Surprising News: Yoga Can HURT You

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Teatime

It’s the time of the year everyone gets re-inspired to get back in shape. If you’re into Yoga, Pilates, or Fusion Workouts, you owe it to yourself to read this article in the New York Times (How Yoga Can Wreck Your Body).

The article details quite a few instances of serious injuries (strokes, cerebral hemorrhages, cartilage and muscle tears, spinal stenosis, etc.) that are much more common than I ever realized.

Yoga aficionados, you owe it to yourselves to learn what poses are particularly risky. Here’s the link again.

You’d never think that by working to insure your health, you could risk it completely. Stay healthy, stay informed!

Is Exercise Brain-Protective? Evidence Mounts as Apparent Correlation Between Cognition and Gait Emerges

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Teatime
Merry Christmas Eve to all!

As we’re gathering together with friends and relatives, it’s always interesting to see how much–or how little–we’ve all changed in a year’s time. Some are blossoming as others fade. Children grow like weeds, voices lower, voices richen, some fall silent.

As a child, I was always fascinated by the adults in my circle. I had an extremely elderly, matriarchal and imposing great-grandmother whose light faded noticeably from year to year, to the point that once I had graduated from bibs she was relegated to them. Although I was quite small, I remember seeing her fed at the table one year and in her sickbed the next and then she disappeared altogether.

Remembering her this year, I thought about how apparent the decline had been, how no one was surprised as she made her transition from ruler to ruled one.

And I wondered if any of us has the ability to see this decline in ourselves, so we can actually DO SOMETHING before it overtakes us.

In my opinion, yes we can. And it’s the same old answer: STAY PHYSICALLY ACTIVE.

Here is a terrific analysis of the issue from a July 2012 New York Times article by Pam Belluck: Footprints to Cognitive Decline and Alzheimer’s are Seen in Gait.

Pam Belluck (@PamBelluck) does a masterful job detailing some studies performed in Basel, Switzerland that yielded some surprisingly simple diagnostic tools that can help reveal impending cognitive decline. In my own opinion, I think this also reveals an opportunity to some to “reinforce their wiring.”

Read the article and you’ll see what I mean. Be sure to watch the attached short video clip that shows a woman walking, then walking while counting backward by two’s; a picture is worth a thousand words.

Enjoy the holidays (and especially that vital after-dinner walk)!

Muscle vs. Fat OR Why Exercise Won’t Really Make You Thin

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I’m an avid exerciser, but I’ve always worked out to benefit my BRAIN more than my body.

I can say I’ve reaped many physical benefits from exercise over the years [I’m told I look “young for my age” (gee, thanks, junior!)]; my weight is in an excellent, healthy range; my blood pressure is low; resting pulse is low; and my HDL cholesterol’s a terrific 77], but what I like best about exercising is the side benefit of those powerful, feel-good endorphins. When I exercise, I simply feel better. That’s enough to keep me on the treadmill with enthusiasm.

I have an easier time focusing on challenging mental tasks than a lot of people in my age group and I get a LOT done in a day. Every day’s a new adventure for me, and I approach each morning with enthusiasm and excitement. I credit my exercise regimen (and my great example of a husband) for this other great side benefit: happiness.

So, I thought I’d share an interesting article that dispels a common misunderstanding. Lots of people think that exercise automatically results in this equation: exercise=muscle gain=fat loss=weight loss.

The real world truth is a little more complex. Many (if not most) people actually gain weight when they start exercising because their appetite increases due to the physical demands of exercise.

Read this compelling article by John Cloud, published in Time Magazine —Why Exercise Won’t Make You Thin.

Here’s a quick quote:

“…The muscle-fat relationship is often misunderstood. According to calculations published in the journal Obesity Research by a Columbia University team in 2001, a pound of muscle burns approximately six calories a day in a resting body, compared with the two calories that a pound of fat burns. Which means that after you work out hard enough to convert, say, 10 lb. of fat to muscle — a major achievement — you would be able to eat only an extra 40 calories per day, about the amount in a teaspoon of butter, before beginning to gain weight. Good luck with that.

So, if you’re working out just to lose weight, you may be just spinning your wheels.

But if you work out to improve your cardiovascular system, improve your strength, improve your balance, solidify the brain/body connection, and to reap some feel-good endorphins for your brain, you’re on the right track!

You Go Girl (or Guy)!

Brain Boosting Power of Exercise

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Teatime
Here’s yet another article detailing the brain-building power of exercise, from Prevention Magazine.

“When sedentary adults in one study jogged for half an hour 2 or 3 times a week for 12 weeks, their memory and ability to juggle tasks improved by 30 percent. Just as important: Inactivity stops this process. When the participants returned to their couch potato ways, they lost 10 percent of the gain after 6 weeks.”

Next time you’re asked why you bother to exercise, tell them you’re building your Hippocampus. Believe me, 98% will think it’s a new muscle group:

“A 2007 study found that exercisers who did two 3-minute sprints memorized new words 20 percent faster afterward than those who skipped the workout. Cardio exercise increases blood flow, triggering growth in the area of the hippocampus responsible for memory and verbal learning, research shows. The proliferation of new brain cells may actually be linked to a bigger brain. In a University of Pittsburgh study, the most aerobically fit had an average 7 percent larger hippocampus size than their sofa-sitting peers did.”

Motivation! Now get back on the treadmill. Now.

Read the complete article, along with its 7-day plan called the “ultimate brainpower workout” here on MSNBC. Work That Hippocampus, People!