Thursday, July 30, 2020

Five...






We all want to be healthy.  Here are five kinds of exercise that will help with that:

 

1.     Cardio:  get the heart moving, improve mood, burn calories, reduce stress.

2.     Strength:  get stronger (duh!), increase metabolism, shape body, reduce fat.

3.     Balance/Core:  avoid injury, improve grace, feel cool

4.     Flexibility:  improve mobility, avoid injury, reduce stress.

5.     Mind/Body:  improve proprioception, relax, avoid injury

 

Short and sweet today!  Go play!

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Move then sit






I’ve been doing yoga all month.  Yoga was not intended as an exercise thing in the beginning.  All those poses are designed to train our bodies so that we can meditate and be still.

 

Maybe not all of us are that interested in meditating (although it is, in fact, good for us!), but almost all of us could use a little help with that sitting still thing.  Many of us have desk jobs and if that isn’t sitting still, I’m not sure what is.  (Confession:  when I had a desk job, I always made a point of going to ask that question in person just so I could stand up and move around.  Copies?  Sure, I’ll go make them at the copier way over there…)

 

Even if the idea of yoga doesn’t make our hearts sing, we can apply the general principle.  Which is:  we sit better if we also get to move.

 

Do the workout, then do the work.  It helps.

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Not about machines






I am pretty sure that I am not the only person struggling with time right now.  A lot of us have had our schedules upended, either by having to work more or differently, or not being able to work at all.  Some of us suddenly have kids around all the time.  Errands have taken on new complexity.  And where did all this hair come from?

 

I confess that I hate change.  I like knowing what is going to happen and when.  The vicissitudes of life with this new non-schedule are real and impactful.  What to do?  Routine to the rescue!

 

Now I know that some of us are groaning right now.  Our creative brains don’t want to submit to some routine that is the tool of the patriarchy designed to mold us into perfect little machines.  Stop for a second.  Take a couple of breaths.  That’s not the kind of routine I’m talking about.

 

I’m talking about the kind that saves energy for the real creative stuff we want to do.  The kind that lets us brush our teeth on autopilot and find our coffee mug in the cabinet without having to think about where it might be.

 

When we add our fitness work to our routine, we don’t have to figure out, every single day, where the heck we’re going to fit it in.  We just show up and do it, whether it is between coffee and shower or after dinner and before Netflix.  Let’s save our brainpower for the stuff we really want it for and let our workouts happen routinely.

Monday, July 27, 2020

Monday Workout: Alphabet






This week we’re playing with the alphabet!  This means that we all get a personalized workout!  Using the chart at the bottom, do 10 reps of the exercise listed for each letter of your name.  If your name is short, do lots of rounds or add your middle and/or last name.  If it is long, do fewer rounds.

 

For example, my workout would be:

 

J

lunges

A

squats

N

burpees

E

squats

T

burpees

 

(Hmm… that’s a lot of burpees.  Crap.)  (You may notice that all vowels are squats.  This is because everyone should do squats.)  My name has five letters, so I should do at least four rounds.

 

Please note:  if one of the exercises listed is not suitable for you, substitute your own!  If you have knee problems, you might want to replace lunges with punches.  If you want more challenge, you can always do jump lunges or jump squats.  You are the boss of you.

 

A

squats

B

lunges

C

pushups

D

jacks

E

squats

F

lunges

G

pushups

H

jacks

I

squats

J

lunges

K

pushups

L

jacks

M

mountain climbers

N

burpees

O

squats

P

lunges

Q

pushups

R

jacks

S

mountain climbers

T

burpees

U

squats

V

lunges

W

pushups

X

jacks

Y

squats

Z

lunges

 

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Three breaths





Got three minutes?  Let’s do three things to help our posture and breathing!

 

1.     Find a doorway.  Stand in it with arms stretched out to the sides against the door frame.  Lean forward, supporting yourself with your arms.  You should feel a stretch across your chest and maybe even your shoulder blades pulling together.

