Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWMExercise and Fitness

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Holiday Leg and Abdominal Exercise

Healthline

Many people are taking down Christmas trees even as the Russian and other Eastern Orthodox families are putting theirs up for Christmas, coming this Saturday Jan 6th. The Russian Snow Girl (Snegurushka), and DedushMoros (Father Frost) have already come to visit. S nastupaiushchim Novym godom i s Rozhdestvom Khristovym - Happy New Year!

Here are two lifestyle strengtheners (and a free Achilles tendon stretch) to build into your fitness as a lifestyle for 2007:

If you would like to get strong legs for the New Year, don't bend over wrong to lift things (upper drawing, left). From now on, make all your bending the way that strengthens your thighs and at the same time prevents back and knee pain (upper drawing, right). Keep your upper body upright and bend your knees. Prevent knee pain and get better use of your leg muscles by keeping both knees down and back over your heels. Each time you keep both heels down while doing healthy bending, you will also get a built-in Achilles tendon stretch. The post How Often Should You Be Healthy? tells more on good bending.

If you want to stop "mystery" lower back pain for the New Year, check to see if you lean backward when you reach upward (lower drawing, left), carry things, or when you are just standing. Leaning back creates overarching of the lower back called hyperlordosis, which pinches and pressures the soft tissue and joints of your spine. People with this kind of pain feel they need to lean over forward or sit to relieve the pain. Instead of doing remedies for pain, it is smarter and healthier to stop the cause of the pain.

The "hip tuck" or "pelvic tilt" to reduce overarching and straighten the spine (lower drawing, right) is described in the post Throw a Stronger Punch (or Push a Car or Stroller) Using This Back Pain Reduction Technique. The muscles you use to move your spine out of unhealthy overly arched position and into straighter position are your abdominal muscles. By simply standing and moving with a healthier spine position, you get free exercise for your abdominal muscles. "Tightening" the abs is not what exercises the abs or prevents back pain. Tightening also does not let you breath or move properly. Tightening is not how to have healthy abdominal function. Instead, use the abdominal muscles to stop overarching and maintain healthy position while going about your daily life and exercise. The post, If Better Abdominal Muscles Are Your New Year's Resolution, Try This, shows how.

If your New Year's Resolution is to have a healthier low back, Achilles tendons, and abdominal muscles, you can do that all at once during your regular daily activities.

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Drawings of Backman!™ © copyright Dr. Jolie Bookspan

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