Mirror Athlete Blog Articles

March 19, 2010

Improve Fitness After Rehabilitation

Marc after Second Hip Surgery

MAE Video \”Marc Talks about Rehabilitation through Walking\”If you have just recently had surgery, experienced an injury and now are finished with your HMO rehabilitative services and want to become fit there is a post exercise mobility therapy habit that needs to be considered to ensure quality living experiences.  Many that are going through physical rehabilitation tend to gain weight, lose strength, cardiovascular endurance and suffer acute to chronic pain from inactivity.

 If you experience weight bearing acute to chronic pain in any of your weight bearing joints, i.e., back, neck, hip, feet, legs and have put on weight, or simply want to take control of your weight, a safe starting movement activity is the way to go.  This means to find some form of activity where you can move your body to begin increasing your fitness levels. 

 There are exercise activity routines you could participate in to rehabilitate yourself to walk, if not able to walk well.  For example, there’s extended physical therapy offered by many health insurers, to include Medicare.  If your insurance does not cover extended specialized services because you have annual limits on these services which you’ve used up, all is not lost.  The same is true if you have coverage that only includes short-term, or very limited medical services.  If you have the ability to walk, you are in a better position to rehabilitate yourself through walking movement activity.

 Now if you’re in a bad way and you need assistance to get yourself rehabilitated, don’t go it alone!  Suck up your pride, reach out and recruit a friend or family member to drive you to the nearest social security administration if you can’t do this yourself, or visit www.socialsecurity.gov online, or call by phone toll free 1-800-772-1213 to reach a representative.  Office hours are between 7a.m. and 7 p.m. Monday through Friday to get further application, appointment, qualifications, self help information and office location in your area.  Also check into the supplemental home assistance programs and other available services.

 Even with disability supplemental assistance programs success to rehabilitate oneself to get active with life will depend much on your ability to begin actively moving your body to receive a fitness benefit.  The disability assistance is nice because you now don’t have to worry about paying your basic living expenses.  However, a word of caution…  All too often, those with limited movement and pain begin to move even less when outside supplemental services are provided.  This level of comfort somehow nestles many to believe they are taken care of meeting the social disability expectation.  This may be true from a cash flow perspective, but absolutely false from a health and increased fitness level perspective.

 To develop a habit of less activity when one should be attempting to rehabilitate working toward increased activity, especially if one can walk is detrimental and a contradiction to their wellness health goals.  Remember, to improve fitness levels and overall health does not mean your social security benefits will end.  All too often, fear in not meeting and maintaining the social disability expectation prevents many from ever improving their disability conditions.  This dependent and addictive support habit often continues to degrade health for fear of losing needed supplemental government services.  Believe me, I’m not opposed to the services, I’m drawing awareness to proper pain management and quality living philosophy where movement activity is balanced into the rehabilitative mix.  I also realize many dependent on physical or mental aid will never have the ability to work for an employer because of disability limitations.

 My message for those that find themselves in this situation, you can have better quality life experiences if you can find a way to get yourself busy in life through a walking activity.  Especially if you can pain manage this activity.  And if you can do this, you will also be able to travel a little more, visit family members, go to a ballgame, maybe even do other activities; like ballroom dance, walk the dogs, sit for periods of time and write that book you’ve always dreamed about.  The list goes on.  Through walking many ailments can be pain alleviated and fitness levels increased.  Of course, keep what I’m telling you in perspective.  Your quality living improvements are relative to your health condition(s), physical and mental limitations.  Never the less, you will experience more feel good endorphins if you begin moving your body.  This will also improve mood, motivation to do more with your time in a day, boost self-worth and reduce dosages on pain medications daily.

 The cost to you to walk is nothing, other than your time, effort and motivation commitment toward improved mobility.  Through daily physical movement activities fitness levels will increase.  This will positively impact mood disposition.  This is important why?  Increased fitness levels contribute to healthy heart, lungs, metabolism, lean body, body strength, reduced body fat, weight control, pain alleviation, better physical endurance, excellent circulatory properties, reduced depression and other ill-health prevention, etc.  A combination of healthy habits, such as daily activity exercise movement and balanced nutrition are two of the ageless body prevention formulas.   This combination instills “proven” ageless fountain of youth methods centurions have known about for years and apply daily to enjoy quality living experiences for life.  To know this information is a “powerful mind-body motivator” for those that are in daily need of rehabilitative strategies to improve overall fitness and health.

