Never Give up!

Amazing Dance

Good morning everyone!

Do you know someone who has given up on their health? 

This is an amazing testimony to NEVER GIVING UP on your DREAMS, your HEALTH or your BODY’S AMAZING ABILITY TO ADAPT!  You can do anything you set your mind to. 

Thanks Joy, for sending this to me!  If any of you have a great health-related story or video, please pass it along.  And remember to forward this link to anyone you know who may benefit from our weekly health blog.

READ THE STORY BEFORE YOU CLICK ON THE VIDEO ABOVE (amazing dance).

Here’s their story …

In a Chinese modern dance competition on TV, one very unique couple won one of the top prizes. The lady, in her 30′s, was a dancer who had trained since she was a little girl.  Later in life, she lost her entire left arm in an accident and fell into a state of depression for a few years.  Someone then asked her to coach a children’s dancing group. From that point on, she realized that she could not forget dancing… She still loved to dance and wanted to dance again.  So, she started to do some of her old routines, but having lost her arm, she had also lost her balance.  It took a while before she could even make simple turns and spins without falling.  Then she heard of a man in his 20s who had lost a leg in an accident. He had also fallen into an emotional roller coaster of denial, depression and anger.  She was determined to find him and persuade him to dance with her.  He had never danced, and to “dance with one leg …. are you joking with me?  No way!”  But, she didn’t give up, and he reluctantly agreed thinking, “I have nothing else to do anyway.”  She started to teach him dancing 101.  The two broke up a few times because he had no concept of how to control his body and knew none of the basics about dancing.  When she became frustrated and lost patience with him, he would walk out.  Eventually, they came back together and started training seriously.  They hired a choreographer to design routines for them.  She would fly high (held by him), with her arm in the air.  He could bend horizontally supported by one leg with her leaning against him.  In the competition, as you will see, they dance beautifully and they legitimately won the competition.

 

Learn to become more relaxed in less than a minute!

Good morning everyone!  200809 omag control busy 220x3121 211x300 Learn to become more relaxed in less than a minute!

Want to know how to become more relaxed in less than a minute?  Last night I read this article from Norman Fischer and I loved it so much that I wanted to share it with you. 

WAIT… if you think you are too busy to read this article, then you WILL DEFINITELY BENEFIT FROM THIS MESSAGE.  I have always believed that feeling busy or relaxed is a mindset… Norman hits this point home brilliantly! 

Everyone – take five minutes and read this.  I would love to hear your comments.  This will effect your work day, your realationships, your back and and certainly your health.

All together now: Ahhhhh…

By Norman Fischer

You keep a to-do list, but you can’t get through it by the end of the day, and you’re frustrated because you feel like you haven’t been able to get enough done. You find that things take longer than you thought they would. And when people ask how you are, “Fine” has been replaced by “Too busy.”

Welcome to the “too busy” club.

In this technology-driven world, we can do more, so we do—and we love it. We feel effective and powerful as we check items off our lists and use our cell phones, BlackBerrys, and computers, sometimes all at once. We’re multitasking, doing as much as we can in the least amount of time. We’re active, creative, and engaged! In demand! Being too busy makes us feel as though we’re making an impact.

On the other hand, feeling too busy drives us crazy. Falling ever further behind as the to-do list relentlessly grows (each item generating many more items almost as fast as we can think of them) is nerve-racking and stressful. We begin to feel like prisoners of the list, prisoners of our lives and our desires, prisoners of time. There just aren’t enough hours in the day. It’s as if we’re doing battle with time—and losing.

But the point is not how many things we have done or will do in a given amount of time; the point is how we do what we do. If we’re rushed and frantic, we’re too busy. If we move through our tasks with equanimity, patient and composed, we’re not.

In the Zen Buddhist tradition that I’ve been practicing for many years, there’s a story that illustrates this point: A monk is sweeping the temple grounds. Another monk comes by and says, “Too busy!” The first monk replies, “You should know there is one who is not too busy.”

Our sweeping monk may have been moving quickly, and so he looked “too busy” to his brother monk. But inside—in his mind—he wasn’t busy. In the midst of his vigorous activity, he was in touch with “the one who is not busy.”

Most of us judge how busy we are by how much we have to do. When there are too many things to do, we think we’re busy, and when there isn’t much to do, it feels like we’re not busy at all. But in fact, we can feel busy when there isn’t that much to do, and we can feel relaxed even when there’s a lot going on. The states of “busy” and “not busy” aren’t defined by how many things there are to do. Contrary to popular opinion, there is no such thing as multitasking; the brain can tend to only one thing at a time. Being too busy or not being busy is an interpretation of our activity. Busy-ness is a state of mind, not a fact. No matter how much or how little we’re doing, we’re always just doing what we’re doing, simply living this one moment of our lives.

