Things you may not know but might change your reality.... to practice for better health.
1. Thinking of things you are grateful for everyday ( regular grateful thinking can increase happiness by as much 25 per cent).
2. Exercising regularly- just going for a walk can elevate your mood and increase feelings of well-being.
3. We are essentially programmed to see and remember the bad things that happen as that is how we have survived by being able to recognise what is something to avoid again since we lived with danger everyday as cave men and women. We can change this by focusing and remembering the good.
4. We are also hard wired to hang onto resentment, which is also a primal fighting response as we are hard wired to fight to protect ourselves from hurt and danger and internalise it to continue the protection.
5. Craft and colouring activities can help with anxiety and depression and are a form of mindfulness, which helps shift unhelpful thoughts and can even help sleep. (Calms the 'amygdala' that I mentioned in a previous post).
So get crafty, breathe, focus on the good, let go of resentment, and exercise.
Sunday, 26 March 2017
Saturday, 25 March 2017
Get to know your 'amydala' response
Mindfulness and breathing techniques has helped myself and my students better understand their emotions and how they are chemically based. With practice we can all learn to monitor our thoughts better. Growing up I knew no other way to process my thoughts and feelings except to act more than not with my fight or flight response. Working from a tiny gland at the base of the skull called the 'amygdala'. I would run from situations I felt slightly uncomfortable in or I would fight it verbally. No winners there obviously. Since learning better ways through yoga I wish to pass this onto the younger generation and hopefully with this understanding and mindfulness they will be better equipped to face challenges (as they are just part of life) and better control negative thoughts and unhelpful ways of dealing with stress. So if you'd like to learn more please join one of my classes for kids, workshops or teacher training.
Peace be with you.
Wednesday, 22 March 2017
nutrition and exercise for young children
Importance of Nutrition and Exercise
One in four children in Austalia are now classed as obese!
Exercise is
vital for children’s development and lays the foundation for an active and
healthy life.
Encouraging
good eating habits and eating healthy options helps children grow strong and
maintain a healthy weight.
Calcium is
particularly important for children’s growing bones. Healthy growth takes place with proper
nutrition in childhood and influences growth and health through to adolescence. Most children have formed lifelong eating
habits by school age. A low fat and
cholesterol diet on a daily basis also promotes good health in children and in
the long term.
Importance of
fundamental skills.
From 4-yrs of
age are the best time to develop these gross motor and fine motor skills, as
children of this age have the neurological & ability to develop skills.
Practising
running, balancing, jumping in early childhood assists children to be better able
to actively enjoy an active lifestyle later in life. Involvement in exercise and motor skill
development programs have shown to develop self- esteem and confidence
associated with in other areas of children’s education.
‘Nonlocomotor’
or body management skills are those that involve bending, stretching, pushing
and pulling, twisting and turning, balancing and rolling. So get your kids involved in forms of
exercise that involve these fundamental skills to encourage a long term
interest in maintaining a healthy lifestyle and possibly developing specialised
skills in their chosen sport in the future.
Top tips for
kids’ yoga participation:
Yoga assists
in development of fine and gross motor skills and building strong bones and
muscles.
A small
healthy snack before yoga can help to giver energy and improve their
cardiovascular fitness outcomes.
Weight-bearing
exercises in which children carry their own body weight, such as upward facing
dog, plank, tree pose, warrior poses all have a positive impact on a child’s
bone development.
As their
bones are still developing, avoid too much high impact asanas and holding poses
for two long. The softness of the growth
plates at the end of each growing bone can mean a greater risk of injury. Short bouts of high impact asanas, such as
jumping in ‘frog pose’ can promote bone growth in children.
Ensure that
your yoga session incorporates a variety of activities that use different
muscle groups and body parts, for example; Move from frog jumping to dolphin
pose to work on the upper body more.
Note: boys
are more prone to growth plate injuries than girls, as their growth plates
usually fuse at a later stage.
Use a warm up
of 5-10 minutes to assist injury prevention.
For example; bike peddling in the air (peddle laughing game).
Work on
strengthening alternate muscle groups as children get older. For example, do
boat pose then a lower back strengthening asana for example, Locust pose in
yoga.
Make it fun! Play is the primary way young children learn
and that includes learning about having a healthy active life.
Kids sleep
better after a work-out of any sort, so added bonus for parents!
Further
reading: ‘Get up and Grow program’ Australia.
Reference:
‘Too Much Too Quickly’ by Jeff Walkley (from the ACHPER Healthy Lifestyle
Journal, 1995).