Saturday, July 23, 2011

non-doing

Non-doing has nothing to do with being indolent or passive. Quite the contrary. It takes great courage and energy to cultivate non-doing, both in stillness and in activity. Nor is it easy to make a special time for non-doing and to keep at it in the face of everything in our lives which needs to be done. 
Jon Kabat-Zinn

Friday, July 22, 2011

The Mindful Leader



Michael Carroll visits Google's Mountain View, CA headquarters to discuss his book "The Mindful Leader: Ten Principles for Bringing Out the Best in Ourselves and Others." This event took place on October 17, 2008, as part of the Leading@Google series.

A new generation of business leaders is turning to mindfulness as a cutting-edge leadership tool. Research suggests that the practice of mindfulness--a technique for learning to live in the present moment--can help individuals gain clarity, reduce stress, optimize performance, and develop a greater sense of well-being.

Michael Carroll, corporate executive, Buddhist teacher and author of The Mindful Leader will give mindfulness meditation instruction and discuss how such mind training can cultivate natural leadership talents like courage, confidence and poise. We will explore how mindfulness, beyond mere pleasantry, is how we can learn to adopt a realistic and inspiring approach toward workplace leadership.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Oak Park Woman Faces 93-Days in Jail For Planting Vegetable Garden

Oak Park Woman Faces 93-Days in Jail For Planting Vegetable Garden: MyFoxDETROIT.com

If You Love Peace, Become a "Blue Republican" (Just for a Year)


