Lower Leg: Lets cut the lower leg into front and back. Usually the right side is tighter from the gas pedal, yet the left side could be if you drive stick shift or motorcycle. To stretch the tibialis anterior= roll your toes under and stand on the front of your foot- well put weight on it. To stretch the back of your calf= put your toe pad on a step or curb, than slowly allow your heel to drop. Or a wide lunge sometimes helps to stretch it. To strengthen the back of your calf muscle= stand on that step or curb and slowly raise and lower your heel. So you look like you are standing on your tip toes, than stretching your calf. |
PLEASE REMEMBER: - Have great posture - Drink your water - Stretch daily - Strengthen daily - Walk/ swim/ jog at least 3xs a week for 25 minutes - Take a weekly epsom salt bath - Play as much as you work
Blog Archive
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2011
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February
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- 3 Water Workouts
- Stretch & Strengthen Quads
- Traveling for the season, help your body
- Spiritual Balancing
- Some News/ Helpful Hints of Cancer
- Running Uphill, Downhill, or Flat??
- Physical BALANCE of the body.
- Nutrition Guide for the Pregnant Vegetarian
- Fun New Year's Family Resolution that work!
- New Years Resolution: Loose Weight w/ formulas
- Stretch & Strengthen Pec & Neck
- High Heel Shoes
- Headaches
- Elbow Pain
- What is diabetes?
- Are your fingers tingling? or numb?
- A Sample Workout ~1hr
- Stretch and Strengthen Outer Thigh:
- Stretch and Strengthen Side/ Obliques:
- Stretch and Strengthen Calf:
- Stretch and Strengthen Bicep:
- Stretch SCM & Strengthen Rhomboids
- Stretch pecs and Strengthen upper back
- Stretch and Strengthen Hips / Low Back
- Stretch and Strengthen Glutes
- Stretch and Strengthen forearm
- Strengthen Abs & Stretch Low Back
- Stretch and Strengthen Lower Leg:
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February
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2/25/11
Stretch and Strengthen Lower Leg:
Strengthen Abs & Stretch Low Back
Strengthen the abdominals There are many ab exercises. The basic crunch has you lay on your back. Your feet should be on the floor with the knees bent; this should help to rotate your pelvis so the low back 'gap' disappears into the floor. The hands can touch (not grasp) behind the neck. Contract the abs to bring the shoulders off the floor focusing on the abs working. Look up as you do this, not at your knees. Stretch the Low Back This is a stretch done well on the floor, facing up. You start with bringing one knee into the chest; place your hands under the knee joint (not on top of it). After about 10 seconds switch legs, than 10 more seconds bring both legs into the chest. If you would like to increase the stretch further into the entire spine; bring your head up to tuck into your knees. |
Stretch and Strengthen forearm
Stretch your forearm Your forearms are unbalanced. The pronator and flexors and are strong so they need to be stretched .- With wrist/ arm/ elbow straight out in front of you. Allow your fingers to drop towards the floor keeping the palm up. Use your free hand to add a slight pull on the fingers to help bring them toward the ground and towards the body. Strengthen your forearms - Strengthening can be done with a weight. You should not need to strengthen your forearms, unless there is a physical rehab/ existing problem. - With the forearm on your knees with the palm down. Start with the wrist/ hand relaxed down, then grab a small weight and slowly raise the top of the hands/ knuckles toward the ceiling. This works the top part (extensors). You can also work the bottom/ flexors by having the palms up. |
Stretch and Strengthen Glutes
Glutes These musles are traditionally weak. They do not get much work but are needed for the body to stabailze, so they get tight quickly and cause sciatic type problems. Glutes need to be stretched and strengthened. Glute Stretch --- leg out, put other foot over leg- hug knee - BACK STRAIGHT ---Can do this with a bent bottom leg. Glute and some outer thigh stretch---Can do on back or in chair ----- cross ankle to knee - hug leg with straight back. Low Back and Glute stretngthening - keep torso straight and lift the straight leg back. You can advance this by lifting the opposite arm at the same time. Look up. |
Stretch and Strengthen Hips / Low Back
