Where To Continue with Fitness Fixer During Health... Stuart's Community Health As A Lifestyle Thank You Grand Rounds 6.31 Academy Developmental Ability and Special Olympics... Fast Fitness - Eighth Group Functional Training: S... Dr. Jolie Bookspan Earns Humanitarian Prize Shihan Chong Breaks 10 Blocks of Ice At Age 70 Arthritis, Hip Pain, and Success With Running Fast Fitness - Seventh Group Functional Training: ... Prevent Pain From Returning - Readers Successes August 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007 July 2007 August 2007 September 2007 October 2007 November 2007 December 2007 January 2008 February 2008 March 2008 April 2008 May 2008 June 2008 July 2008 August 2008 September 2008 October 2008 November 2008 December 2008 January 2009 February 2009 March 2009 April 2009 May 2009 June 2009 July 2009 August 2009 September 2009 October 2009 November 2009 December 2009 January 2010 February 2010 March 2010 April 2010

Air Pushups

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Can you do air pushups?


If the above photos don't load, try:
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2774/4443950148_c7512c2917_m.jpg
and
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2657/4443177857_7cfc415710_m.jpg


Giuliano is a young Romanian boy living in Italy, trained by his gymnast father. Thank you reader Paul J for telling me about him.

Below is a link to the short video clip where I captured the above photos. I was not able to embed this movie, by request at the source. Click to watch 5 year old Giuliano do air pushups:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7jv11mbLc4


I used to teach air pushups in my yoga classes. Every class gave opportunity to see, try, and learn. I'd coach, encourage, even lift the students personally if it helped them try it, or feel the leverages needed. Were students excited? Inspired? Did they get strong and focused?

They might have if they tried it. They whine, stall, pout, refuse, and complain to management that my class is haaaard, and they had to connnnnnn-centrate. They didn't want any of that.

Each week new students arrive in my yoga class, holding expensive yoga equipment. Some are yoga instructors. They explain to me that yoga cures all back pain. I ask why they have come and they tell me all about their back pain that they have for 4 years and they do yoga every day (not curing anything evidently). They say they do yoga all the time and know all about it and how it gives you peace and love and concentration and good posture and strength and balance. Then they sit in terrible posture waiting for class. They get indignant when I tell them to sit well. They correct me that "class hasn't started yet." In the first minutes of class I teach standing on one leg. They topple over and refuse to try again. I have them stand on the other foot and they are flabbergasted that we are doing it again when they just spent all that time insisting to me that they can't (instead of trying). We do simple planks and they sag their back and lock their elbows. When we start hand balancing to learn the basics of air pushups, some of these yoginis have thrown full-out tantrums.

Then the next week, a new crop comes to class explaining to me that yoga gives you love and acceptance and peace and good posture. So I teach them air pushups.

Giuliano also does The Flag - To be covered in the future.


How To Start Learning Air Pushups:

Random Fitness Fixer:


---
Read success stories and send your own.
See if your answers are already here - click Fitness Fixer labels, links, archives, and Index.
For personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions.
Limited Class space for personal feedback. Top students may earn certification through
DrBookspan.com/Academy. More fun in Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---

Photo screen shots from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7jv11mbLc4

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Permalink | 2 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Aerial Ski Training and Olympic Ski Jumping

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Aerial skiers do acrobatic jumps from high ramps onto snow. How can you train in the summer?


Click > arrow to play this short movie of ski jump training. If movie does not load, click
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2761/4383053514_4ff8089b4e_m.jpg


Click > arrow to play this second short movie of ski jump training. If movie does not load, click
http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4021/4382294367_ce916e7f25_m.jpg

Aerial skiers can train using trampoline, bungee trampoline, gymnastics equipment, plastic ramps that slide like snow, diving boards, and ramps leading to pools of water. I love trampoline. I love water. Had to combine the two, so I went to the Park City Utah Olympic training facility. Click to view these movies that I took of young skiers practicing.

Aerial skiing is part of Freestyle skiing, along with moguls, jumps, and other ski specialties that change from year to year. Ski ballet, (later renamed acroski) was a demonstration sport in the 1988 and 1992 Winter Olympics.

In Ski Jumping, skiers ski down a high take-off ramp, then jump, and glide as far as possible before landing. Anders Johnson, ranked 100th in the world, made the US Olympic team for the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver. His sister Alissa, ranked 11th in the world, could not go. Olympic officials refused to allow women's ski jump even though the International Ski Federation (FIS) recommended in a 114-1 vote in 2006 that the women's event be included, and rules since 1998 state that new sports added to the Olympics must include women's events.