Interesting idea: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robin-koerner/blue-republican_b_886650.html?page=2
I am aware that the main objection to Ron Paul from the left concerns his belief that private charities and individuals are more effective in maintaining social welfare than the government. To this I ask one question. Do you believe so much in the effectiveness of our current centralized delivery of social welfare that it is worth the war making and the abrogation of civil rights supported by both Bush and Obama's administrations? Moreover, while Ron Paul would look to transition out of the huge federally run welfare programs in the long-run, that's not where he wants to start: his immediate fight would be to bring our forces back to the USA and to re-implement the Bill of Rights.
Koerner hit it right on here. This is one of my main concerns with Ron Paul. Another huge and far reaching concern is that he would deregulate like there is no tomorrow, which will end in an ugly corporate rule. I don't see how he is all that different in the end. I see the same results as any other candidate, just a different road to get there.
Or am I mistaken?
~~~

 Related Links

http://peoplesworld.org/why-progressives-should-not-support-ron-paul/?commentStart=40

http://fitnessfortheoccasion.wordpress.com/2007/06/26/why-ron-paul-is-a-corporate-candidate/

Monday, June 20, 2011

Kettlebell and Barefoot Training

via: http://corefittraining.net/links/articles/kettlebell-and-barefoot-training 
Ok so imagine living with your hands strapped up in cotton wool and living your whole life without being able to use your hands. Can you just imagine how irritating this would be as you would not be able to pick things up properly. In fact this is like wearing air system shoes all day long, where you are not able to spread your toes and feel the ground that we walk on. All the nerve endings, motor sensors, joints and bones in our feet are protected and very rarely see daylight at all.

But if you go far back to cave men and women times where we first evolved over thousands of years ago  we survived perfectly well without having our feet strapped up in colourful air system shoes on our feet. There are many modern day examples of how barefoot training can help aid physical performance particularly in Kettlebell Training.  Even Zola Budd the marathon runner favoured barefoot training when she ran marathons, and there is research to show  that running barefoot ensures correct body mechanics.

In his book “Take Off Your Shoes and Walk” foot Doctor Simon J. Wikler D.S.C., states that,
“Practically all shoes worn daily by men and women in our Western civilization have little relation to the shape of the human foot – Most adults’ foot trouble would either not exist or would be much less bothersome if properly-shaped shoes had been worn during childhood or, better yet, if those people had gone barefoot”

So what are the benefits of barefoot training anyway?
Enhanced running efficiency
Laboratory research has shown that running barefoot results in a 4% increase in performance.  It is seen that the arches of the foot are allowed to move more freely without the need for air system shoes!

More ability to spread your toes
Yes you will have the freedom to spread and get some air on your toes!

Stronger muscles in your feet and legs
When running barefoot on hard surfaces, the runner compensates for the lack of cushioning underfoot by plantar-flexing the foot at contact, thus giving a softer landing (Frederick, 1986). Barefoot runners also land mid-foot, increasing the work of the foot’s soft tissue support structures, thereby increasing their strength and possibly reducing the risk of injury (Yessis 2000, p.124).When running barefoot on hard surfaces, the runner compensates for the lack of cushioning underfoot by plantar-flexing the foot at contact, thus giving a softer landing (Frederick, 1986).

Greater agility and balance
It is claimed that footwear increases the risk of such sprains, either by decreasing awareness of foot position provided by feedback from plantar cutaneous mechanoreceptors in direct contact with the ground (Robbins et al., 1995), or by increasing the leverage arm and consequently the twisting torque around the sub-talar joint during a stumble (Stacoff et al., 1996).  Siff and Verkhoshansky (1999, p.452) reported that running shoes always reduce proprioceptive and tactile sensitivity, and that using bare feet on the high-density chip-foam mats in gyms preserves proprioceptive sensitivity. Robbins et al. (1989) considered that behaviors induced by plantar tactile sensations offer improved balance during movement, which may explain the preference of many gymnasts and dancers for performing barefoot.

Greater flexibility in your leg muscles
Goes without saying really. If your feet aren’t strapped up all day in comfy shoes then they are going to be able to move freely i will help your feet and legs get better range of motion-thus increasing flexibility.

Improved posture
Which may help reduce lower back pain-walking barefoot means, inherently, that the only heel you’re walking on is your own. Walking wearing standard shoes means, almost inevitably, you’ll have an extra heel. Any change in the orientation of the heel instantly changes the mechanics of the arch of the foot, but importantly also changes the mechanics of the low back – increasing the curve. An increased curve in the low back means that the small facet joints on the back of the spine which are not designed for weight bearing (Bogduk 2003) become loaded and, across time, painful.

Improved circulation
Because the motion you get from your unrestricted foot when walking barefoot activates a number  of muscles in people’s feet and legs, which in turn helps to pump blood back to their hearts. This motion may not be as effective if your foot is confined in a shoe, especially if it’s a poor fitting shoe. This muscle action prevents the pooling of blood in your feet and legs, reducing the stress on the entire cardiovascular system and reducing blood pressure. This is why going barefoot is recommended to prevent deep vain thrombosis.

A better contact to nature
Because life-force energy called Chi (also called Qi or Prana) can only be absorbed through the soles of the feet. Ground Chi is absorbed automatically and unconsciously when walking barefoot, which may be one of the reasons why it’s so relaxing to walk without shoes on and why exercises geared toward strengthening the body and relaxing the mind (yoga, tai chi, martial arts) are also typically practiced barefoot.

