- Hot Peppers. …
- Whole Grains: Oatmeal and Brown Rice. …
- Broccoli. …
- Soups. …
- Green Tea. …
- Apples and Pears. …
- Spices. …
- Citrus Fruits.
Category Archives: Fitness at Work
An Engaged Core gives Better Strength
I’m sure you’ve heard fitness trainers saying this – engage your core, engage your core! Your “core” refers to the muscles that surround your midsection, the part that runs from the top of our pelvic bone to the top of your stomach, wrapping around to your lower back. Basically it’s your trunk area.
Why does your “core” need to be strong? It needs to be not only strong, but also flexible and coordinated to help you in every action and movement. The core area helps us flex, extend, side-bend and rotate your trunk in all directions, as well as keep the trunk stable. Along with your hips and lower back, the abdominal muscles is crucial in keeping our centre strong so that we can use our arms and legs powerfully without hurting your spine.
Why is core engagement important?
A strong core is important in maintaining good physical health. Remember, your core is the building block for your entire body’s posture and overall movement. Once you have strong core muscles, you can improve your balance, coordination and stability, as well as reduce any risk of lower back pain and injury.
Besides athletes and sportsmen, elderly persons can also greatly benefit from having a strong core.
Building the exercise routine
Incorporate practicing core engagement exercises so you can also build endurance around your other muscles. A very simple tip, is to ensure holding a good posture at all times. This simple practice naturally engages your core! So when you’re standing, your spine is more or less in its natural curve. Once you’re used to it, it will become second nature and standing with a relaxed core will actually feel weird.
Six packs equal a strong core?
Let’s start with aspiring towards a lean physique…without a six pack. Most people with six packs are truly inspiring and disciplined; keeping an extremely strict exercise regime and maintaining a planned nutritional schedule and intake. Often pictures of athletes or models parading their six packs are taken during their peak conditions where they have activated both their transverse and rectus abdominus. They don’t usually look like that all year round. In truth, this kind of lifestyle is not realistic for ordinary people like us who do not have 6-8 hours to exercise every day. Abdominal definition is, in many cases, a side effect of being strong and healthy. In other words, strengthen your Transverse Abdominus.
What’s the Tranverse Abdominus?
Transverse Abdominus, or TVA, is the deepest layer of abdominal muscles. It covers our whole torso from ribs to pelvis and from front to back. The TVA muscles are set horizontally like a weight belt or corset and it does not move your pelvis or spine. It helps with your breathing and also helps stabilise your spine, in addition to forceful exhaling of air from the lungs and compress the internal organs.
Why is the TVA so important as a core muscle?
The TVA helps stabilise your spine and is one of the main muscles that helps stabilise the lumbar spine, which is the bottom part of the spine. You can tell you have a weak TVA when you have lower back pain.
When you strengthen your TVA, you not only strengthen your back, which is important for many other activities such as lifting stuff, sitting, walking and many more activities that involve limb movements.
When your TVA is weak your abdominal wall will bulge outwards and your pelvis may rotate and your may increase the risk of a curvature of the spine. In other words, strengthen your core to decrease the risk to your spine. It also helps you to trim your stomach area.
How do you build on the TVA as a core muscle then?
There’s no one magical exercise routine, but a combination of movements that engage the core in a way that works so much better than crunches and sit-ups.
Planks are well known for “working” the core, but some other exercises include pull-ups, jumping, spinning, and rolling.
These movements have one thing in common – and that is, none of them are “isolation” exercises. Basically, in order to do those movements, you need to use your abdominals to maintain your posture and stability throughout the motion.
Core engagement exercise tips
Engage your core while seated
A lot of us sit for long periods of time either at the office or while driving. For this very reason, practising and engaging your core is especially important as you sit down or get up from your chair or car seat.
Step 1: Sit up straight in your chair, with your shoulders over your hips, then let your back relax back against the backrest.
Step 2: Sit up into your original position again and feel that light sense of tension in your abs needed to hold yourself up. It should not be much. Just a light, but deep, engagement. This is the level of engagement you want to have while you walk, run or do any movement throughout your day.
Abdominal Vacuum
Step 1: Sit up tall on a chair. Straighten your spine and place your feet flat on the floor.
Step 2: Draw your bellybutton in toward your spine, engaging your core muscles. Do not hold your breath; instead breathe deeply and evenly.
Step 3: Contract your abdominals or pulse the muscles in and out until your muscles fatigue.
You can practice the abdominal vacuum exercise throughout the day while you are sitting on a chair.
Abdominal Hold
Step 1: Sit on the edge of a chair with a straight spine and your feet flat on the floor.
Step 2: Place your palms flat on the seat of the chair, curling your fingers around the edge of the seat.
Step 3: Engage your core muscles by drawing your bellybutton in toward your spine. Press down with your hands and draw your knees toward your chest, lifting your feet two to four inches off the floor.