Lets Move your Hips / Low Back Lets face it-- you do ALOT of sitting in 1 day. Sitting keeps your hips in 1 place, creating soreness and "tightness" in your hips and low back. Sitting also helps to compress your spine so you actually become shorter after work! When you do sit: Do not sit on your wallet or foot. Do not cross your legs at your knees. Do not lean to one side. This action keeps your pelvis twisted and pulled in an uneven way the whole time you sit like that. To loosen your hips: Walk with super large steps for at least 20 minutes. Do some glute stretches throughout the day. Get up and move about every hour ------------ Here are 3 movements you can do. 1. Glute Stretch- can be done in a chair of on the floor. -Keep your foot flexed during the entire stretch (helps the knee). -Place your R ankle on L knee and gently push the R knee away from body. -switch legs 2. This is a specific movement to use the sacro-illiac ligaments. Hip-hiker -- Lay on your back with your legs straight -- Slowly bring one hip up towards your shoulder while the other is neutral or slightly lowered towards your foot. -- Than swap sides -- It should take about 5 seconds for you to completely raise 1 hip and release it before switching sides. 3. This is another specific movement for your SI joint/ ligaments. -- Lay on your side with your knees bent -- Allowing the weight of your top leg to rest on the bottom leg (this is important as to not include other muscles not needed) slowly bring your top knee further forward than the bottom knee. -- (The thighs always stay on top of each other) -- Switch sides by laying on your other side and bring your top knee forward |
Stretch pecs and Strengthen upper back
Stretch pecs and Strengthen upper back
Strengthen your upper back
The upper back is weak/ tight since you have rounded shoulders the back gets totally stretched out. To strengthen them you could backstroke swim, or you move the shoulder blades into eachother, like a row. Starting with the arms straight in front of you than bringing the arms by the side squeezing your shoulderblades tog.
Stretch your pecs
Your chest is always strong/ tight since your arms are always in front of the body. You need to hold this stretch in a doorway for 10-20 seconds. The elbows can be at shoulder level with arms bent, and/or your arms straight with the elbows at ear level.
Stretch SCM & Strengthen Rhomboids
Stretch and Strengthen Bicep:
Bicep: Stretch: You can do this holding your hands either palm up or thumb up, or you can combine the two starting with palm up and when the weight is curled ending with the thumb up. You can also do this with your elbow at your waist and keeping your forearms straight in front of you as well as your elbows at your side and forearms winged out further away from your body. |
Stretch and Strengthen Calf:
Calf: Stretch: You an use a step- and drop your heel. If you lean forward at the waist, you will stretch your calf and hamstring with some glute also, just make sure to keep your hips parallel. Or do a lunge and feel the stretch on your back leg/ calf Start with your feet flat on the floor, or half on a step... ...Than raise up onto your toes. |
Stretch and Strengthen Side/ Obliques:
Side/ Obliques: Stretch: Feet under hips and bend over at the side than raise your arm overhead. Strengthen: First lay over the ball on your side, than crunch up on each side. Arms can go at head or chest level. Legs off to side, twist at spine, crunch up and look up at the ceiling, not at chest. |
Stretch and Strengthen Outer Thigh:
Outer Thigh: This gets worked when you sit, stand, walk, run, and more. You have to get a little creative with stretching your outer thigh. This should also be done before your glute stretch. Stretch: Sit on your feet than lean to the side almost putting your glute on the floor. Hold yourself up with arms. Keep your feet away from the wall and lean your side into the wall. This helps if you cannot bend your knees. Strengthen Start with you on your side and raise your top leg parallel to the floor.... Raise your foot to the ceiling, than slowly lower it and begin again. |
Use a theraband- place it so the tension comes from the opposite direction (from left side). Attach it to you shoe, move your right leg straight out sideways away from your body, keeping your body upright.
On all 4s. Lift the knee parallel to the floor, keeping the foot tucked, then back down to the other knee without touching the floor, then back up parallel. If you bring your knee slightly behind you, you will also work your glutes and hams a bit. Not the best pic, sorry.
