Namasteman
At-Your-Desk Yoga Attention, workaholics and multitaskers!
(Canyon Ranch Connection Yoga Article)
The average American works 1,978 hours per year, which, according to the United Nations’ International Labor Organization, is more than the citizens of any other industrialized country. We spend a lot of time at work, so if there’s one place where we should look for ways to be healthier, it’s at the office.
If you need additional incentive, consider this – especially if you work sitting down. Eight of 10 adults suffer significant lower back pain at some time, and lower back pain is the leading cause of missing work in the United States. Sitting for extended periods puts more strain on the lower back than jumping, lifting or twisting – the only thing that’s harder on the lumbar spine is lifting while sitting.
The bad news doesn’t stop there. Sitting slumped in a chair for eight-plus hours a day can lead to pain in the neck, shoulders and upper back, as well as in the vulnerable small of the back.
There’s plenty you can do to ease and protect your back while you’re on the job. Integrating simple yoga poses into your workday is a practical, effective and efficient way to minimize back pain, improve flexibility, promote emotional well-being and maximize mental performance.
“Yoga is a vast discipline that encompasses spirituality, breathing, flexibility, movement and fitness,” says Deanna Pierce, movement therapist at Canyon Ranch in Tucson. “You can dedicate a whole lifetime to studying its many aspects and not exhaust all it has to teach. Personally, I look at yoga from a place of body mechanics: Just how good are your body mechanics and how can you improve them?”
She points out that the “Stand up straight!” rule of posture too often collapses when we sit down.
“Even if you stand perfectly, using the legs, feet and pelvis all in alignment, you still need to be conscious about what happens when you sit,” says Pierce. “Too often, when we sit, we plop in a chair with the pelvis tucked under and shoulders rounded forward. That bows the spine, pulling the head and shoulders forward and down, closing the chest and eventually causing pain in the shoulders, back and neck.”
To correct your sitting posture, see yourself from a different perspective.
“When someone looks at you from the side, you should look like a right angle. You should fold not at your waistline, but at your hip joint, so that most of your weight is on the backs of the thighs, not the buttocks.”
And the pelvis should not be tucked under: It should remain directly under the spine to support it, allowing you to sit up tall.
Don’t forget your feet: Be sure they’re placed firmly on the floor. It helps, too, if they can be bare, says Mark Naseck, a yoga teacher at Canyon Ranch in Tucson.
“Take your shoes off when you sit at your desk so your toes and feet can breathe,” says Naseck. “It seems like a small thing, but all the nadis and meridians (reflex points associated with the chi or life-energy pathways) are in the feet and hands and ears. When you can move your toes and the balls of your feet, the rest of the body is more relaxed.”
Naseck not only preaches dressing down at the office, he also advocates an innovative seating alternative: an exercise ball.
“I want people to lift their sternums (breastbones) when they sit. When you lift the sternum, the shoulders and head automatically go back and you lose that forward stoop,” he says.
Basically, it’s all about core strength: Lifting the sternum uses abdominal muscles from the pubic bone to the sternum, integrating and strengthening the whole torso.
“When you sit on a ball, those abdominal muscles must be lifted and pulled into the spine – or you’ll fall off,” Naseck says. “It’s that simple. And when you sit correctly, you keep your spine supple, allowing fluid to flow into the spinal channel and preventing the spine and the muscles around it from locking up.”
Note: When sitting on an exercise ball, allow your pelvis to come forward and your knees to shift slightly down toward the floor. This position promotes a lifted sternum.
In addition to adjusting body alignment, Naseck outlines a simple strategy for easing the back at your desk: Sit with the chest lifted and the abdomen muscles engaged. Clasp your hands behind your back. Beginners may want to simply grasp their fingers or wrists. Advanced: Put your palms together. Straighten arms behind your back while simultaneously lifting your sternum even higher. Breathe deeply 10 times. “This releases pressure and tight muscles under the shoulder blades, which are connected to the muscles in the neck, and which, in turn, cause most tension headaches,” Naseck explains.
Expand the stretch into the lower back by maintaining the position just described while moving your chair away from your desk and bending forward. Lift arms over the head as you bend forward from the hips. Breathe deeply 10 times before releasing the hands and slowly sitting up. And one of the most important tactics for keeping the chi flowing? Just breathe.
“It may sound odd, but lots of people don’t have a natural breath anymore,” says Pierce. “But when you sit up straight, the hips open and the diaphragm relaxes, and that creates the opportunity for a natural breath.”
Sitting tall may be all you need to do to restore healthy natural breath.