 But in order to begin movement exercise activity safely; if you’ve been a couch potato, post surgery patient, or are in some form of physical rehabilitative condition, overweight, etc., you must first develop a fitness activity exercise plan and include your primary care physician and/or specialists to discuss a physical fitness program to ensure it is right for you. 

 Remember we’re all different in age, have various fitness goals, pain issues, disease, life circumstances, etc.   For example, I didn’t use a gym for many years while I worked to rehabilitate my body after surgeries.  I simply walked around the house, short stints with mobility aids in/outside the house, did PT exercises in bed the best I could until my body got stronger.  After I was able to crutch my way around the neighborhood an 1/8 of mile I incorporated other activity.  I’m not telling you to base your exercise mobility routine like mine; I’m simply providing what worked for me as an example.  I also had 4 physician specialists I coordinated with to assure my plan was not going to be detrimental to my overall health.  I know making appointments with specialists to compare notes is an additional burden.  It is a necessary part of any rehabilitative effort to ensure when customizing a fitness mobility exercise program it is done safely with your specialist(s) in the loop.

 Even with an undergraduate degree in Exercise Science, although I’m well versed in fitness activity and the effects on mind and body, I’m not a doctor.  There are many aspects of illness and disease pain pathologies, medications and effect’s on the “encompassing being” I cannot safely forecast when incorporating a daily movement activity to improve overall fitness and health during a rehabilitative scenario.  This is why you need to include your primary care physician at the least before you undertake a daily exercise mobility fitness activity.  But one thing for sure that is consistent in achieving good health, that’s daily movement activity.

 One must get back up on their feet one way or the other and move forward to become more fit.  The best way I know how to do this is achieve a goal to walk without mobility aids if possible.  This may not ever be physically possible for some.  The key is movement activity.  So when I mention walk, if you cannot do this without a mobility aid, simply increase your daily movement activity using a cane, wheelchair, walker, etc. 

 To achieve more movement activity requires daily exercise activity.  This is certainly possible and applicable to all of those using mobility aids.  I’ve got to tell you, I got the best workouts using wheel chairs and crutches.  It takes much conditioning to get into shape to hall your body weight around.  I know this from personal experience.  I challenge any walker to keep up with an avid mobility challenged person that’s conditioned to do so daily.  A word of caution with mobility walk aids.  I did suffer torn rotor cuffs and neck strains because of my aggressive competitive nature to excel in all I do.  So beware, you can hurt yourself while increasing your fitness levels through exercise with crutches and wheel chairs.  To get conditioned with these mobility devices takes the body time to build up strength, postural balance, muscle toning coordination and cardiovascular endurance.  These things are true in training for any form of physical task specific activity.  And with this said, there are correct ways to train for increased activity and wrong ways.  I’ve learned within my rehabilitative experiences, I need to better pace myself and not train for a marathon right out the gate.  After all I’m no longer in peak condition as I once was many moons ago.

 Take one step at a time, one block at a time, and one mile at a time.  Do what you can daily.  Put no time lines, or distances on yourself.  The mind-body will tell you each day what it’s capable of doing.  If you have the ability to walk you’re much further ahead in becoming more fit and healthy.  Move around, or walk daily regardless of mood, etc.  Do your in home physical therapy in bed, flexibility, range of motion exercises, walk in place, move up and down stairs if possible.  The key is to move more daily, work to reach 10-15min/day exercise activity at a minimum before increasing movement walking activity outdoors.  Be consistent at daily movement.  Don’t miss a day.  This is important if you want to improve your fitness level activity circumstances.  If you use a walker, wheelchair, or cane get out and move forward/move daily.  Build up walking endurance with a walking mobility aid if necessary to achieve goal distances of 100ft for example.  Physical therapy exercises will vary for each individual and will not be covered here.  However, if you need ideals on how to warm up and exercise before walking activities research the following:  Use the library, Internet, magazines, primary care HMO home PT exercise book, relevant rehabilitative subscription information/self-help recommendations for your conditions, etc. 