Repeat this exercise as many times as you can during a one-minute interval.
How about other times when we are not sitting or exercising?
Keep your core engaged lightly and gently during any and all movement: when you first get out of bed (with a gentle stretch), while walking, getting into and out of your car, at the office at your desk, and most definitely while you run or walk or do any kind of fitness activity, standing in line, cooking dinner, even while brushing your teeth.
When you focus your mind on your core several times a day, you are in touch with a deeper part of yourself, in the present moment.
Reminding ourselves to keep our core engaged
Make it a game…how many muscles can you engage in any movement if your core is engaged. Feel the difference in how you move when your core is or is not consciously employed. How about setting an alarm on your phone, with a ring tone that is unique to remind yourself to engage your core?
Revisiting the benefits of breathing right
You might not think about something that happens so automatically as breathing, but it can make all the difference in your workout – especially when doing stomach exercises. Breathing out at the right time tightens your ab muscles and engages your core, so you get more out of your workout. Proper breathing technique can also give you more stamina while on the exercise mat. When exerting yourself, it can seem like a natural reaction to hold your breath. Don’t do this! Keep breathing otherwise you could get dizzy and faint.
Proper Technique
Improper breathing techniques could interfere or delay your ability to get the most out of your ab workout. To get the most oxygen from your lungs to your muscles, it’s important that you draw air deep into your lungs. This is accomplished using a technique known as abdominal breathing.
Abdominal breathing helps you fill your belly with air to get the optimal amount of oxygen into your body. If you’re only pulling air into your chest, you may not get the oxygen you need during a workout.
Ok, some people will say that they breathe with their lungs. This is okay as long as you can feel your abdominal muscles move.
The problem arises when you use your upper chest to breath as this more often than not causes or makes chest pain worse.
Chest breathing are shallow and rapid or fast breaths. This is a stress response and can lead to hyperventilation, which is bad for those with stress and anxiety. You can use abdominal breathing to control your nervous system and encourage your body to relax. When your body is relaxed, it brings a range of health benefits.
Take a quick at the last issue of Running Malaysia where we touched on Breathing. Proper breathing helps you to lose weight as well. So when you’re strengthening your core, don’t forget to breathe.
Credit: Article compiled by Nikki Yeo – Co-founder AsiaFitnessToday.com and ACE-certified Fitness Trainer.
References:
http://sportsmedicine.about.com/od/abdominalcorestrength1/ss/AbAnatomy_5.htm
http://www.chirunning.com/blog/entry/all-day-core
http://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/bhcv2/bhcarticles.nsf/pages/Breathing_to_reduce_stress?open
http://healthyliving.azcentral.com/tighten-stomach-sitting-6831.html
http://www.breathing.com/articles/chest-breathing.htm
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/8757467/How-to-breathe.html
http://www.livestrong.com/article/405255-breathing-techniques-for-stomach-exercises/
The real (and surprising) reasons healthy movement matters. It’s not about busting your butt to get a gym body. It’s about being capable, confident, and free.
When most people hear healthy movement, they think exercise or fitness or looking better or weight loss.
Sometimes, vanity.
Often, fitting into social norms.
“The man” telling you what to do (or how to be).
Moral righteousness packaged as 6am Hot Detox Spin-Late Pump class or an entire weekend of Instagram-worthy self-punishment.
But healthy movement is actually more interesting, liberating, and, frankly, crucial than all that.
In my years as a health and fitness coach, here’s the most important thing I’ve discovered: Developing a body that moves well is the ticket to a place where you feel — finally — capable, confident, and free.
We are all, literally, born to move.
It’s no secret: Human life has become structured in a way that makes it very easy to avoid movement.
We sit in cars on the way to work. At work we sit at our desks for much of the day. Then we come home and sit down to relax.
That’s not what our bodies are built for, so creaky knees, stiff backs, and “I can’t keep up with my toddler!” have become the norm.
Sure, if you can’t move well, it may be a sign that you aren’t as healthy as you could be. But the quality and quantity of your daily movement — your strength and agility — are actually markers for something much more important.
In my line of work, you watch a lot of people lose a lot of weight. The results would shock you — and I’m not talking about how they look on the beach in their bathing suits (although there is always a big celebration for that).
Most often, the thing people are most excited about after they go from heavy and stiff to lean and agile is this feeling that they’re now living better. They notice they’re:
- more energetic and young feeling,
- able to do things they’ve been putting off for years,
- empowered,
- proud of their lifestyle, and
- free from many of the anxieties and limitations that held them back for so long.
They’re happier, but not just because they wanted to look better, and now they do. They’re happier because their bodies now work like they’re supposed to. They can now do things they know they ought to be able to do.