When breathing no longer comes naturally, however, go back to these basics: Let the belly be soft – if you normally keep it “sucked in,” let it go. Place the tip of the tongue at the roof of your mouth where your teeth and the roof of the mouth meet. Connecting with this point “keeps the physical, mental emotional and spiritual bodies open,” allowing the body to relax more fully. Inhale through the nose, becoming aware of inflating the lower, center and upper lobes of the lungs, in that order. Feel the lungs fill from the bottom to top, and feel your rib cage expanding at your sides and in back. Exhale, lifting the belly gently off the thighs. “Inhale profoundly, as if you are smelling a fresh flower, then exhale every atom of air. The goal is to feel the body move and the ribs float as you breathe,” Pierce explains. Performing this breathing exercise just three or four minutes every hour can keep you relaxed and re-energized, mentally and physically. And when hectic schedules make every minute precious, that’s precisely the time to incorporate a regimen like this into your life.
“Just as we eat three times a day to nourish the body, we need to nourish the spirit, or soul, or essence – however you think of it – regularly,” says Naseck. “This is the basis of holistic medicine and the spiritual arts.”
To the Owner/Manager,
Please allow me to introduce myself. My name is Robert Schwartz, and I am the author of the new spirituality book Your Soul’s Gift: The Healing Power of the Life You Planned Before You Were Born (ISBN 9780977679461), which was published in March. My intention in this book (as well as my first book, Your Soul’s Plan: Discovering the Real Meaning of the Life You Planned Before You Were Born), is to help people see the deeper meaning and purpose their life challenges, emerge from victim consciousness, and heal. Both books are are available from New Leaf, Ingram, Baker & Taylor, and DeVorss.
May I ask if you would consider offering one or both books in your store?
If you do decide to carry the new book, I would be honored if you would consider featuring it in your newsletter. The cover image is available on Amazon, or I can send a high res jpg to you.
To give you more information about my new book, I’ve copied some descriptive text below.
Also copied below is an article I wrote about the new book. You are welcome to use this article in your newsletter to promote the book.
I invite you to sign up for my email newsletter on the first page of my web site.
Thank you for your kind consideration.
With love,
Robert Schwartz
http://www.yoursoulsplan.com
In his groundbreaking first book, Your Soul’s Plan, Robert Schwartz brought the idea of pre-birth planning into the mainstream.
Now, his brilliant sequel Your Soul’s Gift: The Healing Power of the Life You Planned Before You Were Born delves even deeper by exploring the pre-birth planning of spiritual awakening, miscarriage and abortion, caregiving, abusive relationships, sexuality, incest, adoption, poverty, suicide, rape, and mental illness. There’s also a chapter about the pre-birth planning we do with our future pets. Working with a team of gifted mediums, Schwartz brings forth great love and wisdom from the other side to explain why such experiences are planned and the deep, soul-level healing they can create.
Through the stories in Your Soul s Gift you can:
Develop greater self-love as you become aware of the tremendous courage it takes for you to plan a life on Earth and to live the life you planned
Emerge from victim consciousness to know yourself as the powerful creator of your life
Forgive those who have hurt you and create a lasting inner peace
About The Author
In a personal session with a medium in 2003, author Robert Schwartz was astonished to speak with nonphysical beings who knew everything about him – not just what he had done in life, but also what he had thought and felt. They told him that he had planned many of his most difficult experiences before he was born. Realizing that knowledge of pre-birth planning would bring great healing to people and allow them to understand the deeper purpose of their life challenges, he decided to devote his life to the study of pre-birth planning. The extraordinary insights that have emerged from his work speak to our heartfelt, universal yearning to know . . . why.
Robert Schwartz is a certified hypnotherapist who offers spiritual guidance and hypnotherapeutic regressions to help people understand their life plan. For more information please visit him online at http://www.yoursoulsplan.com.
ENDORSEMENTS
“This book is an incredible guide map to your soul and the various jewels stored inside it. Read this to reconnect with your TRUE SELF”. James Van Praagh, author of Growing Up in Heaven
“Robert Schwartz offers deep wisdom into the nature of our soul and the purpose of our lives. He explains life and karma with clarity and elegance.” Arielle Ford, author of The Soulmate Secret
“I was deeply impressed by Your Soul’s Gift. This is a fine discussion of one of the great mysteries of existence: To what degree do we plan our lives before we are born? Robert Schwartz offers a profound spiritual analysis of some of life s most difficult crises and turning points. This book is well worth reading for its novel and surprising insights into the difficulties most of us face in life.” Raymond Moody, MD, PhD, author of Life After Life
Hi Robert,
Thanks for writing me via my website https://www.namasteman.com
I visited your website and see that Meryl Hershey Beck is a facebook
connection and that may be how you got to me, not sure though.
I would be happy to speak with you about all thing s spiritual…
including your book and the possibility of it being in my bookstore.
My bookstore is connected to my other website http://www.marknaseck.com
I hope this message finds you well and I wish you many blessings
on your journey!
Mark
520 885 0471
mark@marknaseck.com
Sacred Union Here Now, LLC
Sacred Union Here Now Media