 There are many self-help books and free HMO pamphlets available.   I personally like Pilates and plank exercises for core strengthening exercises after passive and active warm-ups like, hot shower and range of motion stretching exercises.  I also do these slow stretch exercises while I watch the morning news, or evening shows and in-between writing my daily articles.  My slow stretch exercises include seated reach for toes and hold, standing slow stretch side bends, neck rotation/side tilts and squatted back stretches holding from 10’s of seconds to minutes at any time within the day’s activities.  I then go on my daily walk (active warm up and conditioning) and incorporate Pilate’s stretches and body part light strength training at the local fitness center.  I do manage pain daily by knowledge of working around pain threshold trigger points during activity and certain prescribed medications.  Check out books and literature on Pilates and core strength exercise examples.  There are thousands of exercise examples.

 Other tips:  Consider “not taking” your car to the store for daily staples once you can walk half a mile total distances assisted mobility device or not.  Make your fitness goal each day to walk to a market that’s near.  Make a goal to walk and shop for your evening meals, or drive to and walk the mall for example “a safe environment as you rehabilitate through movement activity.”  Get a small backpack “once able to walk small distances;” carry healthy produce, products to the car, home etc. 

 Never carry more in weight than the weight you lose.  For example, I personally never carry more than 5lbs in bags, one for each arm, greater than 1 mile.  That’s .5 mile one way.  This has more to do with my chronic back-neck problems than weight lost.  So you need to factor in acute-chronic pain triggers under load.  In other words when starting a shop & walk activity program, you don’t hall extra weight until you lose weight, or alleviate pain significantly.  Just like you won’t move your body by walking without a cane, or walker after injury, or surgery until your body was conditioned to do so. An unconditioned body to walk without crutches, walker, cane, or wheel chair adds more body weight to weakened weight bearing joints.  To do so when the mind-body is not ready will risk secondary weight bearing injuries to body compromising overall health.

 When you’re strong enough to walk a 1/8mile one way for a total of ½ mile without walking aids you are then ready to begin a 3-5 day fitness activity program.  Even if mobility aids will be with you for life, you can still work toward customized fitness mobility assisted 3l-5 day walking program.  The health body results will still be experienced, i.e., cardiovascular, muscular, postural, mental function and pain alleviation benefits in varying degrees.  Regardless you achieve more activity in life which equates to better quality living and health body-mind experiences

  Please look for the following article at the home site to get on a 3-5 day activity exercise program that’s right for you after you complete your rehabilitative mobility exercise activity goals.   The article you’ll want to search for to progress to the next activity level, “How to Exercise and Increase Fitness Levels.” Try various combinations of exercise activity, break up the fitness conditioning patterns and don’t go into any activity program at full intensity unless trained to do so.  Good things in life come to those that take the time to do it right while balancing all life activities and fitness goals.

Author:  Marc T. Woodard, MBA, BS Exercise Science, USA Medical Services Officer, CPT, RET2010 Copyright.  All rights reserved, Mirror Athlete Publishing @: www.mirrorathlete.com,  Sign up for your Free eNewsletter.

July 7, 2008

Social Disability Expectation and Public Perception

I know a lot of you out there are hurting with disabling pain thinking there is nothing more you can do to increase your physical activity, provide further health benefits and/or improving your health condition, or quality of life.  There are solutions, but you have to want to become a mirror athlete as your number one goal.  Remember a mirror athlete will use health management techniques customized to improve posture, health & fitness levels improving overall daily activities and maintaining a healthy mind, body and soul.