Reasons given included unfortunate statements including the phrase "dilution of medals" (by IOC President Jacques Rogge) and that, "Ski jumping is just too dangerous for women...seems not to be appropriate for ladies from a medical point of view" (according to FIS President Gian Franco Kasper).

Girls, dressed as boys were known to compete in ski jumping events at Nordic competitions until the 1950s. In 1911, Austrian countess, Paula Lamberg, jumped 22 meters wearing the required women's uniform of the time - a skirt.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michele-morris/olympic-gender-discrimina_b_461592.html


Related:
Random Fitness Fixer:

---
Read success stories and send your own.
See if your answers are already here - click Fitness Fixer labels, links, archives, and Index.
Subscribe free - updates via e-mail or RSS, upper right.
For personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions.
Limited Class space for personal feedback. Top students may earn certification through
DrBookspan.com/Academy. Learn more in Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---

Movies © copyright by Dr. Bookspan

Labels: , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

No-Hands Volleyball - Footvolley

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Readers were excited when I wrote about Sepak Takraw, a fast net game using feet, leaping windmill kicks, shoulders, and head, but no hands to volley a woven ball called a "takraw."

Readers asked if this kind of game exists in other world cultures. Here is one from Brazil, created in the mid 1960’s.

Footvolley combines beach volleyball with the ball-touch rules of soccer. Players score points by heading, chest butting, and kicking the ball with foot or knee over the seven-foot-tall net to the opponents’ court.

Click the > arrow top play this short movie:


If the movie doe not load, click
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcwmaUsvvuI&feature=player_embedded

Footvolley is a popular sport for vacationing Brazilian soccer stars.

Related Fitness Fixer:
Random Unrelated Fitness Fixer:

---
Read success stories of these methods and send your own.
See if your answers are already here by clicking labels, links in posts, archives, and The Fitness Fixer Index. Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, click "updates via e-mail" upper right.
For personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions. Limited Class spaces for personal feedback. Top students may apply for certification through DrBookspan.com/Academy. Learn more in Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---

Labels: , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

91 Year Old Water Skier

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Edith McAllister was born in 1918 and lives in San Antonio. Here is a video of her water skiing at the age of 91.

Click the > arrow to play this short movie:


If video does not load, click
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-OzZppi1kw

Ms. McAllister swims and water-skis every day. She says the key is you have to keep going, don't quit.

My father was also an avid water skier. I have photos of him slalom-skiing, long silver hair flying. In water-ski vocabulary, "slalom" means only one ski. I also have a photo of him high diving from the Mexican cliffs with the real cliff divers - for another story. I have photos of my grandmother lifting weights in her 90's with her hip-length hair still black, but she said she doesn't like the photos because she looks old.

Stay active, no matter what your age. It is the key to being mobile and independent

Related Fun Fitness Fixer:
Random Fun Fitness Fixer:


---
Read success stories of these methods and send your own.
See if your answers are already here by clicking labels, links in posts, archives, and The Fitness Fixer Index. Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, click "updates via e-mail" upper right.
For personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions. Limited Class spaces for personal feedback. Top students may apply for certification through DrBookspan.com/Academy. Learn more in Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---

Labels: , , , ,

Permalink | 2 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Moving More is Fun

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
The human body is healthiest and happiest when it moves throughout the day. Reader Paul J sent this video clip of a project in Sweden, reminding people how much movement can be fun: Click > arrow to play:

If movie doesn't load, click http://thefuntheory.com/?q=expriment/pianotrappan

Medicines prescribed for poor mood and the surprising number of diseases caused by sedentary lifestyle, frequently cause disease and despondency. Real life movement throughout the day has been found more effective than pills and surgery to reduce or solve depression, obesity, heart disease, high blood pressure, reduce risk and effects of cancer, and other diseases.

Remember to enjoy moving. Go dancing. Skating. Play ball and Frisbee. Do community work. Pick up litter. Help a shut in. Fun doesn't only mean being entertained. Make doing good for yourself and community a positive fun feeling.

What projects can you think of to make real life active, healthy, and fun again, not just artificial movements in a gym? My Academy- the Academy of Functional Exercise Medicine (AFEM) teaches people and communities healthier ways to live - both in formal classes and grassroots community projects - click AFEM.

