As I look toward my upcoming birthday in about a month, I am more personally aware of just how aging affects the body. Every morning when I get up, right away I feel the stiffness in my joints. It takes a full ten minutes in the hot shower to get my body feeling normal again. As I dry off, I use the time to stretch a little, and then again before I put my shoes on, I do more stretches before I feel ready to face the day. Even though I teach Pilates and yoga just about everyday, I still need to stretch and practice mobility exercises as a part of my daily living. Most people my age, even those who exercise regularly, have problems with stiffness and restrictions in range of motion. In addition to stiffness, mature people often exhibit physical and mental sluggishness due to poor blood circulation. After years of working with clients my age and older, I have come to realize that we really need focus on staying mobile or the quality of life can suffer.
You Got to Move It!
For mature people no matter what your occupation, there are some simple mobility exercises that I have found greatly help relieve stiffness and aid in getting the blood circulating and bringing alertness back. These 8 exercises only take 10-20 seconds each and can be done anywhere, anytime, especially to get the day started or as a mid-day pick-up.
1. Arm Breaths:
Stand in a neutral parallel stance and inhale as you lift your arms up from your sides. Exhale as you bring them back down. Repeat 4 times. Focus on inhaling and exhaling fully and feeling your arms long and loose.
2. Overhead Reaches:
Start standing with arms up, then reach one arm higher than the other for one second, then switch. Alternate these reaches 16 times. Focus on reaching through your whole side body as well as your arm, and spread your fingers as you reach to help stretch your hands.
3. Head Turns, Tilts and Half-Circles:
Standing with arms by your sides, turn your head from side to side in an easy, smooth rhythm. Repeat 10 times. Then tilt your head slightly to one side for one second, then repeat to other side. Repeat 3 times to each side using gentle force. Then tilt to one side and hold for 3 seconds, deepening into the stretch by exhaling and relaxing the jaw completely. Repeat 3 times to each side. Lastly, slowly circle your head from one side to the other, doing a half-circle in front, and repeat the other way. Avoid circling or dropping the head to the back. Repeat 2 times each way.
4. Shoulder Circles:
From standing or sitting, circle your shoulders 4 times to the back, and 4 times to the front. Leave your arms straight and loose and breathe normally.
5. Side Bends with Reaches:
Open your legs to a wide parallel stance with your knees bent. Reach up and over with your left arm to the right side, curving your torso over, and placing your right hand on your right thigh for support. Repeat reach up and over to the left. Alternate 4 reaches to each side.
6. Torso Twists:
Stand with feet a little wider than hip-width distance apart, knees bent. Holding arms in an easy bent position, twist torso from side to side while keeping hips and lower body absolutely still. Use an easy, smooth rhythm without using too much force. Repeat 5 times to each side.
7. Front Leg Swings:
Stand with your left side next to a wall (or a ballet bar). Lightly place your left hand on the wall or bar for support and swing your right leg up in front keeping the leg long, but not locked straight. Bring the leg back down and tap the toes in back. Repeat the leg swings 10 times, being mindful not to swing too hard or so high that you have to bend the standing leg or sense a collapse in the lower back because the hip is moving with the leg. Turn around and repeat the swings with the left leg.
8. Arm Circle Swings:
Stand in neutral parallel stance. Swing right arm up and around in as full a range of motion as feels comfortable. Let the arm feel pulled around by centrifugal force to really loosen up the shoulder socket. Repeat 8-10 times with one arm, then repeat with the other. Next, reverse the arms circle swings with each arm.