As humans, we move our bodies to express our wants, needs, emotions, thoughts, and ideas. Ultimately, how well we move — and how much we move — determines how well we engage with the world and establish our larger purpose in life.
If you move well, you also think, feel, and live well.
It’s proven that healthy movement helps us:
- Feel well, physically and emotionally
- Function productively
- Think, learn, and remember
- Interact with the world
- Communicate and express ourselves
- Connect and build relationships with others
We don’t need “workouts” to move.
Shocking secret: There’s nothing magic about a resistance circuit, the bootcamp class at your gym, or the latest branded training method.
Our ancestors didn’t need to “work out” when they were walking, climbing, running, crawling, swimming, clambering, hauling, digging, squatting, throwing, and carrying things to survive. Nor did they need an “exercise class” when they ran to get places, danced to share stories or celebrate rituals, or simply… played.
“Working out” is just an artificial way to get us to do what our bodies have, for most of human history, known and loved — regular movements we lost and forgot as we matured as a species.
We may not hunt for dinner anymore, and we may opt for the elevator more often than not.
We may move less. But movement is still programmed into the human brain as a critical aspect of how we engage with the world.
Therefore, to not move is a loss much, much greater than your pant size.
What factors determine how your body moves?
While there are universal human movement patterns, our specific movement habits are unique to us, and to our individual bioengineering.
Basically, the human body amounts to a sophisticated pile of interconnected levers:
- Muscles are attached to bones with tendons.
- These tendons connect to two (or more) bones across a joint.
- When a muscle contracts, or shortens, the tendons pull on the bone.
- That contraction and pull causes the joint to flex (bend) or extend (straighten).
How you move is determined by the size, shape and position of all of those parts, along with anything that adds weight, like body fat.
If you’re a tall person with long bones it may be harder for you to bench press, squat, or deadlift the amount of weight your shorter buddy can, because your range of motion is much bigger than your friend’s, so you have to move that weight a longer distance with much longer levers.
(This is why there aren’t many super-tall weightlifters or powerlifters, and why great bench pressers usually have a big ribcage and stubby T-Rex arms.)
But you can probably spank your short friend at swimming, climbing, and running.
If you’re bottom-heavy and/or shorter, you may not be able to run as fast as your taller friend. But you may have exceptional balance.
If you’ve gained weight in your middle (or if you’re pregnant), you may have back pain. That’s because the extra belly weight pulls downward on the lumbar spine (lower back).
When the lumbar spine is pulled down and forward (“lordosis”):
- The pelvis also tips forward (“anterior pelvic tilt”), which pokes the tailbone back and the belly forward — aka Donald Duck Butt.
- The upper/mid back may round to compensate (“kyphosis”).
The downward pull can also affect all the joints below (the pelvis, hip, knee, and ankle).
Conversely, it also works in the opposite direction, where, say, ankle stiffness can affect movement in the lower back.
If you have wider shoulders (“biacromial width”), then you have a longer lever arm, which means you can potentially throw, pull, swim or hit better.
If you have longer legs, then you have longer stride, which means you can potentially run faster. This is especially true if you also have narrower hips, which create a more vertical femur angle (“Q-angle”), allowing you to waste less energy controlling pelvic rotation.
Some variations in movement, we are given by nature and evolution. Other variations, we learn and practice.
If you’re a woman who’s top-heavy, you may have developed a hunch in your thoracic spine (upper and mid-back), whether from the physical weight of your breasts or from the social awkwardness of being The Girl With Boobs in middle school.
Or, if you got really tall at an early age, you may have developed a habitual hunch to hide your size or communicate with hobbits like me.
Yet the structural engineering remains important. Especially if we understand how our structures and physical makeup affect our movements.
For instance:
Body fat and weight change how we move.
This is especially true if you don’t have enough muscle to drive the engine.
At a healthy weight, your center of mass is just in front of your ankle joints when you stand upright.
However, the more mass you have, especially if you have extra weight in front, the harder your lower legs and feet have to work to keep you from tipping forward.
This puts additional torque (rotational force) on ankle joints.
Once you start walking — which is, essentially, a controlled forward fall — you have to work even harder to compensate.
Any unstable or changing surface (stairs, ice, fluffy carpet, a wet floor), requires your lower joints to adjust powerfully and almost instantaneously — literally millisecond to millisecond.
As a result, obese children and adults fall more often.
Human bodies are amazingly adaptable and clever, but nevertheless, physics can be an unforgiving master.
The good news is that this is generally reversible.
No matter where you’re starting, the more you move, the better your body will function.
When we move:
- our muscles contract;
- we load our connective tissues and bones;
- we increase our respiration and circulation; and
- we release particular hormones and cell signals.
All of these (and a variety of other physiological processes) tell our bodies to use its raw materials and the food we eat in certain ways.