Fun Lifestyle Through Fitness Fixer:

Lifestyle Exercise Shouldn't Be Unhealthy:

---
Read success stories of these methods and send your own. Before asking questions, see if your answers are already here by clicking labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and The Fitness Fixer Index. Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
For personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions. Limited Class spaces for personal feedback. Top students may apply for certification through DrBookspan.com/Academy. Learn more in Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---

Labels: , ,

Permalink | 4 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Bodybuilding Champion Age 74 - Tsutomu Tosaka

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Mr. Tsutomu Tosaka began bodybuilding at age 40. Last week he won the 21st Japan Masters Bodybuilding Championship in Tokyo. He is 74.

Tsutomo-San says healthy aging and staying in shape is easy and anyone can do it if they just work out from time to time.

Below, a YouTube video should appear. Note Mr. Tsutomo's healthy upright neck position. Click the > arrow to play.

If the movie does not appear above, click http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5om6gbDwA8




Next is another, more polite video. It begins "defined muscles and grey hair…" It is not in English, but it doesn't matter.
Click here or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jSCRqNWq2fA to view. Embedding is disabled by the owner.




Here is a Japanese interview when he was 69:

If the movie does not appear above, click http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ViVQOHmLOg



Related Fitness Fixer:

Unrelated Random Fitness Fixer:



---
Read and contribute your own success stories of these methods. Before asking questions, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. For answers to personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions.
Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books, take a Class, get certified
DrBookspan.com/Academy.
---

Photo courtesy of Zimbio.com

Labels: , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Fast Fitness - Push Ups with Neutral Spine

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Here is Friday Fast Fitness - how do abs help your back? Only when you use them to:
  1. Abdominal muscles don't help your back by themselves. Support is not automatic. They don't fix your back pain by being stronger. Strengthening abdominal muscles doesn't make you hold neutral position (support you). Holding neutral strengthens your abs.

  2. In the post Fast Fitness - Strengthen by Changing Your Plank Reader David from Belgium showed changing the plank from overarched lower spine to neutral spine. He pushes up from the floor into an arched position, then fixes it. Readers asked to see how to push up from the floor (or from the bottom of a pushup) with neutral spine.

  3. David made us another video. Click the > arrow to see the first 20 seconds show holding neutral - green check mark. Next 15 seconds repeat the same push up, but with over-arched spine, marked with a red X. Then he corrects spine angle until the end - green check again. Can you see the difference? Can you do the difference?

if the video does not load, try
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYEe_XjamAo&feature=channel_page

Letting your lower spine cave inward (hyperextend) under your body weight means you are not using core muscles to prevent it. Hyper-extension, is also called hyperlordosis (too much lordosis) and swayback. Hyperlordosis bangs and abrades the joints, called facets, of the spine. Hyperlordosis can also pinch a disc that is already degenerating or bulging, making disc pain worse.


Related Fitness Fixer:
---
Questions come in by hundreds. I'm bailing the ocean with a bucket. I make posts from fun mail. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. Why not try fun stuff, then contribute! Read success stories of these methods and send your own.

Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books, take a Class, get certified
- DrBookspan.com/Academy.
---

Movie by David of Belgium - www.hierennu.be

Labels: , , , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Neutral Spine Fun For Kids and Adults

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
As kids become pre-teens, the slight normal inward curve of the lower spine often increases too much. Large degree of hyper-lordosis (swayback) is often written in medical textbooks as normal development, however, my physician colleagues who see patients at Children's hospitals report much back pain in these kids.

Teaching kids they don't have to ooze into any slouch that just happens, is part of regular training in manners, looking both ways before crossing the street, brushing teeth, and physical habits. Changing from overly-sagging inward at the lower spine to more neutral spine, stops much lower back pain in these populations.

Here is a charming, well-made video by reader James J., age 14, showing keeping stable in all planes and with a smile:


if video doesn't load try,
http://www.flickr.com/photos/39972966@N03/3676458060/


James' dad Paul J. says this is a fun reminder or a way to get kids interested in neutral spine. He wrote, "Plastic Man has a plastic shirt, so you won't be able to see the slight curve that is neutral lower spine. You can put a plastic man on your desk as a reminder."

Enjoy the video as a wonderful reader contribution, for a smile, and to keep going. The way to get strong enough for a plank or handstand or all you do, is to do them and keep good spirit.

