5 habits to ditch in your 20s for a healthier future
These 5 'cool' habits may seem trendy, but they secretly harm your mental and physical health. Ditch them now for a healthier future.


Let’s face it—your 20s are filled with freedom, discovery, and the occasional (okay, frequent) bad decision. You pull all-nighters like a badge of honour, eat whatever fits your budget and cravings, and often treat your body like it’s indestructible. You tell yourself, “I’ll fix this later,” or “I’m still young.”
But here’s the truth: later starts now. The habits you develop in your teens and twenties don’t just fade—they shape the mental clarity, physical energy, and emotional stability you’ll carry into your 30s and beyond. And while social media might glorify hustle culture, junk food, or endless scrolling, these so-called “cool” habits can quietly wreck your well-being.
This article isn’t about judgment—it’s about awareness. You’re not too young to care about your health. In fact, the earlier you start, the easier it is to build a life full of energy, clarity, and confidence.
Here are 5 ‘cool’ habits many young adults should ditch—for good—to protect both their minds and bodies.
Health mistakes to avoid in your 20s—ditch these now
1. Pulling all-nighters like a badge of honour
Sleep isn’t laziness—it’s smart self-care.
Whether it’s binge-watching a show, studying last minute, or just scrolling through reels at 2 a.m., sleep often takes a backseat. The hustle culture often celebrates “grind now, rest later.” But science says otherwise.
Lack of sleep impairs memory, reduces focus, weakens immunity, and can even lead to long-term mental health issues like anxiety and depression. Chronic sleep deprivation also increases your risk of obesity and heart disease.
Your brain resets, your body repairs, and your emotions regulate when you sleep well. That’s the real flex.
2. Living on junk food and caffeine
Eating well is the new cool.
Energy drinks, instant noodles, and fries with every meal might feel convenient, but your gut, skin, and brain are screaming for help. What you eat directly impacts how you think, feel, and perform.
Poor nutrition leads to fatigue, poor concentration, skin issues, and mood swings. Worse, it sets the stage for diabetes, high cholesterol, and digestive disorders.
Smoothies, oats, rice bowls, and home-cooked meals are fast, budget-friendly, and way more sustainable for your body.
3. Glorifying constant hustle and burnout
Hustle smarter, not harder.
“Sleep is for the weak.” “You can rest when you’re successful.” These toxic ideas are often pushed online, especially by influencers glorifying 18-hour workdays. But burnout isn’t a badge—it’s a warning sign.
Overworking without rest leads to mental exhaustion, loss of motivation, irritability, and even physical breakdown. Productivity suffers, relationships strain, and your sense of joy fades.
Take real breaks. Set boundaries. Do things that recharge you. Growth doesn’t require collapse.
4. Escaping emotions through screens
Pause and process before you scroll.
Scrolling through TikTok for hours, gaming nonstop, or doomscrolling the news can feel like relief. But often, these habits numb you instead of helping you process your emotions.
Too much screen time worsens anxiety, damages sleep quality, and disconnects you from real-life joy and relationships. When you’re always plugged in, you miss out on being present.
When emotions hit hard, journal, call a friend, go for a walk, or just sit quietly. Screens won’t solve what silence can heal.
5. Normalising alcohol and substance use
Confidence without intoxication is a power move.
Casual drinking, vaping, or experimenting with substances is often glamorised as part of “being young and free.” But regular use—especially to cope with stress or loneliness—can spiral fast.
Substance use affects memory, decision-making, liver health, and long-term emotional regulation. It can also worsen depression and anxiety, even if it feels like temporary relief.
Opt for mocktails, water-based hydration, or sober social hangouts. Being fun doesn’t need a filter—or a flask.
Final thoughts
Choosing your health doesn’t mean becoming boring or rigid. It means becoming intentional. You can still have fun, make memories, and be spontaneous, without sacrificing your peace of mind or your body’s well-being.
In fact, the real rebellion in today’s overstimulated, hustle-obsessed world is choosing balance over burnout, nutrition over neglect, and healing over hype.