Just curious, are you disabled and fulfilling your disabled “social expectation?”  This would be the type of person that accepts their lot in life and basically has given up on their health, activity or physical goals.  For example, if you are confined to a wheelchair this does not mean you can’t maintain mid-body to upper torso strength, flexibility, tone and overall weight & health management. You also may have gained excessive weight while confined to the wheel chair for example, or maybe you require walking assistant devices, have prosthetic devices to assist you in walking, or gripping.  Maybe your pain is so severe due to lack of an adequate pain management program… This keeps you indoors with minimal activity. Or maybe you experience depression on/off seeing no other way out of your medical condition predicament.

I do understand feelings of depression and acute/chronic body pain and loss of productivity and activity as I personally have experienced these things on a daily basis.  Yes, depression is never removed from the forefront as this typically goes with chronic pain, but can be managed. I also understand what it’s like to be eyeballed as physically weak, a failure in your mind’s eye, or inability to financially provide for your family, etc..

“If you are disabled and self fulfilling your disabled social expectation, you don’t have to be this way if you choose not to.”  What I mean by this statement, I know a lot of you former mirror athletes with broken bodies have given up on yourselves because you’ve had an injury(s), maybe forced to take early retirement and/or may be collecting disability checks, etc.  Some of you feel since you are disabled and collecting a disability check, you somehow must earn this support by self fulfilling your role as a disabled person with limited activity.  This means you’ve accepted your health condition misfortune and you feel your medical specialists, or primary care physicians are doing everything possible to assist you and there is nothing further you can do to improve your health situation waiting on the next medical test, appointment or procedure.  These facts are not even close to the truth “in most cases” regarding health benefits that can be received, even if your health issue/condition is classified as stationary permanent (means condition is stable, may/may not improve and “may” get worse with age).

My contention is, if you can move segments of your body you “can” receive an activity health benefit.  If you can consume calories, you can control and manage what you consume.  If you suffer from depression, there is support within the medical community and much information to be found in library’s or the Internet.  If your on a pain management program, you “most likely can” reduce your daily script to allow focus on activities for periods of time in a day, providing for healthy mind, body & soul.

There is nothing in life that can be accomplished well without proper balance of daily task management and nutrition.  Incorporate this mentality with pain, nutrition, fitness, exercise management programs and overall health maintenance on a daily basis… You “can” live your Mirror Athlete lifestyle as best you can and in “most” cases better than you are currently experiencing.

Don’t let society dictate expectations… Don’t accept or fulfill the disabled expectation.  Be a mirror athlete gladiator, take back as much of your life as you possibly can… Control a lifestyle that makes you feel great about yourself!   What have you got to loose?  Take back what rightfully belongs to you, it’s your health!

Author:  Marc T. Woodard, MBA, BS Exercise Science, USA Medical Services Officer, CPT, RET.  2008 Copyright.  All rights reserved, Mirror Athlete Publishing, www.mirrorathlete.com,  Sign up for your Free eNewsletter.

June 25, 2008

How to Work Around Chronic Pain?

Q.   I was curious, how do you work around chronic pain.  After visiting your chronic pain center, I read your introduction.  You mention a pain management philosophy, or exercise application around pain.  I can’t find anywhere in your articles, or section that address this topic in detail.  Is there an article you have written on this topic?  If so, where can I go to read it?A.    This is a very good question.  The work outs, or fitness programs around chronic pain will be presented in some of the monthly excerpts from Mirror Athlete with Chronic Pain Chronicles.  Since you have seen the summary at our chronic pain center, you also understand most of this information will be released once the chronicles manuscript is published as a book.  Although I have not provided any detail on how Mirror Athletes that are-aren’t disabled work around chronic pain and specific techniques applied to stay relatively active & fit… I can say this is a work in progress (I will write some articles outside the chronic pain articles revolving around overall fitness and exercise program).   I can also tell you I can provide tidbits of information that you can use now to incorporate into a fitness exercise program to help you maintain a healthy lifestyle.  For example,A very important key to exercising, or performing activity if you have chronic pain, or are basically disabled because of your chronic pain, you first must understand what triggers your pain [I like to analyze the "what, when, where & how pain is triggered].  You need to learn to do the same thing.  This physical pain analysis prior to activity, or exercise work outs is critical.You also must have a good understanding of your medical & health condition, goals and activity risks by working with your primary care physicians and/or medical specialists ensuring you understand how a pain condition  could be aggravated to become more chronic.  Keep in mind what I’m presenting here is not a complete medical, health, or history audit checklist before exercise activity commences.   These general bullets are instead the basic rudimentary steps required to understand how you can stay active even with disabilities without risking further aggravation and harm to your body.  Since exercise and activity are key ingredients to my healthy life program, it is essential that all walks of life looking to improve their health condition apply an activity, exercise, pain management program that makes sense for their overall health management program.