Paul J was featured in the post:

Watch a short video of how to reduce a too-large curve to neutral:

If your computer doesn't easily load videos, here are photos with directions:


---
Questions come in by hundreds. I'm bailing the ocean with a bucket. I make posts from fun mail. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. Why not try fun stuff, then contribute! Read success stories of these methods and send your own.

Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books, take a Class, get certified
- DrBookspan.com/Academy.
---

Labels: , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Good Deeds With Good Bending

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Here is Fast Friday Fitness - do good deeds using good bending. Readers Jeff and Sabrina made and sent this video:



if the movie doesn't load here, try:
http://www.vegsource.com/articles2/media_ducks.htm

  1. Click the > arrow on the movie to run
  2. Notice general good bending using the lunge and half squat
  3. Notice all the times you can do good bending around the house, the gym, and for good deeds.

Functional exercise is how you bend and move all day. Exercise your legs and spirit while you prevent disc degeneration by stopping bending over for things, and instead, using good bending, for all you do.

Half Squat for Good Bending

Lunge For Good Bending

Functional Examples Of Half Squat And Lunge

---
Questions come in by hundreds. I'm bailing the ocean with a bucket. I make posts from fun mail. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. Why not try fun stuff, then contribute! Read success stories of these methods and send your own.

Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books, take a Class, get certified
- DrBookspan.com/Academy.
---

Labels: , , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Children Have Huge Potential

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Don't miss this beautiful short clip sent to me by my Russian reader Tamara.

Watch!


Jurij years old is 7 and Karina 6
If video doesn't load, try
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZLaZyMpfUI



Don't let the vast potential of children go unmet. Go to the playground with them. Hang with them. Tumble with them. Play movement games with them. It's gaining priceless skills and health and the best aspects that childhood offers, not losing any aspect of childhood. Ask them to show you things.

Babies have a grasp reflex that allows them to hang with their fingers, with grip equal to world class climbers. Children have the brain elasticity to easily learn many languages without an accent, to move with strength and ability.

Don't strap children into the equivalent of wheel chairs (strollers) while you lift little hand weights. Lift the kids.

I teach many of the moves in this video in my yoga and other classes. Beginners can start them with good success, if they work and try. I have had yoga instructors who come my classes, curse and storm out at the first effort, whining that it is "haaaaaaaaaarrrrrd." They claim yoga makes them strong and loving, then throw tantrums, but that is for another story.

Click the labels children and partner exercise below this post, for Fitness Fixer ideas you can try (using your brain) so that children grow with all the joy, discipline, and strength of real health.

---
Questions come in by hundreds. I'm bailing the ocean with a bucket. I make posts from fun mail. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. Why not try fun stuff, then contribute! Read success stories of these methods and send your own.

Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books, take a Class, get certified
- DrBookspan.com/Academy.
---

Labels: , , , ,

Permalink | 1 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Want Weightlifting? Plant A Food Garden

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

Sledge Hammerer

For weightlifters who enjoy Olympic lifts, rows, cable cross-overs, curls, and all the other good stuff with endless heavy weight, you may like growing vegetables.

We have been tilling a vegetable garden from a rocky field at my Mom's. Seems her home was built on landfill. We had to sledge-hammer and pry concrete slabs - prodigious squatting, levering, clean-and-jerking, and hundred pound medicine ball throws over the just-built garden fence into a pile. Then lifting and hauling away the pile.

Carrying sand, earth, rocks, weed bales, tree branches as heavy as you can lift, over uneven rocky hilly earth back and forth from the truck, the field, and the new compost pile a hundred feet away for hours is functional weightlifting. Hours of repetition-maximum (RM) hoeing gives a harder abdominal, arm, and gluteal workout than it looks.

Healthline software still isn't uploading my own photos.
At left above, a photo of a statue with too much
lumbar curve/hyperlordosis to be healthy,
but in general doing functional weightlifting.
Use your muscles to prevent overarching like this when
you
swing a sledge, a kettlebell, or other weight.
For Fitness Fixer posts on neutral spine and hyperlordosis,
click the photo or here.


Over the winter while visiting home in Asia, my husband Paul and I went to a workman's shop. The store-keeps remembered us and smiled. The first time we went there years ago, they were so sure we were lost tourists, they took our shoulder and gestured at a restaurant. In the best Thai I could manage, I explained that Paul is a carpenter, has done forge metal work, and loves old-world tools, strong bamboo handles, and hand-hammered metal. They smile each year we return. In the US, we live in a crowded urban area with minimal bricked exterior in deep shade from surrounding buildings. Vegetable gardens don't grow. Paul wanted to plant my Mother's field - a brambled overgrown area.

