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World Series of Posture Poll

What must you strengthen to Improve Posture?
 
StrongPosture™ Habits

Young or old, athlete or couch potato, strengthening posture with daily StrongPosture™ exercise is an intelligent LifeHabit for aging well.

“Straighten up and don’t slouch” doesn’t work.  To change your posture, you need to teach your body new habits and change how you move.  Daily StrongPosture™ exercise builds posture awareness, strength and control and, along with StrongPosture™ LifeHabits,  helps relieve back and neck pain and get you moving and feeling well.   If you see a Certified Posture Exercise Professional (CPEP) you'll also learn LifeHabits ranging from how breathe deeper for reduced stress and more energy or how to use exercise bands, foam rollers and other low-tech tools to help you become conscious of how you are moving.



Sleeping Postion and Kidney Stones
Consistently sleeping on the same side of your body makes you more prone to develop kidney stones, suggests a 2-year study conducted at the University of California, San Francisco.

 

Researchers studied 110 patients who suffered from kidney stones that were confined to one side of their body. Of this group, 93 patients consistently favored sleeping on one side. 75% of these patients had kidney stones on the same side. Dr. Marshall Stoller, a professor of urology at UCSF reported, “Sleeping in the same position each night appears to alter bloodflow to that kidney, impairing the organ’s ability to clear itself of stone-forming crystals and deposits.”

 
Strong Posture - The Path to a Lifelong Motion Cycle
StrongPostureTM exercise creates an awareness of posture and, when performed daily, can stretch muscles, ligaments, and other structures that shorten with poor posture; strengthen muscles that weaken; and help people stay active, thereby combating a litany of health issues from degenerative joint disease to cardiovascular and respiratory problems.

Stronger posture not only helps back and neck pain, but it also helps you feel better in general as you breathe deeper, reduce stress, and have more energy. People who regularly do StrongPostureTM exercises report improvement with problems ranging from knee pain to headaches, and say they even feel, and sometimes look, taller and thinner.

Young or old, athlete or couch potato, maintaining StrongPostureTM with daily StrongPostureTM exercise is an intelligent LifeHabit for aging well. These posture- strengthening exercises are based on contemporary biomechanical concepts blended with ancient yoga practices and wisdom. The goal is to become conscious of your posture, and then strengthen your posture and balance with focused-motion StrongPostureTM exercises. Exercises can be done anywhere, and do not require any expensive equipment. A flat wall is necessary as a reference for erect posture, and then we introduce inexpensive, low-tech tools like exercise balls.

To change your posture, you need to teach your body a new habit. "Straighten up and don't slouch" doesn't work. In order to change how you move, you need to first become conscious of how you are moving, and then adopt new LifeHabits to consciously train new patterns of motion and so retrain the body to move unconsciously in those new patterns of motion.

Strengthening your posture with daily posture exercises as part of your regular physical activity will help you keep moving well as you age.

 

 

 
StrongPosture Computer Habits

Get Wise With Your Computer

When my students despair, “I just can’t seem to get comfortable sitting,” I remind them that the body is more at ease when in motion. Many jobs require people to sit for prolonged periods with little diversity in the tasks they perform. Add stress to the equation and you have a probable cause of sciatica, back and neck pain, and repetitive strain injury.

Sitting with rounded shoulders and slumped posture, tucking the phone under the neck while typing, or working for hours without taking breaks spells trouble. Despite helpful ergonomic tools, many are in pain because they fail to use correctly the primary tool -- their bodies. The Alexander Technique can help.

Helpful Hints:

Be aware of your postural habits at the computer. Notice whether your pelvis is tucked under as if you are sitting on your tailbone, or if your back is overarched. Shift your pelvis to the back of the chair and sit up on the bony points at the base of your pelvis. Notice if your head is protruding forward to view the screen. Loosen your neck muscles and allow the head to balance atop a long spine. Check your shoulders to be sure they are not shrugged up to your ears. Rest your arms in your lap and let the fingers lead the hands to the keyboard.

Take periodic breaks to walk around, stretch, or lie on the floor. Gravity is continually exerting a force on the spine causing compression of the intervertebral disks. Short periods of lying down with the knees bent will rehydrate the disks and keep the back strong; it is also an opportunity to break the stress cycle.


About the Author

Elizabeth Buonomo is a member of the American Society for the Alexander Technique (AmSAT). AmSAT-certified teachers are highly trained professionals who have completed a 1600-hour training program over a period of at least three years. AmSAT establishes and maintains the nation’s highest standards for teacher training, certification, and membership.


 
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