For instance, movement tells our bodies:
- to retrieve stored energy (e.g. fat or glucose) and use it;
- to store any extra energy in muscles, or use it for repair, rather than storing it as fat;
- to strengthen tissues such as muscles, tendons, ligaments, and bones; and
- to clear out accumulated waste products.
And improved body functions ensure you’ll be able to move well and:
- climb stairs or hills
- step over obstacles
- carry groceries
- stand up from sitting down, or get up from the floor
- grasp and hold objects like a hammer
- pull or drag things like a heavy door or garbage can
- walk an excitable dog
The more we can do confidently and capably, the fitter we’ll be. Even better, that means we’ll do more. That leads to more fitness. And this virtuous cycle continues.
Movement does more than just “get us into shape”.
Despite eyeglasses and iPhones, humans are still animals. We’re meant to move with the grace and agility of a tiger (or a monkey). And movement offers us a tremendous number of (sometimes surprising) benefits.
Movement is how humans (and other animals) interact with the world.
As babies, we immediately start grabbing things, putting things in our mouths, reaching for things, and clinging to our (now less furry) primate parents.
We are tactile, kinesthetic beings who must directly interact with physical stimuli: touching, tasting, manipulating, moving ourselves around objects in three-dimensional space.
Movement helps us connect and build relationships with others.
Movement is a sensor for the world around us.
In one study, when people’s facial muscles were paralyzed with Botox, they couldn’t read others’ emotions or describe their own. We need to mimic and mirror the body language and facial cues of one another to connect emotionally and mentally.
From the puffed-chest posturing of drunken young men outside a bar, to Beyonce’s fierce dance moves, to the mating rituals like close leaning and eye contact, to the laser stare your mom gives you when she knows you’re up to no good:
Movement gives us a rich, nuanced expressive language that goes far beyond words, helping us build more fulfilling and lasting relationships, with fewer misunderstandings, disconnections, or communication bloopers.
Movement helps us think, learn, and remember.
You might imagine that “thinking” lives only in your head.
But in reality, research shows we do what’s called “embodied cognition” — in which the body’s movements influence brain functions like processing information and decision making, and vice versa.
So “thinking” lives in our entire bodies.
But even if thinking were limited to our brains, there is evidence that movement and thought are intertwined.
It turns out that the cerebellum — a structure at the base of the brain previously thought to only be used for balance, posture, coordination, and motor skills — also plays a role in thinking and emotion.
Also, movement supports brain health and function in many ways, by helping new neurons grow and thrive (i.e. neurogenesis).
Every day, our brains produce thousands of new neurons, especially in our hippocampal region, an area involved in learning and memory. Movement — whether learning new physical skills or simply doing exercise that improves circulation — gives the new cells a purpose so that they stick around rather than dying.
Thus, movement:
- helps maintain existing brain structures,
- helps slow age-related mental decline,
- helps us recover if our brain is injured or inflamed,
- lowers oxidative stress, and
- increases the levels of a substance known as brain-derived neurotrophic factor, or BDNF, which is involved in learning and memory.
Move well, move often, get smarter.
Movement affects how we feel physically and emotionally.
People of all shapes and sizes say they have a better quality of life, with fewer physical limitations, when they are physically active.
If you exercise regularly, you probably know that kickass workouts can leave you feeling like a million bucks. (Personally I think of mine as anti-bitch meds.)
Research that compared exercise alone to diet alone found:
People who change their bodies with exercise (rather than dieting) feel better — about their bodies, about their capabilities, about their health, and about their overall quality of life — even if their weight ultimately doesn’t change.
(Now… just imagine if you combined the magic of exercise with brain-boosting and body-building nutrition!)
Find out what “healthy movement” looks like for you.
Not everyone has to be (or can be) a ballet dancer or Olympic gymnast. As a 5-foot, 40-something woman who can’t run well nor catch a ball, I’m fairly sure the NBA and NFL won’t be calling me.
But I’m also not saying that, “Well, guess I shouldn’t climb the stairs because of my Q-angle” is the way to go.
I’m saying: Today, pay special attention to how you move.
Be curious.
As you go through the mundane activities of your day, notice how your unique body shapes your movements.
How do you move… and how could you potentially move?
In our coaching programs, we work with a lot of clients who have physical limitations, such as:
- chronic pain or movement restrictions — say, from an injury or inflammation.
- too much body fat and/or not enough lean mass.
- too many or too few calories/nutrients to feel energetic.
- age-related loss of mobility.
- a physical disability.
- neurological problems.
You may have some body configuration that makes it easier or harder for you to do certain things.
We all have structural or physical limitations. We all have advantages. It all depends on context.
Regardless of what your unique physical makeup might be, there are activities that can work for you, and help you make movement a big part of your daily life.
Ask yourself:
How can I move better — whatever that means for MY unique body? And what might my life be like if I did?