In other words, if an activity creates pain beyond a manageable level of pain tolerance, I’d say relative to your pain and health management program this is not good for your body and could cause serious harm to a preexisting condition.

Also visit our site Wellness Company page.  We offer excellent “NATURAL” products scientifically formulated to remove chemical toxin allergies from your home.Thank You for your patronage, please subscribe to your free monthly eNewletter at our home site.

Marc T. Woodard, Health & Fitness Consultant, Publisher, Mirror Athlete Enterprises @  www.mirrorathlete.com
2007-2008 Copyright Mirror Athlete Enterprises, All rights reserved.
 

 

 

Toxins in Our Families Home Use Products?

Back in November 2007, I wrote an article “Is Cancer in Your Tub?” The information within this article predominately came from Network News and Publications(www.netnewspbl.com).  In essence the literature discusses FDA approved chemicals in our foods and house hold products as an outrage to our families health!  Many of your everyday use items have carcinogenic toxins that within a laboratory controlled study, in many cases “confirm serious health issues with long term use of our FDA Qualified “SAFE” products!”  To read the full article “Is Cancer in Your Tub?  Visit our Health Repository, look under “Environmental Toxins, and scroll over to Mirror Athlete free read articles column.”

Recently I procured brochures from author Debra Lynn Dadd, “Please Protect Yourself from Household Toxics.  I would like to share a portion of the information that was in her literature.  She writes,

“While certain people may be more sensitive than others, and some chemical(s) may bring on reactions only after many years of repeated exposure, I discovered through my research that chemicals may bring on reactions only after many years of repeated exposure, I discovered through my research that chemicals in the home could put anyone at risk.  Cancer, birth defects, genetic changes, heart disease… Almost any symptom imaginable, both physical and psychological, has been associated with chemicals in common household products.  Recently, scientists have discovered that toxic chemicals can lodge in our endocrine system contributing to thyroid problems, diabetes, weight gain, and infertility.  At greatest risk are fetuses, children, the elderly, and those who are already ill, but these chemicals are threatening the health of everyone, every day.”

Also, as I combed through AARP Bulletin Today, May 2008, Vol.49 No. 4, there is an excellent article I’d like to share with you.  “Hazards at Home,” by Reed Karaim.

“And older people are more likely to have conditions – such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, respiratory disease and diabetes – that can dramatically reduce their ability to withstand exposure to environmental hazards… The stakes are high.  Older people tend to process and eliminate toxicants from their bodies more slowly than younger people.  And “as we age, we become less efficient at detoxification – the slowing down of kidneys, liver and immune system functioning all play a role.  In this older people are more like infants and children in their ability to fend off toxic assaults,says Sandra Steingraber,the author of Living Downstream:  An Ecologist Looks at Cancer and the Environment.”

“Cleaners – Chemicals to avoid in cleaners, says McRandle (Paul McRandle, Deputy Editor at the National Geographic Green Guide), run from ammonia, which is known to trigger asthma, elements in chlorine bleach, which is a lung irritant and will kill you if you swallow it, to things like glycol ethers, which are used to dissolve grime and dirt, and can cause nerve damage.”  Protect your skin by wearing rubber gloves and your lungs by ventilating your work area or wearing a mask.”

It simply was amazing to see within these articles, glycol ethers and propylene Glycol (ingredient found in anti-freeze), are ingredients within many of your household shampoos, deodorants, cosmetics, lotions, toothpaste and pet food?”  Why is it necessary to put these carcinogenic solvents in our consumable house hold products?  Especially, when company’s know how to make a non-toxic human product?  The answer is very clear.  “It’s all about the money.”  It’s obvious to me that cost cutting “skimming SAFE quality products” and outsourcing American business is “the” critical” element required when profits are king.

