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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: posture, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. QUIT SLOUCHING!! Have I got your attention? :)  My husband sends...



QUIT SLOUCHING!! Have I got your attention? :) 

My husband sends me great info like this regularly (he’s a fitness trainer). These tips are extremely useful for anyone who sits all day (and probably incorrectly). It’s not just the old “sit up straight” talk either:

  • Sitting provides stability to perform high visual & motor control tasks 
  • General Goal: Optimal Sitting Posture = Design of Chair + Posture 
  • Specific Goal: Seated Minimal Muscle Cocontraction + Neutral Spine 
  • Utilize Backrest & Do Not Slump Forward (Excessive Kyphosis) 
  • General Backrest Inclination: 90-105° 
  • Lumbar supports — Help Achieve Neutral Lordotic Curve 

(via National Posture Institute)

Another great reminder: make a point of regularly sitting up, stretching, and moving around. Got a laptop? Try switching during the day from a seated desk to a standing desk (if you have one; or if you have a bookcase with adjustable shelves you can set one to the right height and try that out).

Watch out for your health, because if you don’t no one else will!

ps: If you know who actually created this medical illustration, please let me know! That name embedded in this JPG is not the illustrator. So, another tip: Don’t claim to own illustrations that aren’t yours! GRRR!)



0 Comments on QUIT SLOUCHING!! Have I got your attention? :)  My husband sends... as of 1/1/1900
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2. Take a Break by Morgan Mandel

Since becoming unemployed at the beginning of the year, I've had more time to write. My goal is 1,000 words each day on my paranormal thriller, Forever Young. Sometimes I achieve it, sometimes go over. Also, sometimes, my neck or back gets sore.

Writers do face a danger of injuring themselves if they don't use proper posture. I know I tense up when I type fast and unconsciously sit the wrong way, lean over, or press certain keys harder than the others.

To try and offset this tendency, I've decided to take a break when I type. It's not always easy to do that when I'm in the flow, but I do it as soon as I can in those instances. How I do this is by keeping a kitchen timer next to the computer. I set it for 35-40 minutes. When the timer goes off, I get up and move around for maybe 5 minutes, then go back to work. It seems to help the cause.

What do you do to prevent writing injuries and soreness?



Morgan Mandel
http://morganmandel.blogspot.com/
Killer Career now 99 cents at
Kindle and Smashwords.

10 Comments on Take a Break by Morgan Mandel, last added: 2/11/2011
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3. Posturing for Beauty

Magda, the champion dancer, talks about posture. She says, "Imagine that you have a coat, a heavy coat, and that you have filled its every pocket with stones. Now imagine that you are wearing that coat, that your shoulders bear its weight. There is no tension in your neck, no hunch around your ears, because the coat that you are wearing keeps your shoulders in their place and your arms proper in their sockets. You reach high, but always from an anchored place. Your neck is strong. Your head sits right."

She talks and I watch her move, I watch her glide across the room—this gorgeous creature. I think how easy it seems—standing straight, shoulders back, life in repose. I think of how, from the earliest days on frozen ponds and ice skating rinks, I had all the inner joy and all the speed and all the height, but I lacked posture. I lacked the courage to present myself to the world, to come out from behind myself and say, Here, at last, am I. That has carried forward. Writing, for example, is myself once removed. It is me, behind words, inside them.

Is it too late, at my age, to finally stand tall?

No. Because I want this. I want beauty.

2 Comments on Posturing for Beauty, last added: 10/16/2009
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