On: Bowls

Imagine, if you will, 3 bowls. These bowls are inside you, one stacked above the other.

The first is your pelvis. Already described as a bowl, it supports and holds all above it.

The second is your diaphragm. Separating the organs in your chest from the organs in your abdomen, it forms the top of the abdominal cylinder and should move gently as you breathe.

The third is in your upper chest, at the top of your lungs and about the same level as your collarbones.

This being a conceptual experiment, fill them with water. Then, think about the way you are standing or sitting. Are those bowls going to overflow? Is the water going to run out of the front, the back, even the sides?

Stand easily if you can, weight distributed in the centre of your feet. Soften your knees and ankles.

Then, come up to the pelvic bowl. Tilt it forwards and backwards, until you find the centre, neutral position.

For the diaphragm, you can feel if it is forward or backward and correct.

Ditto the shoulders. Allow them to open, don’t force, allow. A subtle external rotation and lengthening of the clavicle.

Once reflected and considered individually, check in again with all three.

This is probably one of the quickest ways of achieving optimal posture smoothly, balance the bowls, check how they move when you breathe and then, get on with the business in hand.

Of course, if you need help balancing the bowls, can’t find a neutral position or are struggling to fix it in any other way, please book in, we are happy to help.

No easy way

There is no easy way to lose weight. 

Anyone saying otherwise is trying to sell a system. 

It is a challenge between reducing energy intake, maintaining muscle and bone mass, ensuring hormonal levels are stable and slowly allowing fat mass to decrease. 

This is pretty much the only way for fat to shift and stay off. 

The commercial weight loss clubs are brilliant for support and basic nutritional advice but there is little evidence that the points or programmes offer any other benefit over self management in a well educated and motivated individual. 

However you do it, getting your weight down to a healthy point, with a BMI below 25 is probably the single most important thing you can do to improve your health, other than not smoking. 

Focus on the now

Buddists and other meditators claim that there is no past, no future, only now. Yet we spend most of our time ignoring whats in front of us and instead thinking about what has been or what might be, not being in our heads and focusing on the immediate task. This is not to say that planning (an almost unique skill in humans) is not vital, as otherwise we would be wasting ourselves spinning in circles watching a small screen, but this long term plan has to be combined with appropriate action now.

From a movement perspective, when coaching clients in new patterns, I use 2 key words  as triggers. Attention and Intention. What is the attention on and what is the intention. For example, moving the shoulder joint, the attention is on the joint, the way it feels and glides, while the intention is that the arm should move slowly and under control at all times. Many find this very hard to do as the mind tends to rebel against focusing on just one thing. The same is with running, the attention cannot be on the whole activity, as  we cannot cope with such input, but instead on just feeling the push off, or the chest postion, or another skill.

A five minute challenge, when moving next time, ask yourself: Where is my attention? What is my intention? Not just in a movement pattern but when working as well, it may provide some interesting results.

Breathe the pressure

Come play my game, I’ll test ya…

Prodigy – Breathe

So sang the Prodigy and even if Keith Flint seems more than a little bit crazy, he perhaps has a point. 

Even under pressure, we still have control over our breathing. Very often, when stressed, we tend to hold our breath slightly, the effect of which is to change to vital gas balance in our blood stream. 

Respiration is one of the only autonomic functions over which we can have conscious control, and also the one that has the most profound effect on our physiology and mental state.

With controlled breathing comes situational control, the ability to mentally step back, assess the problem, be it a run, workout or stressful issue at work and regain focus. 

One of the fastest ways to control your breath under load is wheel breathing, where you follow an inhale / exhale cycle as though blowing a wheel around, no pausing, no flat points. Instead, you consciously become aware of a smooth, slower, deep pattern that starts to bring everything else back under control. 

Even a few cycles mid workout will pay huge dividends, so if in doubt, breathe.