And finding someone who can help you if you think that’s what you need.
What to do next
1. Pay attention to how it feels to move.
“Sense in” to your body:
- When you walk or run: How long is your stride? Do your legs swing freely? Do your hips feel tight or loose? What are your arms doing? Where are you looking?
- When you stand: How does your weight shift gently as you stand? What does that feel like in your feet or lower legs?
- When you sit: Where is your head? Can you feel the pressure of the seat on your back or bottom?
- When you work out: Can you feel the muscles working? What happens if you try to do a fast movement (like a jump or kick) slowly, and vice versa?
2. Consider whether you’re moving as well as you could.
Do you feel confident and capable? Ninja-ready for anything?
Do you have some physical limitations? Do you have ways to adapt or route around them?
When was the last time you tried learning new movement skills?
What movements would you like to try… in a perfect world?
3. Think about other ways to move.
If you’re working out a certain way because you think you “should”, but it’s not fitting your body well, consider other options.
Or, if your current workout is going great but you’re curious about other possibilities, consider expanding your movement repertoire anyway.
Everything from archery to Zumba is out there, waiting for you to come and try it out.
Remember: You don’t have to “work out” or “exercise” to move. And you don’t need to revamp your physical activity overnight, either.
Take your time. Do what you like. Pick one small new way you can move today — and do it.
4. Help your body do its job with good nutrition.
Quality movement requires quality nutrition.
And just like your movements, your nutritional needs are unique to you.
Here’s how to start figuring out what “optimal nutrition” means for you:
- Balance your intake to eliminate possible nutrient deficiencies.
- Calibrate your calorie intake with easy, effective portion control andappetite awareness.
- Tailor your diet for special circumstances, like pregnancy or injury.
- Find ways to reduce stress (this may look a bit different for men andwomen).
If you feel like you need help on these fronts, get it.
A good fitness and nutrition coach can:
- help you find activities that suit your body.
- review your nutrition and offer advice on how to improve your diet (even if your life is hectic).
- help you identify any potential food sensitivities that could be causing or worsening inflammation and thus restricting your movements.
Benefits Of A Workplace Wellness Program
When Google opened up in the 90s it took a unique approach to employee satisfaction. In an age of monochrome cubicles and monotonous workdays, they added a workplace wellness program. Their philosophy was that to get the best talent, they had to make their office a place people wanted to work. Exercise brought employees together, improved morale, and made them more productive. Now, companies across the country are trying to emulate Google’s success and are establishing workplace wellness programs of their own.
It’s a smart move. Now we are examining the top 10 benefits of a workplace wellness program.
Fun
Sometimes work gets boring, repetitive and draining. This drains morale and lowers productivity. Try mixing things up by partaking in the activities and initiatives going on in your work’s wellness program that interests you. That 5k challenge? Try it out. How about thatpiloxing class? Why not! It’s fun to try new things, don’t limit yourself. Rather, be open to improving your life through health and fitness.
Improved Productivity
Engaging in workplace wellness activities, like exercise and eating well, increases employee productivity and performance. Your brain will be better focused for tasks, and you’ll feel more energized and motivated to accomplish work. No more falling asleep and feeling burned out. That’s what exercise and nutrition does to us, my friends!
Happier
According to the AFLAC 2012 Workforce Report, employees who took part in a workplace wellness program are more satisfied at their jobs than those who don’t partake. The people who engaged in their companies program were generally more content overall with work related factors. This is because healthy living doing just make you look good, but nourishes the way you feel as well. Healthy living can make you happy, people.
Builds Community
Group activities that involve health and fitness will get you connected not only more to your company, but to your fellow employees as well. You’ll start to form relationships that haven’t been available to you before because having a wellness program in place engages all members of the company. That being said, everyone will benefit from the shared experiences and your social health can thrive.
Lower Healthcare Costs
If you’re at a workplace that promotes exercise and taking care of your health for hours a day, your whole well being will benefit. This in turn makes you less likely to get sick and injured, saving you money in the long run. Study after study confirms that workplace wellness programs reduce healthcare costs. Less doctor visits, less pills to take, less medicine. So keep the heart disease at bay by participating in your work wellness program!
Sense Of Accomplishment
Many work wellness programs feature competitions between employees. Who can walk the most steps in a month, get 7 hours of sleep, or cut out alcohol for a week? Set some goals and try to engage in your work’s healthy atmosphere while you reap the benefits of accomplishing a healthy task.
Improved Physical Fitness
Taking part in the different physical activities that your work has to offer can greatly improve your physical fitness and overall wellbeing. Hitting the gym during your lunch break or participating in yoga classes twice a week can have many evident benefits. Whatever it may be, open yourself up to the variety of physical activities your work has to offer and say hello to strength and muscle toning!