A Sample Workout ~1hr
First we stretch -Neck (up, down, side, side, half moon roll) -Pecs (forearms on doorway 90*) -Shoulder Joint (arm circles) -Upper Back (pull on doorknob) -Sides (feet tog, lean body to side) -Hamstrings (foot up on something and touch toes) -Quads (keep knees tog and hold ankle) -Inner Thigh (separate legs and touch each foot) -Hip Flexors (deep lunge) -Low Back (lay on back and bring knee to chest) -Abs (cobra stretch) -Calf (down dog, take turns with each leg) -Back mvt (cat - cow) than (child's pose) Movement - cardio portion 1 min run forward 1 min run backward 1 min skip (distance or height) 1 min skip backward 1 min cross your feet over- zig zag pattern do this 2, 3, or 4 times depending on your ability Strengthen 15 lunge forward (knee never pass toes) 15 lunge backward 15 squats (knee never pass toes) 15 push ups 15 leg raises 15 superman 15 crunches/ sit ups (look up, not at chest) do this 3,4,5 times can also use weight depending on ability Some more options -Bear crawl- distance 1 min (face down walk all 4s) -Crab walk- distance 1 min (face up walk hand/ feet) -Mountain Climbers- 1 min (knees through arms) -Jump feet to plank than to hands 30 times -walk your hands up and down to plank 15 times Stretch again do the top list and take a little more time with it. |
Are your fingers tingling? or numb?
Lets see what you may be doing. The fingers have main nerve bundles going into them. They come from the arm (radial, median and ulnar nerve). The radial hits the thumb and half 2nd finger. The median hits half 2, all 3, half 4. The ulnar nerve hits half 4 and pinky finger. Tingling can happen when the nerve is somehow slightly squished or almost all the way occluded. There are a few "common" locations where the nerve is more apt to getting squeezed; in the finger itself, than the wrist, the elbow, the pec, or the neck. Please do not have surgery for "carpal tunnel or thoracic outlet" without letting a massage therapist and/ or chiropractor looking at that nerve pathway. The wrist can become compressed since we use it so much, typing, lifting, bending, catching ourselves. The best way to watch your wrist is to keep it straight (so letting your wrist bend while typing, carrying a waitress tray, doing push-ups, and clutching something tightly into you is not a good idea). Your elbow usually gets painful when you hit it, or from high impact going to immediate stopping power. An example would be tennis and golf. The pec and neck would be tight from shortening of the muscles which usually come from bad posture. If you want more information on the chest and neck look at past issues. You can self massage your forearm. Use lotion and start at the base of the wrist and go as far into the elbow as you can, also go in all directions around the forearm as you can reach. |
What is diabetes?
What is diabetes? Diabetes is a condition where the blood sugar level is higher than normal. Normal is 80-120. There are two main types of diabetes. Type 1 diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes. It is usually seen in young people. Type 2 diabetes - usually non insulin-dependent diabetes. It tends to affect adults and overweight people. There are also other types of diabetes. Pregnancy diabetes. This is known as gestational diabetes. It's associated with pregnancy and symptoms usually disappear after the birth. If you get gestational diabetes, you have an increased risk of developing one of the main types of diabetes later in life. Secondary diabetes. This is when diabetes is caused as the result of another condition, ex. inflammation of the pancreas (alcohol), or by the use of certain medication such as diuretics or steroids (the most common cause). Normally blood glucose levels stay within narrow limits throughout the day: 4 to 8mmol/l. But they are higher after meals and usually lowest in the morning. The Joslin Diabetes Center clinical guidelines recommend the following target blood glucose goals for people with diabetes. Pre-meal (fasting) glucose 90-130 mg/dL. Two-hour post-meal glucose: less than 160mg/dL. Late-stage diabetic complications When very high levels of blood glucose are present for years, it leads to damage of the small blood vessels. Late-stage complications do not usually develop for 10 to 15 years with Type 1 diabetes. In Type 2 diabetes, however, symptoms can appear close to the time of actual diagnosis because the disease may go undetected for longer. Diabetic Retinopathy (small blood vessels in retina are damaged) or Diabetic Macular Edema (blood vessels leak making swelling in macula of retina) that can cause blindness. 1 in 2 develop eye problems ranging from glaucoma to cataracts. Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness 20-74yrs. Make sure your have eye exams yearly. Nephropathy (kidney disease) Diabetic kidney disease that can lead to kidney failure. Diabetic neuropathy (nerve disease) that can cause foot ulcers and foot infections. 1 in 4 have foot complications, so take the time to inspect feet and keep them healthy and moisturized. Atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries), particularly in smokers and those with high blood pressure and abnormal fat levels in the blood. Cardiovascular disease, such as heart attack, hypertension, heart failure, stroke and problems caused by poor circulation, ex. gangrene in the worst cases. The main factors that increase your risk are: smoking--so stop! high blood pressure raised levels of Triglycerides (fats) such as cholesterol in the blood. Info from NetDoctor.co.uk and Time Magazine Oct 2008. |
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