Monday, July 23, 2018

Esercise

I have talked a lot about all the benefits of exercise but exercise is hard, hard to do, hard to find the time or place. Because it is hard, many of us don't do any or enough to make a difference. Let's examine happens to you if you DON’T exercise.
Did you know being sluggish or lazy sets off a negative chain reaction that may be impossible to halt before you die? At least until you reverse your habits. 
 If you do not exercise the prognosis is pretty grim so you might want to be sitting down as you read this. On second thought, how about standing? Then you’ll be one step closer to some positive movement and help reverse some of the nasty detriments to your health and longevity that inactivity and lack of exercise causes.
Which came first being sedentary or the weight gain. I think it is being sedentary. As you become more sedentary, you start to gain weight, and because you are gaining weight, you become more sedentary. That combination leads to even more unwanted pounds until you are obese.
I don't want to imply that every inactive person gets fat. But, I will. In my opinion, you can be fat without being overweight. What I mean is that you have undeveloped muscles and a high proportion of fat while still maintaining a normal weight.
The next step after you chose a sedentary lifestyle results in a weakened cardiovascular system. A weakened cardiovascular system is dangerous to your health. As you try to carry on normal activity with a weakened cardiovascular system you may cause harm to your heart. Next to follow could be heart disease. Did you know about half of the first heart attacks are fatal? In other words, your first symptom of heart disease could be death.
And of course, heart disease remains as our number one killer.
And if you continue to be inactive it may get worse.
Inactivity leads to muscle wasting (sarcopenia), and 7,000 people a DAY die from sarcopenia and its related conditions. One of the most important changes related to ageing is the loss of muscle mass and muscle strength. Older adults lose approximately 1% of muscle mass and 3% of muscle strength each year. Sarcopenia is recognized as a geriatric syndrome characterized by critically low levels of muscle mass and muscle strength or muscle performance that predisposes individuals to adverse health outcomes Sarcopenia, if you live long enough, usually lands you in a nursing home where the quality of life plummets.
Closely related, and a direct condition of inactivity is bone density loss. And this chain reaction leads to organ failures, a horrible quality of life, protracted sickness and suffering and life-destroying medical costs… followed by premature death.
The good news is, all this can be avoided – and even reversed by something as simple and inexpensive as exercise.
You don’t have to be an Ironman athlete to stay healthy. In fact, that extreme might in itself be life-shortening. Even something as easy as regular brisk walking and riding a bike, climbing a few flights of stairs instead of taking an elevator, yoga, and lifting and carrying packages instead of carting them around or having someone carry them for you can let you dodge absolute misery.
Better, of course, is at least moderate weight training and/or callisthenics.
Your brisk walking and bicycle riding can take care of your cardio training, but I suggest something a bit more aggressive if you can.
Weight-bearing exercise, a demand on your muscles and regular aerobic exercise can set off a positive chain reaction for you. A lean tight body which strengthens your muscles, bones, and all your organs, way less sickness and suffering, a longer healthier life as well as saving a fortune in medical bill

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Looking out my back door

This was the scene in my backyard the other day, video compliments of my son. So as I sat and watched the hummingbird I was playing Credence on the stereo. Guess which song?


Saturday, July 21, 2018

Canadian Medical Association Seniors Survey

If you are retired and live in Canada there is an online survey regarding Seniors Health Care, created by the Canadian Medical Association. This survey asks a series of simple questions in order to understand the different dynamics that represent people’s experience with seniors care. It gives you as a citizen a chance to express how you feel about the health care system’s ability to adequately meet the seniors care needs that you and your family will have. Results from the survey will assist in the CMA’s advocacy for quality public health care. 

Participate in the survey by visiting https://www.demandaplan.ca/surveys/new-federal-seniors-measures

Friday, July 20, 2018

Visualize

I was wondering the other day about what part of "visualize" do you think most people misunderstand?

The use of visualization to present information is not a new phenomenon. It has been used in maps, scientific drawings, and data plots for over a thousand years. We look in awe at the early cave drawings of life before the written word. Our early ancestors used visualization and visual imagery to tell stories, to create myths and to honor each other.

It is a confusing term and one that is used or misused by many. On one level it is a technique involving focusing on positive mental images in order to achieve a particular goal
visualize or to form a mental image of (something incapable of being viewed or not at that moment visible).

On another level, it is a motivational technique which can help you achieve personal goals. If you really want something to come to fruition, then you have to put your imaginative mind to work. See the result in front of you, play the game you are going to play in your mind, or watch yourself accepting your degree at college. The only limit is your own mind. Visualization is also a useful mental skill which allows you to picture an image or scenario not immediately in front of your eyes.

Visualization used as a motivational technique is a skill that can be learned but like any skill, it must be practiced more than once a day. Many try visualization and fail because of many reasons. One reason could be that we only do it just once a day, for a few minutes a day, because we have yet to realize that whatever it is we most want lies only a little thinking away? So we stop when we fail, rather than continuing to try. Can you hear me now?