2.     Lie down on your back.  (Hey!  The good part!)  Bend both knees so that your feet are flat on the floor.  Bring your arms up toward the ceiling and put the palms of your hands together.  Keeping your hips on the ground and your hands together, move your arms to the left (right shoulder can come up and elbows will stay straight) and then to the right.  Keep your head still.  Repeat about ten times.  Then do the same thing letting your head follow your hands for about ten repetitions.  Finally, let your head go the opposite way that your arms go about ten times.

3.     Sit on the floor or a chair with your spine upright.  Lift your shoulders toward your ears, roll them back and down, and then circle them forward, returning to your ears.  Do about five circles and then go the other way.  At the end, sit for a couple of breaths with your ears lined up over your shoulders.

 

These are good things to do any time you feel tense or like your breathing is too shallow.  It’s a good series to reset between meetings or before bed.

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Posturing...





Posture is not one of those warm and fuzzy words.  Maybe it makes us think of walking around with books on our heads, or of screeching drill sergeants, or of grumpy older teachers muttering about respect.  Maybe it conjures a sense of bravado, of irritating pretense.  It’s still something useful, so maybe we can replace those other images with, say, dancers.  The relaxed-yet-straight poses of sitting Buddhas are also a good image to keep in mind for posture.

 

Or, if some of us prefer a things-to-avoid sort of image:  let’s not be that person hunched over the computer screen, shoulders in ears, lower back screaming, chest compressed.

 

Why?  A couple of reasons, actually.

 

Here’s one to appeal to our collective vanity:  we’ll look thinner if we use good posture.  Who doesn’t like that?

 

How about one for comfort?  Good posture helps reduce tension in the neck and shoulders, improves and/or prevents low back pain, and helps us avoid injury while exercising.

 

Health?  When we hang out in a slumped posture, we inhibit our breathing.  News flash:  people who can’t breathe die.  Sure, we can get by for a long time with substandard breathing, but really, wouldn’t it be nice if we made it easy for ourselves to take a deep breath?

 

Which brings me to what good posture is.  When we are standing up, we want our ears to be over our shoulders, which should be over our hips, which should be over our knees, which should be over our ankles.  This is best seen from the side, so find a friend to check it out.  A lot of us tend to have our heads forward and our shoulders rounded, but we don’t want to overcorrect and stick our chests out like pigeons.  Many of us also tend to arch our lower backs more than is ideal, so we can think about tucking our behinds under us a bit to lengthen the lower back.  It should feel kind of good.

 

At first, good posture will feel kind of tiring.  Our muscles are used to a different position and the short ones will need to get used to lengthening and the long ones will have to adjust as well.  Keep breathing.  It gets better.

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Strong





Many of us are concerned about weight gain these days.  We may feel helplessly under the sway of the refrigerator and the take-out menus.  We may be using eating as a coping technique.  We may not have our usual options for working out.

 

I get it.  It is not a simple problem or else we’d all have it solved by now.  But we can start dealing with it with some simple steps.  I’ve been pushing cardio over the last while because of its mood-boosting benefits and because so many cardio exercises don’t require that we have a bunch of stuff—if we have shoes, we can walk or run.  However, if we really want to get on top of the weight issue, we need to consider strength training.

 

Strength training not only burns calories while we do it, but over time it also changes our body composition so that we burn more calories all the time.  This is because muscle tissue requires more energy to maintain.  In other words, when we have more muscles, we have a higher metabolism automatically.

 

The manufacturers of fitness equipment and the Fitness Industrial Complex will have us believe that we need acres of equipment and fancy machines and the Magic Bullet Exercise Doodad of the Week.  Nope.  We can get a good strength training workout in with just our bodies.  (Hey!  I posted one on Monday!)  If we have weights or other equipment, we have even more options.  Or the resourceful among us can lift water bottles or jugs, canned goods, or cooperative pets and children (uncooperative ones tend to lead to extra cardio…).

 

Some notes:  do not do strength training of the same muscles two days in a row.  Our tissues need time to recover.  Always use good judgment and stop if there is pain (the real kind, not the growing kind).  If there is soreness over the next two days, use ice or ibuprofen as desired and tolerated.

 

Go play.