In the Thai tool store, I explained with the words I knew that Paul was looking for a specific Thai tool, shaped like a backward shovel, that you use in overhead action, like a mattock (flat bladed pick).
Quickly, excitedly, word went from the store-keep, to her friend in the next shop, to the next, and next:
"Man who good to Mother of wife!"

The coconut telegraph was happy. We bought two heavy tools, called "job" in Thai. Both had thick lovely bamboo handles. One was giant sized for Paul, the other for me. Fun getting them through flights and US customs.

Mom had asked a local man what it would take to clear her field, and he told her a blowtorch, a machine plow, three men, and a week. Paul and I cleared it in one day in early April with a digging stick and the Thai hoe-shovels. The ground was half frozen. Six, or so hours massive exertion - first clearing brush and tall grasses, then hours of half-squats to seize handfuls of stalks, standing back up to pull them with grip strength. Then excavating slabs of concrete and discarded materials with a pry bar, the Thai digging tools, and bare armed weight lifting.

The packs of seeds we had scattered in assorted flowerpots, pans, shoeboxes, and containers sprouted over just a week into tiny plants - broccoli, cabbage, pea, hot and sweet peppers, strawberries, eggplants, and assorted spices. We have been learning about complementary planting - plants, just like people, who are better and healthier with specific other kinds of plants so that chemical fertilizer isn't needed. We are learning about plants that repel pests, instead of using insecticides.

We got a rain barrel to reduce water bills. We attached an old broken hose. The holes made it a natural soaker hose. We poked more holes and arranged it around the garden for drip irrigation. We don't know the water quality of either the rain or from the tap. We will send six dollars and a soil sample to an agricultural university for testing. Maybe other toxic things are in that landfill that we don't want the vegetables absorbing. Maybe commercial food factories have the same problem. Many things to learn.

Weeks pass squatting and sitting well to plant seedlings, still hitting buried rubble. More lifting and hauling. Each night we are too tired to worry or think anything bad. We are barely were able to lift hands and feet. I consider what people for thousands of years have been doing just for subsistence farming, day after day, year after year. I thought of Fitness Fixer success story Ivy and her story - Farm Work, Lifestyle Exercise, and Preventing Overuse Pain.

We thought we planted everything, then found a half pack of pea seeds left. Paul mentioned we didn't have one more container for them. I laughed, "we didn't have a pot to pea in."

Ideas:
Before the 2008 election, a video appeared by Roger Doiron (I don't know him, just liked the video). He asked the next President to grow a garden. It did come true. Here is his viewpoint of getting your own garden started, showing various bending, occasionally good:



If the movie does not appear, click YouTube video URL
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOXtNdQxGw8&feature=player_embedded



Related:

---
Read success stories of these methods and send your own.
Questions come in by the hundreds. I make posts from fun ones. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here by clicking labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, or in the Fitness Fixer Index.

Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books. Get certified
- DrBookspan.com/Academy.
---

Image by kev_walsh via Flickr


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Permalink | 3 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Health Homework Becomes AntiObesity Chronic Disease Reality Check

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

Everything that's wrong with America

Jeff & Sabrina sent me an e-mail that their 7th grade son was given a school assignment about the "proper amount of calories to have a normal weight" but with junk foods listed in the menus.

They made a video of the events, explaining,
"Could it be that our schools are actually Suspect Number One in fostering obesity and chronic illness?"

This is not a surprise. I have taught at medical schools and attended medical conferences that serve unhealthy foods. I was on a national committee to determine nutrition consensus statements where the box lunches served had cookies, sodas, processed bread, cured meat and cheese sandwiches, "sports bars" which are candy in an expensive wrapper, and gloppy fatty dressing. I have received many letters from doctors and fitness instructors that they can't be expected to eat right, or even exercise enough given their busy schedules. This is not fitness. Fitness is not appearances, or being unhealthy while giving medical advice to others, or taking stimulant drugs to stay awake to work extra jobs to support a spending habit, or doing repetitions of artificial exercises 10 times, then returning to slouching and bad bending to pick up your gym bag. Fitness is how you think, move, act, and help the world be better.

We need some role models. Click the arrow to watch the video.




If the video does not appear on your screen, click their link
http://www.vegsource.com/articles2/media_willie1.htm
The video introduces their documentary, PROCESSED PEOPLE, with interviews with leading health experts.


