Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Taken from Doug Kelsey, PT

One Thing You Need to Stay as Young as Possible

Tree_poseIt's a simple task.

But, few can do it, correctly, the first time and it took me over six months to achieve.

Standing still, on one leg, for 30 seconds.

You might be thinking, "Really? Took a year? Poor guy. How hard is that?"

Uh-huh. Until you try it.

Stand tall and still on one leg. Bend the other leg to 90 degrees at the knee and hip such that your thigh is parallel to the floor and lower leg points to the floor.  Arms at your sides. Now, stand still. Completely still. No flailing around like Joe Cocker at Woodstock. No wiggling or writhing - even a little. Just stand still. Time your self. The moment you lose control of theSingle_limb perfectly still position, the test ends.

Go ahead. Try it.

Balance is essential for movement. Movement is the transition from one point of balance to the next. It is sequential episodes of balance - imbalance - balance. Walking requires you to lose and catch your balance. You propel yourself forward, are momentarily imbalanced, then catch your yourself. If you have ever watched a 2 or 3 year old child walk, you'll see the episodes of balance and imbalance. As the child grows, movement improves as balance improves. As an adult, this cycle of balance - imbalance happens so fast that you don't even realize it - until you're injured.

Injuries create imbalance and the only way you get your balance back is by facing the imbalance and working on it. The temptation is to skip over something so simple. I tried. I tried a variety of exercises, stretching, a bunch of things that I convinced myself I needed to do to abolish the pain in my back. I was working hard and made sure that after every session, I was worn out; that I had really put everything I had into the drills and routines. Then one day, my friend Ryan Smith, asked me to stand on one leg. I couldn't do it. He just watched, patiently, as I struggled for about 10 seconds with a shaky leg and wobbly trunk. I remember feeling ticked off that I couldn't do something so basic as stand on one leg. He just said, "I think this will help you a lot."

Ryan was right.

Balance is one of the main elements of a complete training program. Balance not only improves your movement but reduces the risk of falls as you age and keeps your brain healthy. Yeah, that's right, it turns out thatbalance is a great anti-aging weapon for your brain.

The cerebellum is a region of the brain that coordinates all of the muscles and joints needed to maintain your balance. And, the cerebellum isn't stimulated much when you sit on your butt all day pounding a computer keyboard. Ever heard the phrase, "Use or lose it?" Well, when you do not use your brain for certain things, like balance, the connections in the brain fade like an old picture. Before long, you not only have trouble standing on one leg but doing things like bending to pick something up off the floor or reaching high above your head to get something down from a cabinet become challenging events.

So, if after testing your self, you find your balance out of whack, start practicing balancing on one leg and when you get good at that consider things like Tai ChiYoga, or Pilates - all great avenues for improving your balance.

Balance helps keep you as young as possible for as long as possible. Standing on one leg yet?

Doug Kelsey

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Manual Therapy for Sciatic Nerve

Chiropractic for High Blood Pressure

Seasonal Greetings

"If, as Herod, we fill our lives with things, and again with things;
if we consider ourselves so unimportant that we must fill every moment of our lives with action, when will we have the time to make the long, slow journey across the desert as did the Magi?  Or sit and watch the stars as did the shepherds?  Or brood over the coming of the child as did Mary?  For each one of us, there is a desert to travel.  And a star to discover.  And a being within ourselves to bring to Life."
                                                                                                                              -  author unknown

How to save your Kids Back

Amazon's Kindle. The ipod has made carrying cd's around  a thing of the past..  As these readers evolves, textbooks and other readings will be available electronically.  My kids carry backpacks that look like astronaut jetpacks. Not for much longer.

From the Happiness project

If you're in the mood to read a novel about happiness...

A reader suggested that once a month, I include a suggested reading list. Great idea: I’ll include this list on the last day of every month.

Because it’s summer, when people tend to have more time to read novels, I’ll start with a list of novels that I found most interesting on the subject of happiness.

All of these books are TERRIFIC. You may be cowed by the thought of readingWar and Peace, but I was staying up late to read it every night until I finished it--there's a reason it's a classic of world literature. Or if you're in the mood for something more light and fun, start with Happy All the Time. But I promise, you can't go wrong with any book on this list.

Elizabeth von Arnim, Elizabeth and Her German Garden
Wallace Stegner, Crossing to Safety
J. P. Marquand, Point of No Return 
Marilynne Robinson, Gilead
Laurie Colwin, Happy All the Time
Michael Frayn, A Landing on the Sun
Lisa Grunwald, Whatever Makes You Happy
Nick Hornby, How to Be Good
Ian McEwan, Saturday
Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace 
Winifred Watson, Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day