Bad Karma: How Yoga Can Lead to Serious Injury

Bad Karma: How Yoga Can Lead to Serious Injury

Sloppy teaching and overly competitive students are giving yoga lovers serious and scary injuries.

I remember only one pose from my first yoga class seven years ago: a modified seated forward bend known in Sanskrit as Paschimottanasana. I sat on a mat with my legs slightly bent in front of me, my arms wrapped beneath my thighs as my forehead reached toward my toes. It was about an hour into class, and my body felt like a stuck door slowly easing open.

A warm current of something—call it blood, call it chi—coursed from shoulder to shoulder. I felt the muscles unfurling from my spine; then, in the other direction, the vertebrae unsticking from each other—click, click, click. It was a sensation of freedom and release I remember as vividly as the first time my husband touched me. This was how I was supposed to feel.
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A Call to Fitness Professionals

A Call to Fitness Professionals

Meeting the Physical Activity Guidelines – A Call to Fitness Professionals

Physical activity has been shown to improve cardiovascular and muscular fitness, mental health, and the ability to perform activities of daily living.  And though I hope it’s of no surprise, this holds true for everyone.

For the most part, the guidelines for people with disabilities are not much different from the guidelines designated for “active” adults.  The main difference seems to be the incorporation of the phrase “who are able to” into the specific recommendations as well as the removal of the suggestion that individuals should continue to increase or progress activity to reap even further health benefits (i.e. “the more the better”).  There is also an additional recommendation for people with disabilities to consult a health-care provider about the amounts and types of physical activity that are appropriate for their abilities. (more…)

Natural Steps to Liver Health

Natural Steps to Liver Health

When I suspected liver malfunction in one of my patients recently, he protested. He assumed that his liver was fine since he didn’t drink large amounts of alcohol.

His assumption was a common one. Whenever I mention liver problems, most of my patients think of cirrhosis (associated with excessive alcohol consumption) or hepatitis, a viral disease with particular risk factors. They assume there’s not much else to worry about when it comes to liver health. Perhaps it’s an assumption you’ve made yourself. (more…)

Alzheimer’s & Exercise – Partners in Recovery

Alzheimer’s & Exercise – Partners in Recovery

Alzheimer’s and exercise go hand in hand in slowing, or even reversing this dreaded disease.

Most of us know one or more of the 5.2 million people in the United States whose lives are devastated by Alzheimer’s disease. Millions more have short-term memory loss or early dementia signs.

It is estimated that 10 million baby boomers will develop Alzheimer’s in their lifetime. Some experts theorize that anybody who lives long enough will get it. (more…)

Exercise for Neck Pain, Back Pain & Sciatica

Exercise for Neck Pain, Back Pain & Sciatica

A Mayo Clinic study noted that, “Back pain ranks second only to headaches as the most frequent pain location. More than 65 million Americans experience low back pain every year. Four out of five adults will experience at least one bout of back pain at some time in their life.” There can be little doubt that the associated condition, sciatica, follows right behind, equally in frequency and just as debilitating. (more…)

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