Related Posts - Nutrition WeightLoss Mindset:
Related Posts - Fun Healthier Nutrition:

---
Read success stories of these methods and send your own. Questions come in by the hundreds. I make posts from selected ones. Before asking, see if your answers are already here by clicking labels under posts, links in posts, and archives at right.

Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
Become certified through the Academy - Dr.Bookspan.com/Academy
Find your topics on the Fitness Fixer Index, and see
Dr. Jolie Bookspan's books on her website.
---

Image title "Everything That's Wrong With America by msmail via Flickr
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Labels: , , , , , ,

Permalink | 2 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Fast Fitness - Add Balance, Stability, and Portability to Military Press - Handstand Pushups

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Here is Fast Friday Fitness - If you like lifting weight overhead for upper body strength, you don't need to wait to go to a gym, or to get weights or equipment.

Get more exercise, practice balance, and shoulder and arm stability, with handstand dips:
  1. Do a handstand against a wall. An easy way is to stand with your back about a foot or so from a wall, crouch down and put one foot, then the other, high on the wall.
  2. With good judgment, do upside down pushups (dips).
  3. Vary the depth of each dip, speed of each, speed you can do a number of dips, and distance of your hands from the wall to vary the exercise.
Robert Davis sent in his video of how to do handstand pushups. Blogger is still having trouble uploading visuals. Click this link to watch it:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/35939272@N05/3409818688/

he writes, "I replaced the military press with this. It is portable for one! Ever notice how pronounced male gymnasts shoulders and arms are? They do things like this:) "


Robert was a weightlifter who hurt his back with conventional lifting (bad bending and overarching the lower spine). He rehabbed quickly with Fitness Fixer techniques and has been sending in his success stories one after the next. He writes:
"This was not a very problematic exercise as I had been used to destroying my shoulders with mega high weight LOL. But this is different because of the engagement of muscle groups that control stabilization.

"But yeah, I have been doing that in place of military press and see how it is more beneficial as the stabilizers have to kick in more then being benched or using a machine.

"Once again thank you and I think people should really listen to you. I am glad I did because I have no need to go in to get scanned or be told I need surgery or something silly ;)

"Like I said I am not into pro body building, I just did it to stay "fit" and look fit as I thought it was. But after going thru this, it is not all that functional to pound out reps of heavy weight and not be able to do a plank or walk/sit straight. I lifted enough just to have "lean muscle" but not to be huge. But I realize now this is easily done safely with your methods and I do not need a gym."

Good brain and body training Robert!

Related Posts:

Robert's Success Stories:

---
Read and contribute your own success stories of these methods. Before asking questions, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
For answers to personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions. Limited Class spaces for personal evaluation. Top students may apply to certify through DrBookspan.com/Academy. See Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---


Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Permalink | 2 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Secret To Get Better and Fitter

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
What magic secret exercise or machine or supplement makes you fitter?

Fitness Fixer reader Jilly wrote in to ask:
" I am a 65 yr old woman and have no strength in my upper body; I cannot push myself up even by 1 inch but just lie floundering on the floor! How do I start rectifying this to be able to do even a straightforward push up?"

How to get better? Just like anything else, Try. Practice. The body responds. Work and you improve. Money should be that easy.

Remember that Olympic athletes are sore for days after workouts. They fall and fail thousands of times, get back up and work more. Like learning a language - start with nothing, and the more you work, the better you become.

Click the arrow to watch this short video that reminds what practice can achieve:





Everything is Possible - video powered by Metacafe




Retrain your body to move in natural ways, not just in one up/down or side-side motion of gym exercises. Use daily life as your built-in all day strengthener. That is the difference between "doing exercise" then going back to weak unhealthy life, and real healthy living. That is what Fitness Fixer is for.

Have a real life and enjoy the quick gains. Proceed safely, and have fun. Send in your success stories. Stay inspired.


---
Read and contribute your own success stories of these methods. Questions come in by the hundreds. I make posts from fun ones. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. For answers to personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions.
Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books, take a Class, get certified
DrBookspan.com/Academy.
---

Labels: , , , , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

91 Year Old Keeps Moving With Drumming

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Keep moving no matter what your age.

A video should appear below of 91-year-old drummer Jerry. Chick the arrow in the center of the movie box or at bottom left of the video box to watch her. You do not need HD to watch it. It is viewable at various resolutions.




Stay active, keep moving, be happy. It keeps you vital, more with each year.

