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Fitness Health Mindset Personal Growth

Consistency: Why I love and loathe consistency

There are so many things that I love to be consistent…my morning coffee, my work schedule, my employees always showing up on time, my fiance making me quinoa or rice for dinner.

I don’t want to sound hypocritical right off the bat so let me say that I am very consistent at certain things like work. I rarely take a sick day, I keep to my hours and try to be the best leader.

However, there are dream projects that I’ve started and stopped over the years, like this blog and of course it’s gone nowhere. Am I surprised? Of course not but do I know where other people who started around the same time as me have taken theirs, yes I am painfully aware.

It’s not even the satisfaction of success, I feel satisfied in other areas and this didn’t need to be one of them. I’m not trying to escape my practice, I love it. But I do love the idea of consistently putting forth an effort on a hobby that I believe benefits others.

I was reading something my uncle, Sam Crowley at www.everydayissaturday.com posted and he said that John Lee Dumas did a podcast every day for 10-15 years and now he’s selling it for probably around 10 million dollars.

Of course it naturally evolved as things do, and he had paid guests to come on his show to pitch their ideas. He also has a website and sells courses.

But it really got me thinking what is the version of me doing that continued her blog 10 years ago and did it every day?

Of course, what is the version of me like who has stuck to everything that I said I’d do or never do again?

I think that version of me would be insanely fit and healthy, happy, joyful and grateful that I stuck to my commitments to myself.

I don’t know if I’m lying to myself to say I’m going to do better but I think I’ll try to keep my integrity to myself and give a little more effort.

Categories
Fitness Health

Yoga for Back Pain

I wanted to write a quick post for people who are interested in using yoga for back pain.

Yoga in and of itself a great practice and one in which I regularly participate.

I find the breathing exercises, synchronizing my movement to the breath and the overall toning/stretching benefits to be very helpful.

One movement that we often do in yoga is the baby cobra or up-dog. When most people have back pain they are experiencing a disc issue, a spinal misalignment causing pressure on a nerve, tight muscles pressing on nerves, or possible spinal stenosis.

Often I find, that people have the mindset of ‘no pain no gain’, STOP! This might be true for high schoolers in football practice who would rather play video games than run a mile but this not true when it comes to spinal pain. In fact, this mindset can actually lead to real problems.

As a chiropractor, I would be remiss to not tell you that you need a spinal check and that includes x-rays. You need to know exactly what the problem is before you can start forcing your way to health.

One reason, I love yoga is that from my first class a good instructor will always tell you, if it hurts then slow down, modify or take a child’s pose. This means that you should not just push through the pain.

For my weekend warriors this might be disappointing but I’m here to tell you that too much of a good thing is still too much.

Or if you already have back pain and you think now is a good time to try something totally new like yoga, think again.

You need to get to the root cause of the problem and then you can heal it in the most effective way possible.

Throwing yoga at it, as if that is going to make up for all your years of not exercising and not stretching is not necessarily going to be good for you.

Back to baby cobra versus up-dog. Many people who try yoga for the first time in the hopes of fixing their back pain jump right into up-dog but this is way too much lumbar extension if you have a back issue.

Instead, baby cobra is a widely used physical therapy exercise for back issues. I use this as an example, not medical advice to show you that while you may have good intentions for yourself, you simply don’t know which exercises are safe and which could lead to more problems.

I highly encourage you to go to someone who is trained in yoga therapy or have a one on one with a certified yoga instructor and tell them you are in pain!

They need to help you to find out what is appropriate for you in the muscle, tendon and ligament scene before you just pop in a DVD or join a class.

Blocks and straps are also helpful tools to help you to get into and out of poses safely so you don’t hurt yourself. Again, a good teacher can help you to avoid falling or injuring yourself by teaching you how to use these aids.

Everyone wants you to enjoy yoga for it’s lifelong benefits and you can’t do that if you get hurt at your first class and then swear it off because it didn’t work for you.

Morgan

Resources:

If you’re going to use a yoga DVD, at least look for one that is for people with issues like the one below. As an Amazon affiliate I earn a small commission from any purchase made through these links.

Categories
Fitness Uncategorized

How to: Fix Abs after a Baby

Congratulations! You’ve just welcome a shiny new human onto planet earth and that is really amazing.  You’ve spent nine months growing another living being and now you will be taking care of said being for next 18 years or so. 

After giving birth and especially after multiple births many moms notice that their abs start to separate.  This is particularly problematic because you can do thousands of sit ups or crunches and not get those to cooperate.

If you are one of the many moms out there having this problem, then please try my modified dead bug routine. 

I modified this from the traditional dead bug routine.

I don’t have any pictures yet but we will have some soon.

Dr. Crowley’s Modified Dead Bug Progression

Phase 1

Lay flat on your back with your arms flat by your sides and knees bent, feet flat on the floor

Raise one knee keeping a 90-90 bend at the hip and knee, as you do so, tighten your abdominal muscles as if bracing

Hold for 30 seconds

Bring that foot back to the floor and raise the opposite knee, brace the abdominals

Hold for 30 seconds

Bring that foot back to the floor, now raise your arm up straight back by your head so its flat on the ground with your fingers pointing towards the wall behind you

Hold for 30 seoncds

Bring that arm down and repeat with the other arm

Phase 2

Begin in the starting position with knees bent, feet flat on the ground, arms at your side

Raise opposite knee to 90-90 and opposite arm, above your head at the same time, brace the abdominals

Hold for 30 seconds

Bring the knee and arm back down, and raise opposite knee, opposite arm

Hold for 30 seconds

Phase 3

Begin in the starting position with knees bent, feet flat on the ground, arms at your side

Raise opposite knee but this time stretch the leg out to a 45 degree angle with the floor and raise opposite arm

Hold for 30 seconds

Bring arm and leg back to neutral starting position and repeat with opposite arm and opposite leg

Hold for 30 seconds

  1. Spend 1-2 weeks performing each exercise 4-5 times a week
  2. Stop any exercise if you feel pain
  3. Always consult with your doctor before beginning any exercise program

Questions? E-mail me at info@morganc13.sg-host.com and I’ll be happy to answer any questions that you might have.