Showing posts with label functional exercises. Show all posts
Showing posts with label functional exercises. Show all posts
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Corrective vs Postural Jargon Debate & 3 Postural Exercises for Everyday




In my never ending quest to deconstruct the latest rhetorical trends in fitness, one of the newest trends is the use of the word “corrective” in front of an exercise. In the past, therapists and fitness professionals would call an exercise a “postural exercise” when it was designed to stretch shortened muscles so that a person could achieve better alignment of the spine, pelvis, shoulders, or other area of the body. Another postural exercise would be one that strengthened over-stretched or weak postural muscles to give support to the spine. Nowadays, the lingo is “corrective exercise”. Whatever, I personally don’t like to think that people need correction, except in parochial schools. I think postural exercise sounds better in that it doesn’t have any negative connotation to it, and really it is about good posture that needs attention to always, rather than just fixing a mistake. For most people, bad posture is an ingrained habit. It comes from lack of awareness and poor mechanics. You can’t correct ingrained habits just from doing a particular exercise. Many therapeutic modalities have been created, such as Alexander, Feldenkreis, Hanna Somatics, etc., to help deal with the subconscious roots of poor posture and improper mechanics of how we move and hold ourselves. As in my Yogilates method, it begins with awareness and relaxing of unnecessary tensions. I can’t fully describe the methods that these different techniques utilize, but my point is that they all include the deepening of the mind/body connection and are much more than just exercises. I believe that they are also more integrative than “corrective” in that one is encouraged to listen to their body and is informed by how their own body responds. True integrative fitness is one that empowers the client to own their body and the condition it is in, and encourages them to visualize for themselves how to achieve release from bad habits and maintain good form, and to see themselves in a more positive and healthier light.
The images at the top are for the following three postural exercises that I have found most of us can truly benefit from on a daily basis:
1. Wall Neck Lean:
Stand with your back against the wall. Place the back of your head against the wall making sure the top of your head and bottom of your chin are level. Keep you body in straight line and walk your legs away from the wall about a foot. Stay leaning in this position for 1 minute.
Benefit: Strengthens muscles in back of neck that get over-stretched and weakened from poor head position while working at computer. Helps mitigate forward head position.
2. Shoulder Blade Pinch:
Standing of sitting, clasp your hands behind your back and push your arms straight while you roll your shoulders back. You should feel your shoulder blades coming together and your thoracic spine push forward. Hold for two full breaths, then relax your shoulders back to neutral. Repeat and, if possible, reach the arms up for more stretch and hold 10 seconds.
Benefit: Stretches front shoulder and chest area and extends thoracic spine. This mitigates internal rotation of arms and hunched upper back.
3. Straight Leg Bridge on Box or Couch:
Lying on the ground, place your feet up on a 12 inch high box. You can also use the edge of your couch. Turn out your legs and keep the heels close together. Hold for 10 seconds, then roll the spine down. Repeat.
Benefit: Strengthens lower back and gluteal muscles which get over-stretched and weakened from poor posture while sitting for long periods.
The images at the top are for the following three postural exercises that I have found most of us can truly benefit from on a daily basis:
1. Wall Neck Lean:
Stand with your back against the wall. Place the back of your head against the wall making sure the top of your head and bottom of your chin are level. Keep you body in straight line and walk your legs away from the wall about a foot. Stay leaning in this position for 1 minute.
Benefit: Strengthens muscles in back of neck that get over-stretched and weakened from poor head position while working at computer. Helps mitigate forward head position.
2. Shoulder Blade Pinch:
Standing of sitting, clasp your hands behind your back and push your arms straight while you roll your shoulders back. You should feel your shoulder blades coming together and your thoracic spine push forward. Hold for two full breaths, then relax your shoulders back to neutral. Repeat and, if possible, reach the arms up for more stretch and hold 10 seconds.
Benefit: Stretches front shoulder and chest area and extends thoracic spine. This mitigates internal rotation of arms and hunched upper back.
3. Straight Leg Bridge on Box or Couch:
Lying on the ground, place your feet up on a 12 inch high box. You can also use the edge of your couch. Turn out your legs and keep the heels close together. Hold for 10 seconds, then roll the spine down. Repeat.
Benefit: Strengthens lower back and gluteal muscles which get over-stretched and weakened from poor posture while sitting for long periods.
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