A Balancing Act | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: Please join me in welcoming our newest contributor to BCN, Kathy Manos Penn, a native of the "Big Apple", by way of the "Peach City" - Atlanta. Kathy is a former English teacher, author of The Ink Penn blog, and a communications professional in corporate America.

Kathy Manos Penn
    If we think of balance at all, most of us think of work-life balance and the never-ending struggle to make time for work, family and even, selfishly, ourselves. Somehow, pre-families and pre-careers, we managed to fit in studying, playing, maybe a part-time job, and plenty of sleeping. It's only in our late twenties and thirties that we seem to become conscious of the juggling act, as we add more and more to our schedules. And, it doesn't get any easier after that.

    Think of balance another way, and you can add yet another ball to your act: maintaining your physical sense of balance. I know, I know, you thought if you ran around all the time and were physically active most of your life, you could start to take it easy later on. Not!

    The WSJ reports that the three systems-the visual, the vestibular (or inner ear) and the proprioceptive (or sense of body position)-that keep us balanced start to erode when we're in our 40's. The good news is that doing 5-10 minutes of balancing exercises each day can counteract that erosion.

    Reading the WSJ article made me thankful that I've been doing yoga for so many years. So much of yoga focuses on balance. The tree pose, where you stand on one leg with the foot of the other leg resting on your inner thigh, can be challenging, but well worth it. As most yogis know, some days you can balance, and some days you can't, but you keep trying. The John Denver line "Some days are diamonds; some days are stone" keeps running through my head. I guess because some days in yoga class, you sparkle and other days, your body feels like a lead weight.

    "There is also a mental component to regaining balance, says Arlene Schmid, an associate professor of occupational therapy at Colorado State University. This mental aspect is a bigger factor for people with impaired balance due to advanced age or illness.

    In a study published by the medical journal Stroke in 2012, Dr. Schmid's team taught yoga to post-stroke patients for eight weeks. Of the 34 patients, 19 initially had balance impairment as measured on the Berg balance scale. After training, 11 had impaired balance...Yoga can boost balance ability because it increases flexibility and its many poses integrate movements that strengthen a lot of different muscles, including those in the hip, says Dr. Schmid."

    Consider these facts:

  • In the U.S., falls are the leading cause of injury for people over 65
  • Every 17 seconds, someone in this age group is treated in an emergency room for a fall
  • Every 30 minutes, one will die from injuries caused by falling

    I experienced some of this with my 82-year-old mother, who had several falls. She went further downhill with each fall and never quite came back to the level of health she had before.

    If reading this doesn't make you run right out and sign up for yoga, perhaps you'll instead try a few of the simple exercises included in the article. Here's to all of us staying balanced in every way. May all of our days be diamonds.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )



Comments

( April 22nd, 2016 @ 11:22 am )
 
My day is now complete, I learned a new word that I had to look up. Bosu. I will file it along with my old term "Medicine Ball" which I used in Gym in the 10th grade but it quickly deteriorated into a knock em sock em game. As the runt of the class I endured the abuse until we hit the parallel bars where speed and agility was rewarded. TMac and I now use the keyboard technique for fair and balanced control.
( April 22nd, 2016 @ 9:21 am )
 
Hmmm. My trainer occasionally has us use the Bosu, similar to the balance pad, but not often to stand on. More often, we use it for pushups, or we sit balanced on it with legs in the air (for abs), or lunge on and off of it. But hey, we're all still trying...except perhaps for TMc.
( April 22nd, 2016 @ 8:08 am )
 
KmP: Yogi produces pain and stops the mind from thinking. Listening to Nectorene has the same effect.
( April 22nd, 2016 @ 8:00 am )
 


Thanks KMP, for the information. Our Clubhouse exercise room has a balance pad. I tried it and sanding on one foot without holding the rail is almost impossible without practice.

I used to think it was a 100% inner ear problem but our clubhouse fitness trainer says it is quite often the a combination as you point out of poor muscle tone (perhaps proprioceptive) in the legs, inner ear and visual. I no longer stand to put my pants on after a fall a few years ago, there by belying the one leg at a time myth.
( April 22nd, 2016 @ 7:18 am )
 
KmP: Yoga was painful and I went to sleep Meditating. I moved on after 3 mo. training.



Sometimes I Make Things Up & Sometimes I Don't The Ink Penn, Public Perspective, Body & Soul I’m Sorry About All Those Forest Fires

HbAD0

 
Back to Top