That moment may seem long or short. Time is an internal, not external, reality. Have you noticed that half an hour in the dentist’s chair lasts longer than half an hour at a fun dinner party with friends? And five minutes waiting on hold on the phone passes more slowly than five minutes watching a movie. Time is how we live it, not what’s measured by the clock (after all, the watch was invented fairly recently, in the 16th century). To be sure, our world operates on clock time, which is convenient and necessary; how else would we make it to that dentist’s appointment or dinner party? But the clock is supposed to be working for us, not the other way around. If we feel too busy, we’ve mistaken a feeling for an objective reality and are held captive to that reality. It needn’t be that way.

Okay, you say, good theory: We think we’re busy, but we’re not—we’re just doing one thing after another. But the habit of being convinced we’re too busy is hard to shake. What can we do about this persistent mania of feeling task- and time-driven?

Understanding something differently is only a beginning. To change the way we live, we have to practice what we’ve come to understand until it becomes a natural part of us, a habit of thought, feeling, and body. There are many simple techniques that can help us with this. Take three conscious breaths (try it now, as you’re reading). This will change your mind. Whatever you’re feeling will become less compulsive, less driven. There’s a measure of detachment and equanimity even after the first breath. You become more present to your surroundings, to the basic awareness of being alive. Try it the next time you’re feeling overwhelmed; it doesn’t take much time, and it will help you remember “the one who is not busy,” the part of you that’s always right there, even when it looks or feels like you’re too busy.

Walking meditation—intentionally bringing awareness to your body as you move—can lift you out of a busy-ness-induced, semiconscious funk. If you can become conscious of the way you’re moving and the sensation of each movement, you’ll feel refreshed instead of rushed. I know what you’re thinking: “I’m too busy to go for a walk.” But this is something you can do on your way to and from the bathroom. (And if you’re really feeling busy, you’re probably overdue for a trip there anyway.)

Sometimes just a phrase can help: “Not busy.” Remembering our two monks, you can say this softly to yourself when you feel overwhelmed. I do this when I feel crazed; with the repetition of the words, I immediately recognize that it is my feelings and my thoughts that make me feel pressured, not the tasks I have to do. They will get done—or not, and the world and I will survive. Even if I do have a crucial deadline, I’ll have a much better chance of making it if I feel “not busy” and can proceed with a calm mind. Feeling frantic doesn’t make me more efficient. Quite the contrary, it makes mistakes and glitches more likely.

It goes without saying that if you’ve bitten off more than you can chew in a day, or in a lifetime, you’d better step back and change your circumstances, if at all possible. Let go of a few activities: Peace of mind is more important, and healthier, than those few extra accomplishments. But if you can’t or don’t want to change your circumstances, you need to find the most serene and beautiful way to live the life you have. In the end, if you persistently and unpleasantly feel too busy, remember this: It’s not a fact; it’s a choice. There is one who is not busy. That one is you.

Step it up!

If you look around the world at healthy and highly active cultures, they are walking more and sitting less.

Comparatively, North Americans are doing the opposite… sitting more and moving less. 

In addition to good alignment, strength, flexibility and decompression therapy, MOVEMENT in the from of WALKING is a major ingredient in maintaining healthy cartilage and joint space.  Paying attention to these ingredients becomes vitally important to creating a winning recipe for beating North America’s alarming arthritis rates.

How many steps are you taking?

Using a pedometer can be a very effective way to gauge your level of activity.  Give it a try!

Classification of pedometer-determined physical activity in healthy adults:

1) Under 5000 steps/day may be used as a “sedentary lifestyle index”.

2) 5,000-7,499 steps/day is typical of daily activity excluding sports/exercise and might be considered “low active”.

3) 7,500-9,999 likely includes some exercise or walking (and/or a job that requires more walking) and might be considered “somewhat active”.

4) 10,000 steps/day indicates the point that should be used to classify individuals as “active”.

5) Individuals who take more than 12,500 steps/day are likely to be classified as “highly active”.

Why do my joints crack?

“The popping sound may come from a rapid release of gas bubbles that from in a joint when it is stretched.  It can occur when you bend you neck ore wrist, or twist your back, for instance.   It usually is harmless, but if you’ve had an injury or if the cracking is accompanied by pain or swelling, notify your doctor or a spine specialist.  It could be a sign of arthritis or other joint problems.”

University of California, Berkeley Wellness letter  June 2008