Weight Loss
You would be surprised at how much impact changing your daily work routine can be on your health. When you start to focus on eating the right foods, exercising, and taking care of your mental health, the extra weight you’ve been carrying can shed off faster than before. Sometimes a workplace program will offer financial benefits for their weight loss initiatives so take advantage of the many opportunities to improve your weight loss goals.
Less Stress
One of the key factors in health and wellness is learning stress management. Especially if you work in a high demand job, things can get difficult and it’s best to tackle them at the source. When we are stressed, we are more likely to engage in unhealthy behaviors and destroy our mental health. Activities that encourage walking meetings, mindfulness, social engagement, and more can all help an employee feel relieved of daily built up stress. Just 30 minutes of low intensity exercise will get you feeling more relaxed in no time.
Healthier Habits
When at work for hours a day, it will be beneficial to indulge yourself in your work’s wellness program and learn new healthy habits. By doing this, you’ll learn to shift into a health conscious mindset that benefits you. Food choices and workout schedules will be positively influenced because of your atmosphere. If you surround yourself with fellow like minded employees then it will be even easier to strain away from the old unhealthy habits that hurt your health.
How To Exercise At Work
You do have enough time to exercise, really.
Especially if you make moving more a priority throughout the day, even if that’s a work day.
Before you get all defensive, hear us out: You don’t need to spend your lunchbreak at the gym, you don’t need to be away from your desk for an entire hour, you don’t even need to shower, fix your hair or touch up your makeup afterword.
Aside from smart solutions to the too-much-sitting problem like taking walking meetings and strolling over to talk to a coworker instead of emailing her, here are some easy-as-pie exercises you can do anywhere in the office — no gym clothes necessary. We can’t say your coworkers won’t stare, but maybe, just maybe, you’ll inspire them to join in. Oh, and maybe don’t really do these in heels.
The Desk Chair Swivel
Sitting in your swivel chair with your back straight and feet hovering just off the floor, place just your fingertips on the edge of your desk. Contract your core and use your abs to twist slowly to the left and then the right. Try for 10 twists to each side, three times throughout the workday. Take The Stairs
The more physical activity and the less sitting you do throughout the day, the better. If you have a meeting on another floor or when you’re heading out to grab some lunch, take the stairs whenever possible. Or if you just have a few minutes to spare, try a few laps of the staircase nearest your desk. The Coffee Break Kickback
Sneak this glute exercise in every time you get up to refill your coffee mug. Standing tall, balance on one leg and lift the opposite leg straight back. Keep the lifted leg as straight as possible, focusing on squeezing the muscles on that side. Hold onto the counter if balancing feels tough. Complete 10 on each leg. The Squat ‘N’ Sit
Every time you return to your desk chair — whether it’s from a meeting, a bathroom break or a vending machine run — do five squats before settling in. With feet slightly wider than shoulder width apart and the chest lifted, sit down and back, tapping your rear lightly on the seat before pushing up through the heels to return to standing. The Laptop Bicep Curl
If you’re bringing your computer to a meeting — which, for the record, we do not recommend, for productivity’s sake — use your device to complete 10 bicep curls with each arm on your walk to the conference room. Work on getting a full range of motion with your arm, extending it straight down at your side and bringing the laptop to shoulder height on each curl. Keep the abs contracted to engage the core as you walk. If you’ve only got a desktop machine, a stapler or tape dispenser with a weighted bottom or even your full water bottle are good replacements. The Waiting-For-The-Printer Pushup
Next time you rush to the printer only to find your document stalled in a queue, don’t dawdle. Bang out 10 incline pushups, using the nearest counter or wall. Start in full plank position, with your arms just wider than shoulder width apart. Keeping the spine in a straight line, lower your chest to the counter, keeping your elbows close to your sides. The higher your incline, the easier these will be — and so very much cleaner and work appropriate than dropping all the way down to the floor!
A little about N.E.A.T, Non Exercise Activity Thermogenesis
What is N.E.A.T?
Over the past few years, researchers have begun investigating the time we spent awake or at work which is approximately 110 – 115 hours per week, as a weight loss solution, rather than the few hours a week spent trying to exercise. The results are impressive as they provide so many opportunities to achieve effective and sustained weight loss without complicating our lives, finding more time to exercise, doing things we may despise, or even exceeding our own comfort levels or abilities.
We call these expended calories N.E.A.T (non-exercise activity thermogenesis) or NEPA (non-exercise physical activity) and it is the energy expended for everything we do in our daily lives that does not include sleeping, eating, or exercise; and ranges from simple things like standing and fidgeting to moving about.
