Wednesday 1 May 2013

No time to take care of your health? Try this one-minute "exercise".

Want to take care of your health, but can't seem to find the time?


Your body seems to be telling you something. There's an ache in your lower back. It comes and goes. The knees feel a little stiff.

Feel like you should do something to keep fit, or stay healthy? 

Yet, there are too few hours in a day. Too many things that you want to (have to) do, that are more important, more urgent.

When you're done with everything else, you're too tired.


Too tired!

What do you do after you get home at the end of the day?

(a) Sit down to watch TV
(b) Sit down to read
(c) Sit down to surf the web/watch stuff online
(d) Sit down with the kids to go through their homework
(e) Sit down and ... (do whatever)
(f) Do something while not sitting down



My guess is, whatever you choose to do, you're probably sitting while you're doing it.


Add that to the huge chunk of time that we spend seated during the workday, that's a lot of time that we spend sitting down.

Sitting (in a chair) too much is bad for health


Prolonged sitting does the following to your hip flexors (the muscles responsible for flexing the hip or drawing the knees to your chest, and moving your legs front to back and side to side):
  • Shortens the hip flexors
  • Which causes tightness in the hip flexors and reduced range of motion
Tight hip flexors eventually lead to hip pain and lower back pain, pelvic tilting and even knee problems.

What if some of that time that we spend "sitting down" at home could double up as time for you to take care of your body, in a simple way?


You'll just have to make one small change.

Instead of sitting in a chair, sit on the floor. 

  • Sit with your spine upright (don't round your back).
  • Try to sit with your knees bent/legs crossed, if you can. If that's too difficult right now, sit with your legs stretched out in front of you.
  • If you wish, sit on a low cushion/mat/rug. Don't make yourself too uncomfortable.
  • You can do something else (read, watch TV, check your kid's homework) while you're sitting on the floor.

Just sit on the floor for one minute each day. 


(That's about the time taken to watch 2 TV commercials, or read one page of a book.)

After a few (probably 3 or 4) days, you will notice your body getting used to it. For example,
  • You feel less uncomfortable.
  • You struggle less to stay balanced.
  • It gets easier to sit down and get up.
  • Your bent knees don't feel so stiff or painful. Or you find that you can start to bend your knees more.

When that happens, extend the time by one more minute. Then, when your body gets used to that, add another minute.

Keep doing this every day for two weeks.


  • Pay attention to how you feel immediately after every session.  
  • At the end of two weeks, you would probably be able to sit on the floor for 3 to 5 minutes.

Benefits of sitting on the floor


  1. Engage more muscles compared to sitting in a chair.  
  2. Better blood circulation back to your heart (your heart doesn't have to work so hard to pump blood throughout the body).  
  3. Strengthens the lumbar region of the body (lower back), reducing back pain and discomfort.  
  4. Strengthens the core muscles. 
  5. Improves the suppleness of the ankles.  
  6. Stretches the hip flexors.   
  7. Promotes mental calmness, soothes frazzled nerves and is said to aid one’s creative imagination 
 

Ability to sit on and rise from the floor is inversely related to mortality risk


In the 13 December 2012 issue of the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, in a study spanning 6 years, researchers reported that subjects who scored poorly on the “SRT score” (sitting-rising score) were at risk of being 6.5 times more likely to die in the next six years.


If just sitting on the floor is too easy for you


If you find just sitting on the floor, cross-legged too easy, I'll be back soon with the next post in which I will describe a more challenging exercise.

In the meantime, just sit on the floor a little longer! :)


Reference:

de Brito, Ricardo, et al. Ability to sit and rise from the floor as a predictor of all-cause mortality,  European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, Dec 2012

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