Great Posture And Good Health
Great Posture and Good Health
October is National Chiropractic Health Month.
There is indeed a significant relationship between posture and health. Keeping your shoulders down and pushed back opens up the chest, giving the lungs more room to breathe. Holding the head up high and the ears over the shoulders keeps the neck in proper alignment in the front-to-back orientation (the side/lateral view). This posture also helps to keep the mid-back from excessively rounding in what was termed the "widow’s hump" or "hunchback."
Our internal organs have more room to function, allowing more room for lung expansion and digestion to take place. Keeping a neutral pelvis — by not tilting it into a swayback or a flat back at the waist — helps to keep excess pressure off of the lumbar nerves while sitting or standing.
Scoliosis will worsen faster with poor posture and result in more spinal degeneration. These posture corrections help to maintain the normal curves of the spine, which act as shock absorbers.
October is also a month that involves increased yardwork.
Good posture while performing yardwork will help to prevent injuries, so keep your head up, looking ahead as you mow, and lower your eyes (instead of the whole head) as you rake. Bend at the knees, not the waist — and when raking, use a “scissor stance” with one foot forward of the other and switch sides every few minutes.
Stand with feet apart, pulling the rake towards you to make small piles of leaves. If using a blower or another piece of equipment that has a strap, be sure to use it on the opposite shoulder from the side of the body you hold the device, switching sides often. This helps you maintain a more normal center of gravity.
When pulling the start cord on the mower, remember to bend at the knees, don’t twist at the waist, and pull in a smooth, long, steady motion instead of with short, hard pulls.
While mowing, use your whole body to push the mower — not just your arms and back. Have warm-up and cool-down activities, stretches, and corner push-offs to help prevent injury and to keep good posture.
The push-offs are done standing with your back to a corner, elbows at shoulder height, leaning back into the corner and then using elbows to push away from the walls. The farther out your feet are, the more resistance gravity is supplying. This exercise strengthens the muscles that hold the shoulders back, encouraging better posture.
If you’ve felt a “strained” back muscle that is slow to heal, consider seeing a chiropractor because that “strain” may have allowed a spinal misalignment resulting in nerve interference. Nerve interference results in a loss of health — a state of dis-ease.
The World Health Organization defined health as a state of optimal function, not merely the absence of symptoms or disease. Thomas Edison stated that the doctor of the future will give no medicine but will teach care of the human frame and prevention of disease. Better posture and spinal health result in more optimal function of your body.
As we focus on shifting definitions of health, the following story also bears repeating:
A man fell asleep, and in a dream he heard the voice of God.
“Come outside,” God said. “I have something to show you.”
So the man woke and went outside to find a huge boulder on his front lawn.
“Now,” God said, “push against the rock.”
So with all his strength and determination the man pushed, and pushed. For days, weeks, and months — in the heat of the day and throughout the night — he concentrated on pushing the boulder, but the big rock didn’t budge.
He heard a soft chuckle from above.
“Why are you discouraged?” answered God. “I told you to push the boulder — I never told you to move it. Only I can move boulders of that size. But look at what has happened while you have been pushing.
You have developed large, well-defined muscles in your arms, chest, back, and legs.
You have strengthened your patience and tested your faith.
So keep pushing — until I’m ready to move the boulder.”
As we age, the spine has a tendency to lose the normal forward curve of the neck, and previous injuries hasten this decline. Once the curves of the spine in the lateral plane are lost, weight-bearing is carried by the discs instead of the facet joints, causing the discs to wear faster because they start to absorb the shock of every step we take and each bump we experience.
The spinal nerves supply all of the organs and tissues of the body with direction and control by the central nervous system, which is comprised of the brain and spinal cord. That information is compromised by pressure on the nerves. The organs that these nerves supply will have dis-ease — a lack of ease.
Have patience and don’t give up on improving your posture and your spinal alignment. Remember: Good posture, muscle tone, and spinal alignment restore more normal nerve flow and better health.
Let National Chiropractic Health Month inspire you to have your spinal alignment analyzed.
Call 352-795-8911 or (352) 750-6325 for more optimal health and performance.
Better Health Chiropractic
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