Even breathing can help towards burning fat. When you breathe deeply, and slowly, you will work your diaphragm. It takes years to master breathing techniques, but it’s never too late to start. Most of us breath in only 1/5th of the oxygen we need. According to Pranayama Yoga practitioner, breathing master and author of ‘The Art of Breathing’ – Dominique Lonchant, “Most of the time we breathe too superficially and insufficiently. Of all the organs, the brain needs the most of oxygen,”. He believes that many illnesses such as cardiovascular diseases and diabetes occur because of a lack of oxygen!
Engaging your core is another way. But first, let’s start by defining what “the core” really means because it means differently to different people. Usually it refers to the muscles that surround your midsection. It is from the top of our pelvic bone to the top of our tummy and it’s all the way around to our lower back. It’s basically our trunk area. In this instance, we refer specifically to the abdominal muscles located in the front of your body, or the tummy area. To be more specific, the core needs to be strong, flexible, and coordinated to help us in our every action including running.
The core helps us flex, extend, side bend, and rotate our trunk in all directions, as well as keep the trunk stable. Along with the hips and low back, the abdominal muscles keep us strong in our centre, so that we can use our arms and legs powerfully and without hurting our spine.
When sitting, standing or walking, it’s important to be aware of your core area and to strengthen it because it’s the core that holds your poise.
It’s great to aware that non-exercise activity thermogenesis (N.E.A.T) can contribute towards your fitness regime. Well, it’s a good start anyway:)
References: 1. Levine, James. “Nonexercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT): environment and biology.” American Journal of Physiology – Endocrinology and Metabolism. no. E675-E685 (2004). 10.1152/ajpendo.00562.2003 (accessed December 15, 2013).
10 Quick Workouts At The Office
Putting in an entire day at the workplace can be difficult to find an ideal time to work out. In any case, most of us have a bit of free time be it 5 to 10 minutes in between tasks as we sit in front of our PCs, and with this, we can take advantage to have a quick workout. What you may not realize is how hard your body’s actually working even when you’re not paying attention. However, with these type of quick workouts, you won’t get a broad workout but you can get sufficient workout even when you don’t have the time to have an extensive workout session away from work. By following these ideas of 10 quick workouts at the office, this can definitely help you to save yourself from feeling tired and sore for sitting at your working desk for a really long time.
1. Work your A$$ out
Contract your butt muscles. Relax. Contract. Relax. Repeat it for 20 times per session.
Your “glutei” is your muscles on your buttocks, and it serves more than just filling up and creating a bump at the back of your pants. Glutei is there to help you to sit down and stand up, among other crucial movements. Working them out does justice to how your body looks too!
2. Move that neck!
Turn your head all the way to the left, so your chin is parallel with your left shoulder. Then, slowly drop your head, letting the weight of it guide you. Repeat it for 5 to 8 times per session.
Sometimes, when you sleep “wrongly”, your neck tends to ache, and sometimes you can’t even turn your head properly during the day just because you “slept wrongly”! This same applies to your days when your head is glued to the PC.
3. Move your hands
Stretch your arm out in front of you with the palm up. With your other hand, grab your fingers and lightly pull them down to stretch your forearm. This works out your wrist. Clicking and moving that computer mouse repetitively may not be tiring for you, but it creates tension without you realizing it.
For your hands, tense and relax the muscles in your hands. Make firsts, spread your fingers and bend your fingers repetitively. This helps to stretch your hands!
4. Move your legs
For your feet, lift your toes while keeping your heels firmly on the ground. While you can do this exercise standing, it works very well while seated. Also, rotate your feet clockwise your right foot, and anti-clockwise on your left foot. Do it until you feel the tense, then stop.
As for your legs, while sitting on your chair, extend your right leg until it is level with your hip. Hold as long as you are comfortable and then relax it. Do it alternately on both sides.
5. Shrug those shoulders off
Raise both shoulders up toward the ears, hold for 5 seconds, and then relax. Repeat for 15 times per session.
Don’t let your shoulders be sore, you don’t wanna be sorry for having sore shoulders at works! Oh, make sure you’re not doing this during a meeting, or else people would think you’re weird.
6. Work those abs out
Who says you can’t work your abs out even at work? Of course you can! While sitting down on your chair, sit up straight!
Take a deep breath and tighten your abdominal muscles to bring them inwards your spine as you exhale. Stay squeezed for 5 to 10 seconds, and you’ll feel the pressure! Repeat it for 12 to 15 times per session, it’ll be worth it!
7. Walk!
Don’t fret that you can’t find a parking spot that’s closer to the entrance of your office, it’s totally okay to park a little bit further, so you get to spend some time to walk! Take this opportunity to have a quick workout before going into your office.
As for the women, if you’re wearing heels to work, be careful of your steps! But the best is to wear a pair of comfortable sandals or shoes to walk from your car to your office, and bring your pretty heels in a bag with you. Once you stepped into the office, quickly change your shoes!