Facilitated venous return
Decreased blood pressure; this is true – particularly if walking on uneven ground (ie cobbled streets or off road). The walking itself, of course, helps to support good cardiovascular function but, in addition, the fact that the foot strikes the ground at a slightly different angle with each step and is allowed to roll over the naturally convex heel (rather than a flat, straight, rubber plate) means that multiple muscle groups are activated resulting in greater pumping of blood back through the valve-based venous system (Vines 2005). People in Germany, Austria and Switzerland can visit “barefoot parks” and walk along “paths of the senses” – with mud, logs, stone and moss underfoot – to receive what’s known there as reflexzonenmassage. Reflexologists have long advocated walking on textured surfaces to stimulate so-called “acupoints” on the soles of the feet. Practitioners of this complementary therapy believe that pressure applied to particular spots on the foot connects directly to corresponding organs and can enhance their function.

Reduced risk of deep vein thrombosis; for the same reason as above there is less pooling of blood in the lower leg and enhanced venous return.

Lower incidence of varicose veins; because there is improved venous return, blood does not rest in the veins increasing pressure on the vein walls and creating varicosities. Instead it is pumped back to the heart through enhanced muscular use in the lower leg.

Decreased ankle sprains
it is claimed that increased awareness of foot position from direct contact with the ground (Robbins et al., 1995) may decrease risk of ankle sprain and/or the reduced leverage and consequently twisting around the ankle (sub-talar) joint from going “barefoot” minimizes the risk of spraining the joint during a stumble (Stacoff et al., 1996).

Better proprioception
The modern running shoe and footwear generally reduce sensory feedback, apparently without diminishing injury-inducing impact-a process Robbins and Gouw(1991)  described as the “perceptual illusion” of athletic footwear. A resulting false sense of security may contribute to the risk of injury (Robbins and Gouw, 1991).  Yessis(2000, p.122) reasoned that once the natural foot structures are weakened by long-term footwear use, people have to rely on the external support of the footwear, but the support does not match that provided by a well functioning foot.

Increases biomechanical performance
The arches of the feetare shock absorbers for the foot. They store energy and return energy to the gait cycle. Similarly, the natural arches of the spine are designed to perfectly store energy as the body “derotates” during the gait cycle (Gracovetsky 1988, 1997, 2001). Wearing shoes that have arch supports prevent the arches from functioning properly and heels cause chaos  to posture as they compromise energy storage and change the shape of the spine which cause back problems and neck problems.

Reduced risk of bunions
The big toe is often pushed towards the middle of the foot and the same is true of the little toe when wearing traditional shoes. Heels on a shoe load the big toe and cause more strain and the hallux longus is strained and here bunions develop.

Improves balance and  prevents falls
The feet provide significant sensory feedback to the brain and are therefore significant in balance and efficiency when running or walking. But , (Chek 2004) sees the most common cause of death in people above 65 years is falling.  25% of elderly people who fall and fracture a hip, die within 1 year of falling.

So how can going barefoot help me with my Kettlebell Training?
When you go barefoot when kettlebell training your movements not only become the movements of a child-playful and sensitive, yet purposeful and confident, but you experience the unbound joy of being able to grip and feel the floor better and  being able to balance better whilst performing ballistic movements like 2 arm swings.  This is called ‘rooting’ in kettlebell training where your feet are in contact with the ground.

A strong base of support is also required for strength exercises like squats. Rooting will help you become more stable and movements like swings, squats or presses  will naturally align you into a more powerful position that will significantly increase and lengthen your ability to produce force. The improved alignment of your body also ensures that you are safer training.

Rooting and Kettlebell Training
Jamie Lloyd of Russian Kettlebells UK tecahes rooting to his clients so that they form a more powerful foot to ground connection. The first step is becoming aware of your technique and to feel the ground underneath you when performing exercises like kettlebell swings and the kettlebell squats.
Body awareness is essential for learning proper form when kettlebell training.  First, become aware of how you lift a kettlebell from the floor. This will work best if you do them in barefoot. Now lift your kettlebell or weight off the floor and do 5 repetitions.

Take a few seconds and think about how you felt. Where did you feel the weight shift into your feet? Was it in the heels or in your toes?  Did your feet come off the floor? Being aware of these feelings is important in properly aligning your body when you are picking up a kettlebell.

Rooting is becoming aware and influencing how your body is aligned through the contact of your feet and the ground. This is done by focusing on how your feet are connected to the floor by three contact points. The first contact point is located on the heels (point one). Next are the points just under the big toes (point two). The last one is under the little toes (point three). Look at the diagram to view these contact points below.
Kettlebell Rooting for Strength Balance Power
By constantly contacting these points the body will align itself naturally.
The following steps will help increase your awareness of the three contact points of rooting:
  1. Shift your weight back onto your heels so your toes lift off the ground. Feel for where your heels make contact with the floor (point 1).
  2. Go onto your toes. Feel for the two contact points on the balls of your feet. These are the inner (2) and outer (3) points of the upper foot.
  3. Then bring your knees together so you feel your weight shift to your insides of your feet. Feel for the point (2) just below your big toes that are in contact with the floor.
