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Make Some Resolutions To Your Resolutions
Dana Dowd , M.S.P.T.
Vol. XII, No. 1
January/February, 2008
As a physical therapist and fitness professional,
I dread January. After a month of celebrating and socializing over
appetizers, mashed potatoes, and cookies in cold weather and crowded
malls, our bodies are overfed, under-exercised and in desperate need
of a little break and re-direction. So, what do we do? We sit down
and write out our goals for the new year.
These goals usually include
some pretty big ticket items: lose weight, quit smoking, get in
shape, tone up, eat better, or maybe even run a marathon. By the
end of
January, half of our resolvers are back on the couch with the popcorn
and the other half are filling up physical therapy clinics with
their wonderful intentions and over-zealous pursuits. Resulting injuries
are more than nuisances. They can mistakenly give the message that
we are “too old” to exercise, that when I try to get
in shape, “I hurt myself.” There is a better way. Actually,
an easier and more comfortable way! You may think that I am the
only trainer shouting “Take it easy!” Actually, the
new fitness mantra is “De-stress.” I would like to
suggest some resolutions for the over-exerciser and under-exerciser
alike.
First, take a deep breath, close your eyes and say
to yourself “I
am a tortoise, slow and steady.” Fitness is much more than
just exercise or diet. Fitness encompasses all the ways we do or
do not take care of our bodies, including the clothing/shoes we wear,
the amount of sleep we get, the food we eat as well as when and how
much we eat, the way we sit at our desk to work, the hours we put
in without a break, how we maintain relationships with people or
activities that sap our energy and feed into our bad habits, talking
down to ourselves, or not giving ourselves proper credit for good
health habits. If we examine the periphery of our fitness behaviors,
we will find some very easy things to change. Take January to find
and decrease your “loopholes.” Get 8 hours daily of
sleep this month. Replace any exercise shoe that is more than one
year
old (yes, I mean it). Look at your personal fitness pyramid: cardiovascular,
strength, endurance, flexibility, balance, and relaxation, and
decide on two areas on which to focus.
Second, slow she goes. Now, even slower and so slow
you feel your eyelids drooping. Again, I’m not kidding. I now recommend 10-20
minutes of relaxation daily before starting someone on an exercise
plan. Studies have shown a regular nap is tied to a healthier heart,
and that stress is as significant a factor, as any lack of exercise
in most disease cases. By taking some time out of each day to become
quiet, we allow our breath and our bodies to separate from the stress
of the day. As a result, we break the tension cycle that increases
stress hormone production, fat production, blood pressure, and the
muscle tension that help to create headaches, back pain, knee pain,
and keeps us awake at night. The body uses this “down time” to
actually create the healthy changes that exercise promotes. It is
your own personal reset button. So find a quiet spot, turn on some
classical music, and take some deep breaths. For those of you who
find this stressful—and you know who you are— keep
trying. It will get better.
Third, pay attention to your posture. As I walk around
fitness facilities, I often cringe at the positions people put themselves
in, as they
attempt to use heavy equipment. Several body therapies train people
to get out of poor postural habits: Alexander Technique, Feldenkrais,
Pilates, Tai Chi, and Yoga. Research has shown gains in height
with correct form in these disciplines. Correct posture can decrease
neck,
back, hip and knee pain. Posture also helps with balance, coordination,
reaction time, and strengthens those elusive “core” muscles
everyone talks about. Place a sticker on your shirt sleeve and
every time you see the sticker, give yourself a posture check:
Head tall
but chin slightly down, belly off your waistband, feet firmly planted
and evenly bearing weight. Check yourself sitting, standing, and
moving. Be especially aware of how you sit at a computer, in a
car, and how you walk. As you become more aware of your poor habits,
you
can begin to correct them. And don’t stop checking your posture
when you get to the gym! Think tall and symmetrical and stop holding
on to that treadmill. The good news is that good posture burns
more calories and the bad news is that you might get a little sore
from
sitting up straight.
Fourth, give yourself a big hand for your GAINS:
more productive sleep, more energy, better mood, more control in
your life, more
strength, flexibility, balance, and deeper breath. Make this year
about fitness, not just about weight loss. Every day praise yourself
for what you did, not what you did not do. Research has shown that
a positive outlook on fitness behavior creates greater fitness
changes, even when activities are the same.
Fifth, allow yourself to do something physically
new. Get a friend and take a group class at your gym or go biking,
swimming, hiking,
dancing. Even pool and shuffle board are positive ways to get moving.
Every time your body does something it isn’t used to doing,
it creates new neural (brain) connections and wakes up muscle fibers
it wasn’t using, and this is very good!
Finally, instead of
five resolutions for January, take out your calendar and write
down one achievable goal for each month of the
year. Make
this a year of small goals and resist the temptation to do too
much. Ignore your failures, celebrate your successes and BE the
turtle. Dana Dowd is the Coordinator of Fitness and Physical
Therapy at Saint Luke Institute. LUKENOTES is a bimonthly
publication of Saint Luke Institute.
Permission to use these materials must be requested in writing by contacting
lukenotes@sli.org
SLI EDUCATION
DEPARTMENT
Saint Luke Institute
8901 New Hampshire Ave.
Silver Spring, MD 20903
(301) 422-5499 • (301) 422-5519 (fax)
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