Shawn Threadgill & Bricolage Consulting

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Archive for the ‘Physical Fitness’ Category

The 5 Elements of Fitness

Posted by Shawn Threadgill on October 27, 2007

As I see it, individuals view fitness in a very general and limiting way. Generally speaking, the goal of fitness is often to become thin, look good aesthetically, and to have strong muscles. Of course, not all people think this way, but I am speaking from my own experience and from what I see in society today. There seems to be more concern with how we look versus how well our body feels and functions. In order for our “total self” to become “fitness ready,” we must engage in all 5 of my elements of fitness.

The 5 Elements of Fitness

1. Breath: Clinical studies prove that oxygen, wellness, and life-span are totally dependent on proper breathing. Lung volume is a primary marker for how long you will live. Breathing supplies over 99% of your entire oxygen and energy supply. Poor breathing causes or worsens chronic maladies such as asthma, allergies, anxiety, fatigue, depression, headaches, heart conditions, high blood pressure, sleep loss, obesity, harmful stress, poor mental clarity plus hundreds of other lesser known but equally harmful conditions. ALL diseases are caused or worsened by poor breathing. The average person reaches peak respiratory function and lung capacity in their mid 20’s. Then they begin to loose respiratory capacity: between 10% and 27% for every decade of life! So, unless you are doing something to maintain or improve your breathing capacity, it will decline, and with it, your general health, your life expectancy, and for that matter, your spirit as well. Optimal breathing gets you more vitality and better quality of life. We also address food, exercise, internal cleansing, attitude, and environment but breathing is for many the most important part of getting and staying healthy. Begin with breathing. Better breathing is possible for anyone. Develop your breathing now.” Breathing is the FIRST place not the LAST place one should investigate when any disordered energy presents itself.” Sheldon Saul Hendler, MD Ph.D. , The Oxygen Breakthrough, Breathing fundamentals are critical. Just because one particular breathing exercise or development technique feels good does not mean it is the best choice. Many feel good at the outset of a certain exercise but that is largely because so many breathe so poorly that any progress feels significant, and it may well be. But each technique or exercise must be based in solid breathing fundamentals otherwise they can work against each other and cause future breathing development problems. Like a rocket ship even slightly off coarse, as the days and weeks pass you will travel further and further away from your goal of a long healthy, vibrant life. Knowing the fundamentals helps you stay on course.

2. Flexibility: Flexibility is the ability to move joints and muscles through their full range of motion. As you become more flexible, you will find it easier to reach things on high shelves, to look under a bed, or perhaps to tie your shoes. You will also have a better sense of balance and coordination. To stay flexible, stretch all your major groups of muscles. These include the muscles of your arms, back, hips, front and back of your thighs, and calves. Try to stretch for 10 to 12 minutes a day, after a brief warm-up. Do some stretches first thing in the morning, take a stretch break instead of a coffee break, or stretch in the office for a few minutes. Or participate in activities that include stretching, such as dance, martial arts (aikido or karate), tai chi, or yoga. Stretching also can be done as part of strength training and aerobic exercise. When you exercise, you repeatedly shorten your muscles. To counter this effect, you need to stretch slowly and regularly, which makes you more flexible. Combining it with other forms of fitness is an ideal way to practice flexibility fitness. When getting started with flexibility and stretching, begin slowly and increase your efforts gradually. You can measure your progress with flexibility by noticing how much farther you can do each stretch. Can you go farther with each stretch than you could when you started? If so, your flexibility is improving.

3. Emotions: Emotions serve as the source of human energy, authenticity and drive, and can offer us a wellspring of intuitive wisdom. Each feeling provides us with valuable feedback throughout the day. This feedback from the heart is what ignites creativity, keeps us honest with ourselves, guides trusting relationships, and provides the compass for our life and career. Emotional intelligence requires that we learn to acknowledge and understand feelings – in ourselves and others – and that we appropriately respond to them, creatively applying the energy of the emotions to our daily life, work and relationships. Emotional intelligence is demonstrated by tolerance, empathy and compassion for others; the ability to verbalize feelings accurately and with integrity; and the resilience to bounce back from emotional upsets. It is the ability to be a deeply feeling, authentic human being, no matter what life brings, no matter what challenges and opportunities we face. Emotional intelligence (EQ) may be even more important than IQ in one’s ability to achieve success and happiness. I may score well on tests and excel academically, but how well do I handle disappointment, anger, jealousy and fear, the problems of communication, and all the ups and downs of relationships? Persons with high EQ – who have developed emotional literacy – will have more confidence and trust in themselves, and more understanding of others and therefore empathy with them. So they will make better relationships and experience more achievement, love and joy in their life. They will be emotionally mature, a state that many adults do not achieve. If these skills were taught widely, in the home as well as at school, and amongst adults too of course, it would provide the basis of a much saner and happier world to live in. At its essence, a meaningful and successful life requires being attuned to what is on the inside, beneath the mental analyzes, the appearances and control, and beneath the rhetoric. It requires being attuned to the heart, the center of our emotions and outgoing reach to the world. Our heart activates our deepest values, transforming them from something we think about to what we actually do in our life. The heart is the place of courage and spirit, integrity and commitment – the source of energy and deep feelings that call us to create, learn, cooperate, lead and serve. When we have painful feelings, the heart is telling us we have unmet needs, or we are interpreting reality through some kind of distorting filter. When we have positive feelings, the heart is telling us we are pointing in the right direction, towards fulfillment of our needs and towards truth. Our Higher Self, the all-knowing part of us connected to all consciousness, communicates to our body-mind through this channel – not through verbal messages but through the heart. We just need to be open to receive this intuitive wisdom.