Author:  Marc T. Woodard, MBA, BS Exercise Science, USA Medical Services Officer, CPT, RET.  2008 Copyright.  All rights reserved, Mirror Athlete Publishing, www.mirrorathlete.com,  Sign up for your Free eNewsletter.

April 8, 2008

Intestinal Bacteria & Disease Correlation

Marc at Work in the Office MAE Video IBS and How It Impacts Everything that is Biological-Even Healthy Skin 

Did you know that your digestive system is at risk if your bacterial colonies are out of balance between the good probiotics (bacterial microorganisms) and bad bacteria?  “Good bacteria are used by the gut to prevent and treat certain illnesses and general wellness.” Our lower intestine requires at least 85% of friendly bacterial colonies to fight off microorganisms such as E. coli and salmonella.  Our colon can maintain health with a 15% balance of bad bacteria (most people have these percentages reversed).  It is my opinion the best “good” bacteria is found within Flora.   God had intended to balance our good flora bacteria by nature through ingestion of raw vegetables and fruits.  However, soil based good organisms have been reported destroyed since the use of insecticides and later, herbicides in commercially grown food soils.  People are now supplementing their diets with probiotics more than ever.  Americans interest in probiotic health benefits and spending has nearly tripled from 1994 to 2003 (ncam.nih.gov/health/probiotics).  The bad bacteria (antibiotics), better known as unfriendly bacteria, or microorganisms are at war with your good bacteria.  These unfriendly bacteria come in the form of disease-causing yeasts, fungi and parasites.   Research now shows a connection with regard to bacterial balance and nutrient absorption.  A side note: Probiotics are widely used for treatment of Candida where probiotic formulations vary for best benefits. 

“Research continues to explore and find encouraging evidence from specific probiotic formulations that has a benefit and suppressing properties which control the unfriendly bacterial growth in the gut.  By supplementing ones diet with the proper balance of “Flora probiotics” which nature no longer provides, or to very little degree “the probiotic benefit through flora supplementation can be realized.”  An individual suffering with one or more of the following symptoms stands a good chance at receiving relief and a significant health benefit by supplementing the diet with “Flora” probiotic [Check into our health store].  The best flori products seem to be in capsules, tablets, or powders.  The following list identifies symptoms caused from an over concentration of unfriendly bacteria residing within the bodies gut.  Unfriendly Bacteria Symptoms:  Infectious diarrhea, or constipation, IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome) [read our IBS article at home page, under syndicated articles], Inflammatory bowel disease, bloat, gas, stomach ulcers, tooth decay, periodontal disease, vaginal infections, skin infections, “respiratory infections that children acquire in daycare,” diverticulitis & colitis, etc.  Benefits:  Ease chronic yeast infections, enhanced immunity, intestinal support, maintain a healthy balance of intestinal micro flora, or probiotics, better intestinal absorption of nutrients, inhibit growth of bad bacteria (or pathogens), improve lactose intolerance, healthy radiant skin, nails and hair, alleviate flatulence, etc.  

Recommendation to Improve Good Bacteria Balance,
1.   Increase flori balance and daily vitamin and mineral (V/M) supplements to improve digestion, anti-oxidant benefits, nutrient absorption  and  immune system. (see our Florify product).

2.  See our all Natural Affiliate Purity Product Supplements.
3.  If your drinking water is heavily chlorinated, buy bottled water.  Chlorine kills good bacteria.
4.   Improve your eating habits to receive better nutrients.  Also reduce daily stress.
 5.  Discontinue use of antibiotics in food production as well as medical treatment.
6.    Consume:  Yogurt, fermented and unfermented milk, miso, tempeh, soy beverages, and garlic.

Author:  Marc T. Woodard, MBA, BS Exercise Science, USA Medical Services Officer, CPT, RET.  2008 Copyright.  All rights reserved, Mirror Athlete Publishing, www.mirrorathlete.com ,   Sign up for your Free eNewsletter.

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