Related Posts:

For more ideas click the labels "aging" and "spirit" under this post. Labels give all Fitness Fixer posts about that topic. The label "video-movie" shows all Fitness Fixer posts containing a video to watch and enjoy learning how to be happy and fit.


---
Read success stories of these methods and send your own. Questions come in by the hundreds. I make posts from selected ones. Before asking, see if your answers are already here by clicking labels under posts, links in posts, and archives at right.

Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.

Find your topics on the Fitness Fixer Index, and see Jolie's books on her website.
---

Labels: , , , ,

Permalink | 1 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

91 Year Old Decides to Run and Sets Record

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Grace didn't have a lifetime of track and field experience. She lived a life of real movement, called functional exercise, raising 11 children and doing chores. She decided to run a race. One month later, she ran the race and broke a world record.

A video should appear below of Grace Foster. Click the small, right-pointing arrow at bottom-left of the video box to watch her straight body positioning, the race, and her happy family.



Grace exercises daily, stretches, eats healthful food. Other racing record holders over age 90 will be featured in future articles.

Get moving, stay moving, be happy. It keeps you vital, more with each year.

More:

---
Read success stories of these methods and send your own. Questions come in by the hundreds. I make posts from fun ones. Before asking, see if your answers are already here by clicking labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index.
Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's books.
---

Labels: , , , , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Fast Fitness - Isometric Abs Training

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Here is Friday Fast Fitness - learn how to use your abdominal muscles for what they need to do in real life - hold your spine in neutral position, even against resistance:
  1. Lie flat, face up. Legs out straight, as if standing up. Hold a weight a few inches above the floor with arms outstretched, elbows by your ears.
  2. Lift the weight a few inches up and down, using your abdominal muscles to prevent your ribs from lifting up and to keep your back from leaving neutral position.
  3. Keep your lower back close to the floor. This is the key to making this into an effective and functional abdominal retraining exercise. Also prevent the weight from touching the floor (don't drop baby on head).

This video was made by David from Belgium with his baby Aiko, born one year ago today, Feb 27th 2008. Happy Birthday Aiko!

Click the arrow to run. If the video does not load, here is the URL:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8k4zDwce7bE




Watch how David bends well with heels down and upright body to pick up baby Aiko, and gets up again without using hands.

Press your lower back toward the floor and feel your abdominal muscles working strongly. The point of this retraining drill is to have fun learning to hold your spine stable against resistance, learn how to reduce an overly large lower back arch using the floor as a guide, then transfer that knowledge to standing and lifting overhead. This is how your abs are supposed to work in daily life when standing - to prevent the spine from overarching (overextending backward).



---
Read and contribute your own success stories of these methods. Before asking questions, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
For answers to personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions. Limited Class spaces for personal evaluation. Top students may apply to certify through DrBookspan.com/Academy. See Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Permalink | 3 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Enjoying the Change to Digital TV Signal

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
The target Feb 17th date for changing to digital television signal in the U.S. has moved to June. Numerous informational broadcasts have been made to prepare the public. Would you have been ready?




---
Have The Fitness Fixer e-mailed to you, free.
Click "updates via e-mail" - Health Expert Updates (trumpet icon) upper right column.

Find fun topics on the Fitness Fixer Index.
---

Labels: , , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Fast Fitness - Fixing Arches, Knock Knee, and Knee Pain Without Orthotics

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
Here is Fast Friday Fitness - Stop one major source of inward-turning knees (knock-knees). Click the movie arrow to run:
  1. Look at your bare legs in a mirror with feet facing straight forward.
  2. See if the knees turn inward to face more toward each other than forward.
  3. Feel how the muscles can pull outward to gently move (not force) knee position. These muscles like to be used correctly, not left unused.



Often, knees turned inward are a simple case of letting body weight sag downward onto the inside of the leg and arch of the foot, not a case of unchanging anatomy. Pain often comes from letting the knees and ankles twist, rotate, and sag. Restoring neutral position can stop this source of pain. Don't yank or force one segment, like the knee, causing problems in others. Restoring neutral means healthy position for the whole leg.

Orthotics are hard inserts that hold your foot in a certain position. Orthotics are different from cushion inserts that make a softer landing for each step. You can control leg and foot position without orthotics. That doesn't mean orthotics don't work, just that you can do it without them. It's cheaper and you get a free leg muscle stability workout at the same time.