4. Cardiovascular: To stay healthy, adults should do at least 20 minutes of vigorous cardiovascular exercise three times a week, according to joint research from Exeter and Brunel universities. Not only will good cardiovascular fitness reduce the risk of a stroke, high blood pressure and diabetes, it will improve your performance in most sports. Cardiovascular fitness refers to the ability of your heart, lungs and blood vessels (cardiovascular system) to carry oxygen to, and carbon dioxide away from, working muscles. Your resting heart rate (RHR) is a good indication of your overall cardiovascular fitness level. The lower it is, the more efficiently your heart is pumping blood around your body. Seventy beats per minute (BPM) is average for a healthy heart and to improve cardiovascular fitness you must train at 70-80% of your maximum heart rate (MHR). Below, we examine four popular cardio exercises – running, swimming, cycling and rowing – explain how many calories they burn and which muscles they work. To determine your MHR, subtract your age from 220. If you are 40, your MHR would be 180 BPM. A heart rate monitor is useful for cardiovascular training, enabling you to exercise at the required output. Each session should include 5 to 10-minute warm-up and cool-down – both performed at 50-60% of MHR. It’s also vital to stretch all the muscles used in the activity.

5. Muscle Strength: Even if you have no intention of becoming an Olympic weight-lifter, there’s still reason to care about muscular fitness. It influences your ability to do everyday chores, like housework and yard work. It affects how easily you can carry a bag of groceries or lift a young child. It’s also at the core of physical skill and sports performance, affecting how hard you swing a softball bat or how long you last on the tennis court. Muscle-strengthening exercises are likely to improve your stamina and your energy. Equally important, they increase resistance to injury. People with strong muscles are less likely to suffer everyday muscle aches and pains. They also have less strain on their hearts. Resistance training. Building muscular fitness involves resistance training, progressively overloading your muscles so that they get stronger to meet the challenge. This can be done with exercises that use your body to exert force, like push-ups, chin-ups, and sit-ups. Commonly, people use weight training, also called weight lifting, to provide resistance. Strength gains come from resistance€”how much weight you lift. Endurance is achieved through repetition€”how many times you lift a weight in succession. Both are important to develop. Experts advise you to start any weight-training program with light weights and easy repetition. Start with a weight that you can lift comfortably eight to 12 times. Try to do a second set of each exercise after a break of a few minutes. Do at least one exercise for each muscle group, moving from the larger muscles (the legs) down to smaller ones (arms and biceps). Strength gains come when you work with close to the heaviest weight that you can lift comfortably. This is the overload principle. You’ll see the quickest benefits if you lift the maximum amount during fewer repetitions of each exercise. Using a weight that’s too heavy, however, can lead to injury. And if you’re interested in all-around conditioning, it’s best to start with low amounts and progress gradually.

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Posted in Balance & Flow, Expressing Feelings, Fulfillment, Managing Stress, Meditation, Motivation, Physical Fitness, Struggle, Wellness | Leave a Comment »

Nurture Your Body!

Posted by Shawn Threadgill on August 5, 2006

The mysteries of our physical body are many. It is the body that omits energies like feelings, aches, pains, joy, and the like. Where do they come from, why do they happen, and are some of these experiences better for us than others? Our minds spend much of its time trying to only have “good” or “happy” physical experiences, but alas such attempts cause more harm than good. Acceptance and understanding are the first steps to feeling joy and a sense of peace. The best way to understand our bodies is to accept that it needs to be consistently maintained in order for it to run smoothly.

6-Step Plan to Nurturing The Body

We may think that in order to get in shape we need have a great diet, pay an expert to help us lose weight, or change our lifestyle completely, but that is not the case. Our minds want to complicate things and tries to trick us into thinking that more is better. Another obstacle comes from a type of thinking that takes the “all or nothing” approach. In this scenario, in an effort to get the most out of what we do, we set up a complex and perfect workout or dietary plan that we couldn’t possibly meet for a number of reasons. First, our bodies have to learn the new behaviors and get used to the feelings associated with eating different foods and the pain resulting from a new exercise program. Second, it can be difficult to schedule the extra activities in an already busy routine. Finally, our internal negativity or natural resistance is going to vie for control and be screaming for you to give up. Thus, we must allow for a trial and error period, which is unavoidable and will occur until these activities become habitual tendencies. Rather than say, “I’m going to reach my fitness goals in three months,” I would say, “I’m going to give myself three months to engrain these new activities into my being.” This approach will result in long-term growth and allows an individual to continue these activities or versions of them throughout their life. The other approach is a quick fix technique that often results in quitting when the “program” is finished. Here are a few simple steps that I would begin practicing to help you acheive a healthy lifestyle:

1. Eat smaller portions (the size of your fist) that are broken up into 4 to 6 meals per day.

2. Make sure that those meals include a protein, carbohydrate, green and other vegetables, and a grain

3. Drink water throughout the day, consume less alcohol and cut back on sugar and caffeine.

4. Eat this way without alteration 3 to 5 days per week. You can even break each meal into the specific food groups listed:

……………………………………………….. Meal #1 Protein

……………………………………………….. Meal #2 carbohydrate (rice, pasta, potatoes, etc.)

