Archive for August 2010

Standing Pilates by Joan Breibart

Richard Stooker asked:




Joseph Pilates was a physical fitness genius whose work has come into general awareness only in the last fifteen years or so ago, although he lived and worked in New York City for about forty years.

His basic story is that he was a sickly child who studied anatomy and such physical disciplines as yoga (though it’d be interesting to learn how he learned about yoga — it certainly wasn’t common knowledge in the West in the late 1800s. Did some pioneer write a book on yoga then in German, even though India was an English colony?

It’s not so difficult to understand how he learned the physical culture secrets of Western disciplines since his mother was a naturopath and his father a gymnast. Although the standard short form of his biography doesn’t say any more than this about them, they must have helped their child, though he deserves lots of credit for his own studies of anatomy and exercising himself to health.

While interned by the English government on the Isle of Man during World War I (because he was a German national), he began his career of designing equipment to help correct people’s physical malfunctions. He improvised makeshift contraptions to help his fellow interns.

After starting his studio in New York City, he was discovered by a troupe of dancers based in the same building. Word quickly spread of how he could help injured dancers, and his fans included Martha Graham and George Ballanchine.

Pilates is uniquely suited for dancers because of its emphasis on flexibility as well as strength. And especially because it requires a graceful, functional transition from one exercise to the next. A Pilates student works for flow, to go from one movement to the next without a suddenly break to return to clumsiness.

However, Pilates himself was not a dancer and the benefits of Pilates are not confined to dancers.

The benefit of STANDING PILATES is that it does away with the equipment and a lot of the complication of Pilates. You can do Pilates any place you can stand up (it’s recommended to have a wall for support). Though she does start off with a chapter on Classical Mat exercises.

She developed her standing Pilates program because she noticed that some Pilates students got good results from lying on a mat — but when they stood up they reverted to their old habits of poor posture. She wants your body to function in a smooth, healthy fashion throughout your daily life — which includes standing up a lot more than lying down.

Standing Pilates is especially good for older people, because doing weight-bearing exercises can help control or prevent osteoporosis. And she includes an appendix on this condition.

The major of the book consists of the standing exercises with pictures and descriptions.

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What pain medicine works the best while getting a tatoo?

Victoria G asked:


I am in the process of getting a full back piece tatoo, My last session was extreamly painfull because of scar tissue. I have a LOT of other tatyoo’s and have never before had this problem with pain. I have Percocet and valume I’m trying to figure out witch one would work better to control the pain for the 4 to 5 hours of tattooing.

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Tips for pain management

John Scott asked:




Almost everyone will have experienced acute, short-term pain at some point in their lives. You fall, have the misfortune to be involved in an accident, or have surgery. In most cases, you know you will get better – cuts, bruises, strains and fractures heal and you can resume life as though nothing had happened. The confidence that the pain will soon be gone makes it easier to bear. If you do find it too much, almost all the drugs on the market will give you relief while your body mends. But things are very different if the pain is chronic. Once you know that the pain will be with you over time, your mental approach changes. Patience is replaced with resentment or anger that you have been unlucky, that your body has let you down. This darker mood often translates into damage to your personal relationships. Your work suffers. Your marriage comes under pressure. Depression is lurking in the wings as stress builds, making it more difficult for you to sleep. Because you grow afraid of the pain, you stop doing all the things you used to enjoy. A vicious cycle emerges where your depression becomes more dominant as your inactivity increases. This list guarantees long-term suffering: stress, insomnia, inactivity and depression. The inactivity often leads to an increase in weight which reinforces the lack of mobility. You nap and find sleep difficult at night. You take increasing quantities of painkillers but find them increasingly less effective. To allow this to develop unchecked is to give up hope. You need to manage the pain which is the original source of this more general decline and take better control over your life. The first step is to understand that you can regain a better quality of life. Remaining positive in the face of your difficulties will give you the motivation to reclaim what has been lost. The second step is to find a physician or therapist prepared to give you real help. No matter how good a drug like tramadol or the more powerful opioids, reliance on drug therapy is not enough. Do not accept the lazy physician’s prescriptions and rapid dismissal. If he or she will not guide your pain management, ask for a reference to a doctor who will give you the help you need. The next step is to accept that, as part of the pain management regime, you may need to take antidepressants or drugs to help you sleep properly. So much of the problem you face is emotional. The less sleep you have, the more stressed you will feel. The less positive you feel about yourself, the less you will feel like changing yourself. Also recognize it may be necessary to change the range and dosages of the drugs you take until you start to see an improvement. Be patient and consult with your physician on a regular basis. To help the physician or therapist to help you, start observing yourself carefully. You should be able to describe exactly what triggers pain and how you change your movements to relieve it. A therapist will help you learn how to work through the emotional and fear barriers to movement. It is possible to move. You just have to accept limitations and rebuild your mobility within those limitations. Start by walking a few minutes everyday and slowly build up distance and speed. Some find swimming or water aerobics a better way of restarting mobility because the water supports body weight. And finally, you need to reduce that weight. Dieting and eating healthier food helps restore physical health. Put it all together and stress levels should fall and life should grow more normal. It is not easy, but it can be done if you want it.



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