Remember, don't force. If it hurts, it's wrong. Creating new strain instead of restoring function is not health or good thinking. All you are doing is restoring muscle length and using that to learn how to stand neutral, not tilted so much that you compress your joints.

Related Fitness Fixer:

---
Questions come in by the hundreds. I make articles from fun ones. See if your answers are already here - click Fitness Fixer labels, links, archives, and Index.
Read success stories and send your own. For personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions.
Limited Class space for personal feedback. Top students may earn certification through
DrBookspan.com/Academy. More fun in Dr. Bookspan's Books.
---

posture.mpg filmed for us by David from Belgium.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Permalink | 4 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment

Beijing Olympics & Martial Arts Class Teach Common Sense Cooperation

Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

The opening ceremonies of the Beijing Summer Olympics were a quiet, powerful reminder of mutual cooperation as path to strength, beauty, and peace. Thousands danced in metaphor for healthy society - that we cooperate to create a masterpiece, and each individual is significant. Responsibility and support flow both ways.

Paul and I were in China in 2001 for a martial arts competition. I hope to post training stories with some of the motivating photos from there. Discipline and eagerness to do good were all around us. We haven't been back to China yet, although we live in other areas of Asia for part of each year. In many places where we live there, human, animal, and machine-powered vehicles of every description overflow the roads, in all directions at once, often with no traffic lights or signs to guide. Both lanes may flow in either or both directions at once. Turns occur any place needed at the moment. Problems are infrequent because people are taught cooperation from early age. It is an Eastern philosophy, way of life, discipline, and virtue. Words are not needed. Westerns who are not aware that cooperation and thoughtfulness is taking place mistake this highly evolved order for disorder. When tourists see someone coming their way, they may not not cede way or cooperate, but insist that others are in their way. Traffic accidents frequently involve tourists.

When I teach martial arts classes in the US, I teach beginning students something that startles them. If a blow is coming toward you, don't stand there and get hit. Move out of the way. Some students first insist on trying to bat my arm/leg/head out of the way with theirs. I tell them not to do that. If two arms hit each other, whose will win, theirs or the other person's? You don't know? Better to get out of the way instead. What if it is an incoming baseball bat. Or weapon. Or an opponent you have gravely misjudged,even if they only seem to be an old lady. In Zen the concept is called, "Don't be there." In common sense it is called "duck." Some beginners insist the air is theirs to stand in and they want to meet an incoming object with their body. Instead of ducking, or at the least, deflecting it without damage to any party (or maybe training some discipline and arm hardening techniques), they throw their arm up to meet mine, then depart class cursing and exaggerating to administration that they broke their arm, and that they were right to deliberately disobey the teacher who was teaching a valuable lesson called, don't hurt yourself or others. In class, I give the students a moving drill. They practice a specific footwork drill to keep them moving. I walk around the class - right in their way, one student at a time. They are confused. Some try to push or hit me to get me out of *their* way. Some try to stand still to resist, but get deflected off balance. This continues until one student remembers the point of the lesson. They get the smart idea to go *around* me. The message - polite, cooperation. No confrontation. No hitting someone in your way, or believing no one owns the ground but you. Just smile and say excuse me. It seems to be a titanic message to some.


Click the arrow to watch group traffic cooperation in this short movie from a street in Vietnam.

Paul and I are comically (to locals in the street) co-occupying a tiny front basket of a bicycle rickshaw. Locals routinely travel by pedicab, but our height and Paul's epic shoulders blocking the driver's view and feet at the same time caused so much merriment by on-lookers that it won us many new friends that day. The driver looked to weigh no more than 100 pounds (45 kilos), pedaling a steel bicycle weighting at least 200 pounds (90kg). In another post I will tell of Paul's and my ride on an Olympic bobsled on an actual competition track. A professional driver took first seat of the 4 man sled, and we put Paul in second seat, as it was the only place for his long legs. For new readers, Paul is almost 7 feet tall (2 meters, 13cm). We were supposed to have a 4G ride (4 times the usual pull of gravity on earth), but Paul's giant feet, it turned out, prevented the driver's elbows from moving enough to steer the 15 sharp turns. We got quite an extra ride - the wildest the driver said he ever had. To be continued in a future post on g-forces.

China posts to come - Athletes are afraid of the squat toilets, why some Chinese citizens wear masks, Eastern societal practices that promote physical health through advanced age, answers to reader questions that pile in, and more on Olympics and human potential.


Movie © by Paul and Jolie

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Permalink | 0 Comments| Email Post

Post your comment