8. Pushups? No problem!
..and who says you can’t do pushups even at work, with the use of your desk? Of course you can! In order to do this exercise at work, first and foremost, you gotta make sure that your desk is solid enough to support your weight.
Here how it goes, standing before your desk, take a few steps backward, place both hands on your desk, then do push-ups against your desk. Just like any other push-ups, but with the use of your desk! Repeat for 15 times per session.
9. Crunch time!
You think you can’t enhance your abdominal muscles at work? Yes you can for sure!
With both elbows on the thighs, try to curl the chest in towards the legs while resisting the movement with the arms. Hold for 10 seconds, release, and repeat times 10.
10. JUMPING JACKS!
Or as Malaysians would call it in Bahasa Malaysia, “lompat bintang”, which if you direct translate it to English, it means “star jump”. The final workout is probably the most extensive which could wake you up from feeling sleepy and tired at work! If you’re daring enough to do this at the office, all hail goes to you. Not only you’ll be working out for yourself, but you’ll never know, people around you might be inspired to do the same too! After all, hey, you’re working out!
Stand a little far apart from your desk, with your feet together and your hands down by your side. Jump in one motion with your feet out to the side and raise your arms above your head. Then immediately reverse that motion by jumping back to the starting position. Do it for 10 to 15 times per session!
- http://www.lifehack.org/articles/lifehack/29-exercises-you-can-do-at-or-near-your-desk.html
- http://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/diet-fitness/exercise-at-work/5-easy-exercises-to-do-at-work.htm#page=2
- http://greatist.com/fitness/deskercise-33-ways-exercise-work
- http://www.webmd.com/fitness-exercise/exercise-at-your-desk?page=2
Standing and exercise linked to lower odds of obesity
Standing for at least one-quarter of the day has been linked to lower odds of obesity in a new study led by the American Cancer Society in collaboration with The Cooper Institute, the University of Texas, and the University of Georgia. The study appears inMayo Clinic Proceedings.
While sedentary behavior (such as watching TV and commuting time) has been linked to negative health effects, it is unclear whether more time spent standing has protective health benefits. To investigate further, a research team led by Dr. Kerem Shuval, Director of Physical Activity & Nutrition Research at the American Cancer Society, examined reported standing habits in relation to objectively measured obesity and metabolic risk among more than 7000 adult patients attending the Cooper Clinic (Dallas, Texas) for preventive medicine visits from 2010 to 2015. Specifically, the association between standing time and obesity was determined through three measures: body mass index (BMI), body fat percentage, and waist circumference. The association between standing and metabolic risk was assessed via metabolic syndrome, a clustering of risk factors that increase the risk for heart disease, stroke, and diabetes.
The study found that among men, standing a quarter of the time was linked to a 32% reduced likelihood of obesity (body fat percentage). Standing half the time was associated with a 59% reduced likelihood of obesity. But standing more than three-quarters of the time was not associated with a lower risk of obesity.
In women, standing a quarter, half, and three quarters of the time was associated with 35%, 47%, and 57% respective reductions in the likelihood of abdominal obesity (waist circumference). No relationship between standing and metabolic syndrome was found among women or men.
Researchers also investigated whether physical activity in conjunction with standing provided additional reduction in risk. They found that among those meeting physical activity guidelines (150 minutes of moderate activity and/or 75 minutes of vigorous activity per day) the addition of standing time was associated with incremental drops in the likelihood of all obesity measures and metabolic syndrome in both women and men. For example, men meeting physical activity guidelines and standing a quarter to half of the time had a 57% reduced likelihood for abdominal obesity, whereas those meeting guidelines and standing three quarters of the time or more had a 64% lower odds for abdominal obesity.
While the findings provide initial and important evidence on the potential protective benefits of standing, the study team cautions that their findings should be interpreted in the context of the study’s limitations. These findings are cross-sectional, meaning they capture a ‘snapshot’ in time, so it is unclear whether less standing leads to more obesity or whether in fact obese individuals stand less. Additional prospective studies are needed to determine whether standing has protective health benefits.
Moreover, while obesity and metabolic syndrome were objectively measured, standing and physical activity were not; they were based on self-report which may lead to over estimation of these behaviors. Further, due to the survey measure used in the study, it is unclear whether study participants were standing still or standing and moving. While standing and moving provides extra energy expenditure, standing still is similar to sitting with regards to energy expenditure.
Finally, it should be noted that some studies have found adverse health effects to prolonged standing, such as increased risk for varicose veins. Therefore, additional research into the effects of standing on health is definitely suggested.
Date: November 3, 2015
Source: University of Kent
University of Kent. “Endurance expert: Drugs could help ‘lazy’ people exercise: In what has been described as ‘doping for lazy people’ an endurance expert advocates psychoactive drugs to encourage sedentary people to exercise.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 3 November 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/11/151103140442.htm>.