……………………………………………….. Meal #3 Veggies

……………………………………………….. Meal #4 Grains/Fibre

……………………………………………….. Meal #5 Vegetable Juice (from a juice machine)

5. Cut out dairy and all complex Carbohydrates like pasta, rice and bread.

6. Practice Yoga 3 – 6 days per week.

A shift in our thinking regarding the way we view our bodies will help us nurture ourselves; give up the idea that you have to enjoy things in order for them to be fulfilling. Is it more important for food to taste good or be good for your body? Of course, the latter is the correct answer. Taste is a conditioned response and we can learn to like the taste of food that we wouldn’t normally be inclined to eat. A balance of “taste good” and “good for you” is the ideal. Which is why I suggested the above workout plan. Be really good to your body about half the time and the other half can be spent in devilish pleasures! The above 6-Step Plan is easy to do and allows the body to learn new behaviors at a gradual pace. Practice doing this plan 3 days per week and on the other days don’t exercise at all and eat whatever you want. You will find, over time, that your body does not need nearly as much food as you think it does.

Most of the extra food that we eat is to comfort ourselves or is used (often unconsciously) as a block to unwanted feelings of sadness, anxiety, or fear. There is absolutely nothing wrong with these feelings and they do not mean that we have ‘problems.’ They simply offer us a chance to nurture ourselves during difficult times. This nurturing can only happen if we allow those feelings to be expressed by either crying, or yelling (not at anyone) or breathing them out to relieve our frustrations. Finding tools that allow us to “yell-out” our frustrations are essential to well-being. Trying to be calm when we don’t feel that way simply blocks our true expression. I have come home at times and felt a lot of energy or was extremely “amped.” I usually come home and do my Yoga routine right away. When I’m “amped” up or full of energy, I do my Yoga routine to techno or house music with the volume turned way up. Again, I don’t want to block what I am naturally feeling, but I also don’t want it to prevent me from doing my scheduled workout. Usually, near the end of my Yoga routine I have calmed down and have turned off the music becuase it no longer resonated with me.

Benefits of Yoga

I recommend Yoga as the primary exercise routine for my clients. In my opinion, it does more for the body as a single practice than most other exercise forms. Pilates would be my second choice and recommendation. Yoga offers, in a single workout, all of the elements needed to keep the body optimally healthy: strength, flexibility, breathing, stamina and it calms the mind. If one is thinking in terms of making the body work and feel better instead of wanting to be entertained, then Yoga is the way to go. Of course, over time, Yoga will be an enjoyable experience. For individuals who have not tried it before and especially for those who are not athletically inclined, the first six months to a year will be very difficult. In terms of one’s life though, this is a very infantile amount of time. I can almost guarantee that you will feel better and be profoundly happier when Yoga is a part of your life!

At the physical level, yoga and its cleansing practices have proven to be extremely effective for various disorders. Yoga is extremely effective in:

Increasing Flexibility – yoga has positions that act upon the various joints of the body including those joints that are never really on the ‘radar screen’ let alone exercised.

Increasing lubrication of the joints, ligaments and tendons – likewise, the well-researched yoga positions exercise the different tendons and ligaments of the body. Surprisingly it has been found that the body which may have been quite rigid starts experiencing a remarkable flexibility in even those parts which have not been consciously work upon. Why? It is here that the remarkable research behind yoga positions proves its mettle. Seemingly unrelated “non strenuous” yoga positions act upon certain parts of the body in an interrelated manner. When done together, they work in harmony to create a situation where flexibility is attained relatively easily

Massaging of ALL Organs of the Body – Yoga is perhaps the only form of activity which massages all the internal glands and organs of the body in a thorough manner, including those – such as the prostate – that hardly get externally stimulated during our entire lifetime. Yoga acts in a wholesome manner on the various body parts. This stimulation and massage of the organs in turn benefits us by keeping away disease and providing a forewarning at the first possible instance of a likely onset of disease or disorder. One of the far-reaching benefits of yoga is the uncanny sense of awareness that it develops in the practitioner of an impending health disorder or infection. This in turn enables the person to take pre-emptive corrective action

Complete Detoxification – By gently stretching muscles and joints as well as massaging the various organs, yoga ensures the optimum blood supply to various parts of the body. This helps in the flushing out of toxins from every nook and cranny as well as providing nourishment up to the last point. This leads to benefits such as delayed ageing, energy and a remarkable zest for life.

Excellent toning of the muscles – Muscles that have become flaccid, weak or slothy are stimulated repeatedly to shed excess flab and flaccidity.

This newsletter was assisted by the website:
www.healthandyoga.com

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