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Lise Poulsen Floris on Mount Kinabalu, the highest mountain in Borneo and Malaysia, at sunrise. Conquering the mountain has been part of her journey to becoming a fitter, healthier and happier person. Photo: Lise Poulsen Floris

5 tips to become fitter, healthier and happier than ever, from an expat who transformed her body and mind in Malaysia

  • Never much one for sports or spirituality, Lise Poulsen Floris now exercises most days a week, has embraced therapy and become a reiki practitioner
  • Here are her tips for making positive changes to your life, including giving up alcohol – something that led to better sleep, mental clarity and weight loss
Wellness

After four-and-a-half years of living as expats in Beijing, my diplomat husband, my daughter and I moved to Kuala Lumpur, where he was posted in August 2020.

I have not worked full-time these seven-and-a-half years. Now we’re going to Brussels, in Belgium, where I will be taking up a job as a European Union official.

In Malaysia, I’ve gone from being rather uninterested in sports to exercising five to six times a week and taking part in official sports events such as a bike race in Kuala Lumpur, my first ever triathlon, and my first open-water 2km (1.2-mile) swim.

I’ve embraced therapy, worked on my mental health and gone from having little interest in the spiritual world to being a reiki practitioner and sound healing student.

Poulsen Floris takes first in her age category at her first triathlon, in Malaysia. Photo: Lise Poulsen Floris

Here are five ways I grew while living abroad.

1. Adopting an active lifestyle

When you live in the tropics and the temperature is regularly above 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit), your life can go in two directions: either you use the heat as an excuse to never go outside, or you realise that it makes having an active lifestyle really easy.

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Twice a week, my alarm goes off at 5.40am to join the Master Panther swimmers at the International School of Kuala Lumpur. By 5.42am, I am fully dressed: swimsuit, wraparound skirt and flip-flops.

I cross the street to the school, take a cold shower poolside and jump in. At no point am I cold. I struggle to see how swimming can be part of my life the same way in Belgium.

As a Dane and child of the Northern European bike culture, I always used my old-fashioned bike to get from point A to B – but never as a sport. If someone had told me that, one day, I would not only own a road bike, but also load it into the back of my car every Wednesday to join my friends from the “Bike in Nature” club on the edge of the jungle, I would not have believed it.

Poulsen Floris’ cycling group “Bike in Nature” on Malaysia’s jungle roads. Photo: Lise Poulsen Floris

My former self would have come up with a million excuses not to do back-to-back Pilates and strength classes, let alone hike on Sundays under the baking sun.

Be it the climate or my increased awareness about keeping fit as we age, I’m leaving Malaysia the fittest – though not the thinnest – I have ever been.

2. Mental health tune-up

In March 2021, between two strict lockdowns during the pandemic, some friends and I booked a “daycation” at the Mandarin Oriental in Kuala Lumpur.

While splashing around in the splendid swimming pool overlooking the KLCC park, a sense of guilt built up inside me. Here I was on a completely normal Tuesday, sipping cocktails by the pool in the tropics.

Wasn’t this unfair? Shouldn’t I be working like I used to? What was I learning today? What skills had I acquired? How could my children look up to a housewife the way they looked up to a hard-working independent woman who was earning her own money?

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The questions stayed with me for weeks and I realised that my excessive overthinking was keeping me from the opportunity to simply enjoy life.

I booked three sessions with Sisi Gu, who specialises in metacognitive therapy that targets rumination and overthinking.

I went from being convinced that I have no control over my thoughts to mastering several techniques to avoid rumination.

Poulsen Floris shows off her Mount Kinabalu tattoo, done in Borneo to celebrate climbing the mountain. Photo: Lise Poulsen Floris

Having realised that with three sessions of therapy one can make giant leaps towards a happier life, I grasped the opportunity again when my psychotherapist friend offered sessions of neurolinguistic programming (NLP) and we tackled other mental health aspects together.

I now see therapy as a tool in my mental health toolbox. I don’t understand how I lived without it before moving to Malaysia.

3. Learning through writing

As a journalist, I was looking forward to being less fearful of censorship in Malaysia than I was in China. But the first piece of advice I got from a Malaysian journalist upon moving to Kuala Lumpur was: “Just remember, you have to avoid the three R’s: race, religion and royalty.”

These were topics I had looked forward to exploring in Malaysia.

I’m also keen to share lifestyle, travel, health and fitness stories, and there is an abundance of people to feature and stories to tell in Malaysia.

Floris Poulsen attends a sound healing workshop with friends. Photo: Lise Floris Poulsen
Every source inspired me. They included Norah Farooq and her family, who tackled their health issues by adopting the Keto diet; the South African family who sold everything they had to buy a small island resort in Malaysia; and Uzair, a severely autistic 15-year-old whose tantrums have ceased since he started cycling.

Researching these stories brought me closer to the people of Malaysia and to its culture.

I learned about the tricks hijab-wearing women used to be able to wear face masks during the pandemic, and was able to share my first-hand account of fasting for Ramadan.

4. Heightened spirituality

My birthday present this year from my husband was not a perfume or handbag – things that used to be on the top of my wish list – but a reiki healing retreat in Bali, Indonesia.

I had met reiki practitioner Jessica Coup in late 2022 and, having featured her in a story, I wanted to learn how to heal myself and others with reiki.

After completing a course at The Yoga Barn in Ubud, Bali, I started a 21-day self-healing process that opened my mind and heart further to spiritual practices.

A reiki course with Melani Koch at The Yoga Barn in Bali. Photo: Lise Poulsen Floris

I gained more experience and insight from Malaysian reiki master Komathy Ganesan. I also sought out sound healers who would share their knowledge and now have a small collection of singing bowls and practise playing them daily.

5. Choosing to live sober

The greatest legacy from our time in Malaysia is to have quit drinking. During the pandemic, my Italian husband and I found comfort in wine. Every Monday we’d agree to only drink on the weekend – yet Tuesday or Wednesday dinner in front of Netflix just called for a bottle of wine.

Despite keeping physically active, we were living most of our days at “half-mast” – as 85-year-old actress Jane Fonda beautifully describes having had a few drinks.

On January 1, 2022, we decided to take a 31-day break from alcohol. At first, Dry January seemed like a daunting endeavour – but better sleep, mental clarity and weight loss were just some of the eye-opening benefits that we had not expected.

Poulsen Floris and her husband celebrate his birthday with alcohol-free champagne. Photo: Lise Floris Poulsen

February arrived – and we decided to keep going. Dry until July was our next goal. We now wonder, “July of what year?”

I have since written and blogged about alcohol-free living, hosted four alcohol-free events in Kuala Lumpur, and started Drunk on Life – an alcohol-free platform to inform and inspire others.

The first “Classy AF” alcohol-free cocktail-making masterclass in Kuala Lumpur. Photo: Lise Poulsen Floris

Malaysia has been the most welcoming melting pot one could imagine. I go back to Europe and full-time working life a healthier version of myself with no regrets – and a tattoo of Mount Kinabalu to celebrate one of our Malaysian highlights.

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