  4. Then  move your knees apart and  feel your weight shift to your outer foot. Feel for the point (3) just below your little toes that are in contact with the floor.
Once you have learned the three contact points, then to learn how to root them.
This is what you do:

Stand up tall, move one knee inwards. You should feel your outer foot come away from the ground and point three lose contact. Then push back into point three. Don’t shift your bodyweight to reconnect. By pushing back into point three, you will find that your knee realigns naturally.

You can do this with all the above exercises in the same manner. Closing your eyes will increase your proprioception and awareness.

Lastly, go back to your kettlebell. Find a strong root and spread your toes and then lift the kettlebell off the ground. Focus on maintaining constant contact through the three points; think of anchoring your feet to the floor .

Putting rooting into practice into your kettlebell training
Let’s look how you can use rooting and barefoot training in your kettlebell exercises.
The body needs to work as a whole unit.  If the body is unstable then it has to work on keeping itself stable. If you  fall over you must activate and fire up your muscles up to stop you falling. Through proper rooting, alignment and stability you will have a more solid foundation for lifting kettlebells. Instead of muscles being used to balance the body they can now be used to help you push more weight .

Squatting
The first  exercise would be squats. A lot of people have poor alignment when squatting. So remember the contact points for rooting and stay connected through the ground and keep the weight on your heels with your knees tracking in line with your toes. If you feel that you are losing connection with any of the points, look at your toes, reconnect and your body will naturally realign. Try to maintain a strong base and push through the heels.

Military Press
When the weight gets too heavy to lift some  people tend to lean to one side get the kettlebell up. This is because your body is not properly rooted into the ground . If you have established a good base and are properly rooted and your abdominals are braced  you will have better alignment and you will be able to press more efficiently.

Swings
Establish a solid base, keep your weight onto your heels- don’t come onto your toes or the bell will run away from you. Keep connected to the floor as if your feet are screwed down and  drive. You will then  feel that your swings are more powerful and efficient.

So when kettlebell training train in bare feet and be aware of working from the ground up before you lift. Ensure that you take the correct steps to maintain proper alignment  and through practice it will become easier and you will feel like all your kettlebell exercises are more fluid, safer and stronger.

Read more: http://www.articlesbase.com/mens-health-articles/kettlebell-and-barefoot-training-605840.html#ixzz0rnYEICv7
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

"run like a monkey!"

Vested Interests



This video gave me an idea for an interesting analogy. By reversing the analogies of the video, one can have some interesting insight to our society.

The compensations, cranes using fuel, and the armor caused an aha when the narrator (around 7:00) talks about how our vested interests and security will protest if we choose to feel and think . . . moving towards healing.

What does this say about society?

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Spring Semester 2011

New semester is coming up fast! I am currently working on a masters application for the fall. Yep, that means I will have a Bachelors this spring. I am adding a fitness class to my already full schedule, because I need it. Maybe it will inspire me to get back into shape again. The past several years of school have really taken a toll on my physical well-being, kind of odd considering  that one of my majors was Exercise Science.

After a few weeks of break and slacking on Alexander, I began really missing it and needing it today. I had signed up for the same class again this semester, but they cut it. It is sad really, because it is very expensive otherwise. 'tis a shame that such a crucial, and potentially life changing technique is kept out of reach of the masses. I shall do what I can by reading, watching videos and applying what I learned last semester.

Now I will apply what I learned to everything else, now that this isn't my Alexander journal/blog. It will expand its horizon a bit. Everything I do and learn is interrelated, so . . .

Sunday, January 16, 2011

On getting out of my own way

"Enlightenment is not “achieved.” It arises when the hindrances to it are eliminated."

Friday, December 3, 2010

Autism Reality

autism reality from Alex Plank on Vimeo.

Body Mapping

I think that the biggest gains that I have received from this Alexander class has been Body Mapping and how thought affects one's body. These can be the same thing I guess. I think of Body Mapping more as how I think and see in my minds eye, what my body is and how it works. How thinking affects thought is more about how focused, grounded, scattered, or happy I am and how that changes how my body feels.

I got so much out of this class that it is hard to name everything. Up to this post is all that has struck me as significant or important on my Alexander Technique journey. Now this blog morphs into a more general yet personal version of People's Health. Check out the About pages on each to get the lowdown.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Thankful For Alexander

I am thankful for Alexander Technique. I come from a point of view that holds the body/mind connection very highly. Alexander has given me new ways to think about, do, undo, and ultimately not do that connection. It is a journey that I hope to continue. I have been on the journey before Alexander, and I intend to be on the journey after Alexander.

I have learned the very basics and I have seen its influence throughout my life, affecting all areas and levels of my life. It confirms long held beliefs and ways, and it encourages me to delve deeper into what I intuitively know. Now I simply must step out of my own way and be on my merry way!

http://www.elainebelle.com/BlueSpine.jpg

Thursday, November 4, 2010

All out of sorts

 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/f4/The_Scream.jpg
