outside to sit and listen — “headphones off, phone silenced,” said Associate Professor Garth Paine, whose research interest is studying sound in the wilderness.

“Try active listening: focusing in on a single sound, hearing every tiny detail and then listen to the relationship between that sound and all the others you hear around you,” he said. “Listen to the reverberation off the buildings, hear the open or closed quality of space and, most of all, sense yourself being present, connected and part of that ecology.”

It’s a simple way to connect with the world and to recenter yourself.

Reporters Mary Beth Faller, Emma Greguska, Marshall Terrill and Scott Seckel contributed to this story. A version of this story appeared in the January 2018 issue of ASU Thrive magazine.