Entries tagged Orphan

6 Easy Exercises to Wake up Your Lazy Muscles

Fatigue and felling “tired all the time” is a common feature in modern life. Mental tensions are often expressed as constant partial contraction of the muscles, which depletes your energy and disrupts your breathing pattern, making you tired. Muscles remain tense, even when you are inactive and think you re resting. To wakeup lazy muscles, here are 6 moves you can do to combat fatigue:

1. The big bend – Stand with hands on top of table or chair; bend forward from hips. Back up until arms are straight out. Next, stand on rope, feet wide apart; pull rope taut. Lower head, draw hips back. Feel the pull through arms, spine, and backs of legs.

2. The long stretch – This second warm-upper removes tension from long muscle fibers and tendons. You need a length of rope, ends knotted together.

Rope in hands, raise arms up and out, so rope becomes taut all around.

3. Cat Stretch – Crouch down on your hands and knees, with your arms and thighs vertical, like pillars. As you exhale, slowly lower your head and arch your back up, so that it forms a curve. Then, as you inhale, bend your head up and bring your spine down so that it dips slightly. Feel the stretch along your spine, neck and shoulders. Repeat several times, breathing slowly, and accentuate the upward and downward stretches of the spine as much as you can; do not move your head.

4. Inverted corpse – Lie near a wall and raise legs, resting them on the wall at a 450 angle, without bending knees. You may place a cushion under your buttocks, but not during menstruation. This exercise is also good if you suffer from varicose veins.

Caution: Avoid this if you have recently had a blood clot in a vein or if you have hypertension.

5. Cobra – Lie face down with your legs together. Place your hands flat on the floor, on either side of your chest. Inhale and raise your head. Exhale. Inhale and raise your chest until your ribs are off the floor. Exhale. Inhale and stretch further up and back, stopping just before your navel comes off the floor. Use your back muscles to lift your rib cage, and then use your arms. Hold for three to five breaths, and then slowly lower yourself as you exhale.

6. Meditation pose – Sit with your legs out and part them to form a V-shape. Bend your left leg and bring it towards you, placing your left foot on the floor close to your groin. Then bend your tight leg and place your right foot on your left thigh. Rest your hands on your knees. Keep your back straight and start to meditate.

Published: May 23, 2009

4 Easy Steps to Watch Your Health While You Are In the Office

By now you may know what ergonomically correct means, and you are well aware of the dangers a “non-EC” workspace can bring: sore back, headache, eyestrain, as well as neck, wrist, and shoulder pain. So why do you continue to put yourself at the mercy of your desk? Because most of us do not know how to begin to address our ergonomic needs, and even if we did, we would be afraid of what it might cost. But the price of doing nothing can be devastating. Workers with carpal tunnel syndrome (a condition associated with keyboard use and other tasks that require repetitive wrist motions) lost a median of 30 days from work in 1995, the year for which data are available.

Here are the 4 most common problems in the office with both an all-out solution and a budget-conscious quick fix:

1. Computer problem
Problem: Glare bouncing off the screen can lead to fatigue and eyestrain. Take this test to see if you’ve got a glare problem. Turn off your monitor. Can you see your clothing reflected in the screen? Now turn the monitor back on, and shade your eyes with a piece of paper. Can you see the screen more clearly? Next, hold a pad of paper above the screen. Is it more readable? If you answered yes to any of these questions, read on.

Quick fix: Believe it or not, wearing darker clothing helps. As does adjusting your screen so the background is light and the characters are dark, turning down overhead lighting, and making a hood to hang over the top of the monitor.

All-out solution: Buy a glare screen. Polarizing filters work like sunglasses. Glass filters with at least three layers of filtering material on both sides of the screen are ideal for cutting both internal and external glare. Even better are glass filters that are grounded to prevent static and dirt buildup between the filter and the computer. Look for products approved by the American Optometric Association.

2. Keyboard
Problem: Improper use of keyboards forces the wrist into unnatural positions, causing discomfort and long-term injury.

Quick fix: Try to keep in a “neutral” position. The angle between the forearm and the hand should be flat.

All-out solution: Experts argue whether ergonomically correct keyboards help. But there’s more agreement on the value of an adjustable keyboard platform or support. The keyboard position healthiest for you is with the front slightly higher than the back, allowing your wrist to assume a naturally neutral position while you type.

3. Chair
Problem: Seating that does not offer enough support and is not the right size can cause all kinds of pain. Improper lumbar support can lead to backache and fatigue. If the seat pan is too deep, it can cut off circulation behind the knees.

Quick fix: Place a rolled-up towel behind the small of your back. Or use an inflatable pillow, available at back specialty stores.

All-out solution: Spring for a better chair. Adjustability is key. Look for chairs with adjustable back rests, arm rests (movement ion and out is just as important as up and down), seatback heights (pneumatic controls are better than manual ones), and seat bottoms.

4. Mouse
Problem: A mouse can be temperamental, not responding to the pressure of your fingers. That usually leads to repeated clicking – and potential injury.

Quick fix: Take apart and clean out your mouse every few weeks.

All-out solution: Shop around for a mouse that fits the shape of your hand. Also, consider getting a mouse platform that swivels; position it as close to your side as possible.

Published:


eXTReMe Tracker