As I am able to take a few moments to consider and think on my Alexander Technique journal/blog assignment, I can feel myself slowly inhabit and become aware of my body. The past month has been very challenging to say the least. I attended only one of my Alexander classes in that month and feel like I am drifting off into space when it comes to Alexander Technique and my body.

Perhaps my disconnectedness from my body comes from the fact that this past month has instilled a load of stress and tension. My awareness consists of pain, so its no wonder I have become so detached. Sometimes checking in with ones physicality is not a pleasant choice.

I am curious to find out if there are any sort of crisis applications of Alexander. Something that can be done to help out a person who is spaced out and in shock due to extreme life stressors. I need that bad sometimes and I know that I am not alone.

The key is to have time, take time, and know what to do with that time. In such extreme situations this is next to impossible. You would need some kind of wake up call to force you into awareness, presence, and a kind of peace.

All out of sorts describes this past month very well. I am just now getting a grip and able to take a look at what has happened. How does one avoid this, cutting it off before it gets so wildly out off hand?

Friday, October 22, 2010

Choice?

"PS remember everything in your life is a choice!"
"With every choice you make, be conscious of the need it serves."
Plato said, "You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation."

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Unearthing the unspeakable

Scott (1991) points out that institutions function at multiple levels, arranged in part by the power relations within a setting; dissonance is often apparent between what Scott terms the public and hidden transcripts of an institution. “The public transcript is, to put it crudely, the self-portrait of dominant elites as they would have themselves seen…. It is designed to be impressive . . . and to conceal or euphemize the dirty linen of their rule” (Scott, 1991, p. 18). The hidden transcript challenges the institution’s public discourse and administrative overlay on “reality”; it refers to discourse “that takes place `offstage,’ beyond direct observation by powerholders” (pp. 4-5) that contradicts what appears in the public transcript.

Unearthing the unspeakable: When teacher research and political agendas collide
Kathryn Herr. Language Arts. Urbana: Sep 1999. Vol. 77, Iss. 1; pg. 10, 6 pgs

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Getting out of my own way

I find myself wanting to revisit an older post, "Who are we really and what are we doing?" Here is an excerpt of what was written there:
  • Thoughts and actions
    • both useful and not useful
  • Notice choices
    • Awareness of making choices 
      • conscious choices
      • unconscious choices 
I can't help but be reminded of Buddhism here and ask, "Who or what is it that is doing all this noticing?" Noticing choices and actions is much like mindfulness meditation. Which leads to the next point that reminds me of Buddhism. 
 "Who or what is it that is doing all this noticing?" 
  • Where does mind end and body begin? 
  • Are they an inseparable pair influencing and affecting each others functioning? 
  • How much does my tense, crooked body affect my thoughts and decisions? 
  • How are choices made if my body is overwhelmed and frozen? 
  • What choices do I have and how many of these am I actually aware of?
  • How much of Alexander Technique is doing and how much is non-doing? 
  • What is added and what is simply left undone?
  • How will I know to get out of my own way if my choices and thoughts are so conditioned by the habit patterns instilled by a culture of sensory/information overload?
  • How will I know to get out of my own way if my choices and thoughts are so conditioned by a "modified startle pattern?"

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Backyard Dance 2- candlewood

Backyard Dance 2- candlewood from Gabriel Olivares-Todd on Vimeo.

egg shaped beings full of giblets and lungs

Crazy week, just like all the other weeks, only this one has wiped my discursive thought right out. Along with them thoughts go any kind of following of homework. I guess that the noticing of habits is pretty easy. I was in a few good car wrecks that have left my spine unhappy. I am constantly playing with how to have good posture. I know what I am supposed to do, I just don't or can't do it. Not sure why.

I suspect that I don't keep good posture in part due to what is being called in the Body Learning book, unreliable sensory appreciation, debauched kinaesthesia, and stuff. So my habitual misuse crates a bit of a problem as far as me correcting my posture and Use goes.

I sit a lot unfortunately, and I am sure this causes a huge part of the problem.  I have taken to sitting on an exercise ball as a chair. I googled this phenomena and found that I'm not the lone nut . . .


http://www.beloblog.com/ProJo_Blogs/fitness/exercise_ball_chair.jpg 

Check out these kids, they know whats up . . .
http://assets.lifehack.org/wp-content/files/2007/04/20070420-ballkids.jpg

 Isabella Oosterhof does her school work while sitting on the exercise ball.  Photo by Christopher Huber

and here are some models in case you have to be thought of as "normal" at the office or where ever . . .
http://www.thebetterbackstore.net/DataFiles/Images/FitBall_Chair.jpg
Photo
Fitness Ball Chair Deluxe - Click Image to Close

An interesting article on why not to use a stability ball for an office chair, and interesting comments as to why you should. Interesting debate that has me asking, which chair company these authors are getting kick downs from, I am still all for it.


Links






http://s3.amazonaws.com/freestylemind/zen-meditation.jpg

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Expereince Yourself as a Whole Person

Whenever someone asks me to experience myself as a whole person, I immediately take a deep breath . . . all the way to my finger tips, and down to the tips of my toes. I breath into my body as if it were a balloon. Eventually this breathing flips over to breathing in through my fingers and toes and into my center.

This is usually enough to relax any tension, but if tension remains, I breath into it. That is my experience of my self as a whole person, physically speaking. There are other aspects of my whole person hood that come into the picture, but that is a whole other exercise.

http://www.arthurimiller.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/jung-first-mandala.jpg