Tai Chi is normally viewed as a low-impact exercise program. Sure, it might help stretch joints, relax tight muscles, and get you breathing more freely- but that's it, right?
Numerous studies coming out recently suggest that Tai Chi also helps improve balance, improve heart health, and impart a general sense of well-being. But it also helped me through stages of grief.
There have been some deaths in recent months that have touched my family. My grandfather, suffering from Alzheimer's disease; my nephew taken from us by a rare brain cancer; a good friend of my husband and myself just a few days ago lost his battle with congestive heart failure. These all touched me deeply, and brought tears to my eyes. I felt their loss, and I felt how their passing touched others close to me, and I grieved with them, also.
But through it all I've tried, more or less successfully, to continue my Tai Chi practice. There are days when I feel lethargic, or have spent around those grieving, where I missed my practice. There have been days where I did not practice good habits and instead maybe drank a bit too much and lazed about watching YouTube videos. Some days I went for a walk instead because my mind was whirling too much and I didn't want to take the time to pay attention to my forms. There, too, were days when I did my forms, but was distracted and couldn't get them right even though I've been doing them a while and am fairly comfortable with them now.
The days, however, when I at least attempted my Tai Chi or Qigong practice, I have to say, supported the days when I did not. There is a momentum with that practice, I feel, that continues even when I don't physically do the movements, the breathing, or practice the principles.
In the face of grief, awareness, mindfulness, or being able to come back to and rest in the present moment can be very healing. When the mind wanders with thoughts of worry, death, or the persistent malaise of not knowing what comes next, being able to find stillness is very comforting. No, it's not driving out the thoughts (because thoughts exist, I believe, in our physiology). When in a dark mood, the body feels it. That dark cloud that sits in the pit of your stomach, the heaviness of heart, the lump in the throat- those are all connected intimately, I believe, with feelings and thoughts and sometimes we cannot consciously control those feelings at all. However, Tai Chi teaches us to be present with those feelings, to allow them to exist with us without the need for us to dwell on them, to feed them, to perpetuate them. So even for a moment, breathing and feeling the body, acknowledging feelings but not doting on them, allows us a sort of eye in the storm. At least for me, this is what Tai Chi brings to me.
Now, sometimes this practice is uncomfortable. But mindfulness is not about being comfortable all the time- it's about honesty and the ability to appropriately measure our response. Invite a pause, allow your body, through paying attention to what you feel inside, to relax gradually by stages, and don't judge yourself too harshly for being sad. And keep going, keep practicing, and stay grounded. Or at least, cultivate the ability, over and over again, to recognize when we are gathering internal tension, and consciously, sensitively, give it our compassion.
Thank you,
Justin
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
The New Rules of Stretching
Good News: Mobility is no Longer Boring
By Justin Casteel, RYT-200, ACTION-CPT
Watching
an animal in the wild, or even a pet inside a home, we as humans can be struck
by the beautiful simplicity of their movements.
Animals like cats display graceful, sinuous movements, and can walk so
quietly that they make no sound. Dogs
can lay on the floor all day in a sunbeam, then get up, shake around, stretch
for a few seconds, and then they are ready for play! Sometimes, we as people shake our heads and
can’t understand how these animals aren’t stiff, or don’t seem to hurt after
laying and sitting on the floor all the time!
And when they run, animals can embody an athletic springiness that looks
coordinated, vital, and magestic all in the same instant.
But
when humans get in groups to engage in physical activity, we have a funny way
of behaving. Some of us will sit on
benches, stretching our legs, or use straps and blocks to stretch our shoulders
and waists and necks. And we just do it,
and accept it as a way to improve mobility or avoid post-exercise
stiffness. And a lot of it is really
boring! Sitting for thirty seconds, or
even as much as ninety seconds, doing some stretches can seem like an
eternity! Fortunately, there is some
exciting new research that points to benefits from a very different sort of
stretching.
As a
trainer, one of the most common complaints that I hear is about
stretching. It seems people would rather
do something more active, more engaging.
Or, maybe they don’t really see the point. However, in light of some new research,
there might be light on the horizon for stretching! Apparently, when looking from a motor control
perspective, “[o]nly during active movement are the efferent, motor recruitment
sequences generated, which is essential for encoding the movement…”1 In fact, the Golgi receptors are only
activated in an active stretch (where one muscle is contracting to help
lengthen another; an agonist/ antagonist pair).2 This suggests that
stretching like a dog or a cat, where the muscles actively contract, might be more beneficial than conventional
stretching. Furthermore, “[p]erformance is
enhanced by goal-orientated and whole movement. Stretching practices, which
focus internally and on specific tissues, may degrade performance”.1
So, in
conclusion, maybe we can find a way to stretch through movement, to enhance
mobility in ways that are more active and more engaging than the old runner’s
stretches we might be used to! Now, that
being said, there still may be some benefit to traditional stretching. But it might be just as good, or better, to
try something new… and something that might be a little more fun!
References
1). Lederman,
E. (2015) Human movement performance:
Stretching misconceptions and future trends. In Schleip R. (1st
ed) Fascia In Sport and Movement (pp.
83 – 91) East Lothian, Scotland: Handspring Pub.
2). Avison,
J. S. (2015) Yoga: Fascia, Anatomy and
Movement East Lothian, Scotland: Handspring Pub.
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