pain free

A Traveler’s Guide to Staying Supple, Comfortable, and Fit

Throughout the summer, many of us have been active traveling and will continue doing so through labor day. This could involve long car rides, flights, and disturbances in our usual movement and self-care routines. Some people specifically avoid traveling due to back pain or similar issues, or perhaps suffer through increased pain which detracts from the joys of vacationing.

Here are some tips to keep you and your body feeling happy and healthy throughout your travels!

Breaks from prolonged sitting

The number one most important thing is taking frequent breaks from sitting, no matter the mode of travel. Prolonged stillness, especially constricted in an enclosed space of a vehicle or plane, is the recipe for soreness and stiffness

Rather than only taking breaks for the biological need of needing to use the bathroom, consider the biological needs of your musculoskeletal system. The body’s tissues do not like to be in the same position for too long, especially positions that involve increased pressures on certain areas (e.g. the low back).

In fact, studies have shown that prolonged sitting is associated with increased pressures on the intervertebral discs of the lower back. This study demonstrated  that disc height, particularly between the L4 and L5 vertebrae, is significantly impacted by prolonged sitting without breaks. The loss of disc height was not present with brief positional changes performed every 15 minutes. Changes in disc height during prolonged sitting may be associated with low back pain, sciatica, and functional disability.

At the least, try to stand up and walk around once an hour. Consider setting timers so you remember to stop and move around. If you can do it every half an hour, great! If it is not possible to take a break this often, never go for more than two hours without getting up. If you’re not able to get up, change your position often! Trust your own experience and honor your body’s request for appropriate breaks. 

Targeted movement breaks

Maximize your breaks from sitting with specific movements/stretches that help to reverse the effects of sitting. 

Notice that in sitting, the hips and knees are flexed to around 90 degrees. Most people also tend to sit with some flexion in the low and mid back. This shortens certain muscles/tissues, particularly around the spine, hips, and knees. By specifically performing movements that lengthen those tissues, you can help prevent your body from getting quite as stiff and sore during long trips. 

Consider trying some movement snacks (see our Movement Snacks blog) to break up your car trip, particularly the first three videos that you can do standing up (perhaps using your car or a picnic table for support).

Another favorite is a standing back extension, which involves pressing the hips forward to extend the back and hips. This movement can be done as shown below, or by pressing the hips forward into a support surface such as your car, a chair, or a picnic table, while gently holding on to the support surface.

I also love to do a version of a sun salutation that you can do while standing. This involves reaching up to the sky, down to the ground, and cycling through this while breathing. 

You could also do standing pelvic circles, imagining you are standing with a small hula hoop around your waist, and you make circles with your hips within the hoop.

It may also be helpful to consider how the spine moves in space, and engage in movements in which you move the spine in each of the three directions (flexion/extension, side bending, and rotation). See our How the Spine Moves blog for more information.

At the Wellness Station, we will help you create specific, individualized movement routines that you can integrate into your travels.

Ergonomics and posture

While sitting for a while during travel, it can be helpful to enhance your ergonomics and posture. See our Posture Part II blog for more specific information.

The main factors to consider here are:

Appropriate back support

Consider having an inflatable travel ball to stick behind your back in the car or on the plane to help support your spine.

The above can be ordered from Amazon and deflated to the level that fits best for your body size and your seat.

Changing Position Often

Try not to get stuck in one stagnant sitting position. Cycle between being more reclined and less reclined. Change where you are holding your legs. Move the ball around to some different positions.

Sitting movement breaks

Similar to changing position often, try to incorporate specific movement breaks while sitting. You can be doing the pelvic clock. You can be gently pumping your ankles, stretching your hips, rolling your neck. Some planes even have specific in-flight videos for sitting stretches you can follow along to.

Establishing a vacation movement routine

Many people let their routines slip away on vacation. “I’m on vacation- why would I be exercising?” While of course you want to have plenty of time to immerse yourself in new experiences, or perhaps sit on the beach with an ice cold margarita, vacations are no time to be sedentary. Don’t you want to be feeling your very best to fully enjoy your vacation, rather than feeling stiff, achey, and out of shape? 

How can you re-establish a movement routine while traveling? Bringing a yoga mat and some very minimal supplies (ankle weights, therabands) might be an option while traveling. If not, perhaps there is a hotel gym and/or pool that you could enjoy. When bringing equipment and gym access is not possible, think of what body weight movements you could do (e.g. variations of squats, lunges, push ups, cat cow, step ups, etc.)

Consider opting for an active vacation. How can you explore new places with your own two legs? Is there a hike in the area you would like to explore? A bike trail? Swimming in a pristine lake or a salty sea? Or perhaps a walking tour of the downtown must-sees.

Whatever your journey may be, try to prioritize staying active so you can make the very most of your vacation. At the Wellness Station, we can help to gradually progress your fitness to help you be able to move towards the trip of your dreams. 

A biking exploration of Jasper National Park

Written by Jacob Tyson, DPT - Physical Therapist, Yoga Instructor and The Wellness Station Team

How To Enjoy Your Garden Without Stressing Your Back

Tips for digging and shoveling dirt to improve body posturing and reduce pain.

  • First thing’s first, digging is easiest when the soil is moist.

  • A sharpened shovel can be very helpful to diminish required forces.

  • Wear good boots to protect your feet pushing on the shovel.

  • When digging, throw the dirt to the side of the lowest hand on the shovel. Pivot from your hips to throw the dirt, rather than from your arms alone. If you need to throw the dirt to the opposite side of the low hand, change how you are holding the shovel so that the other hand becomes the low hand. This is extremely important so that you have a base of support, the foot and leg on the side of the low hand , to take your weight and not have your back holding the weight of the shovel!

  • Often you can have the lower forearm resting on your thigh and the upper hand pushes down on the handle to use the shovel as a fulcrum. This way, rather than actually lifting the dirt up, you are pushing the dirt up.

Enjoy this beautiful spring and hang out in your garden to nourish your soul more and more!

Stay tuned for an upcoming post on weeding, raking and energy conservation strategies.

The Sea Squirt: Lessons on Brains and Pains

Have you come up with any resolutions or intentions for 2021? We hope you’ll add this sea squirt inspired idea too: You can improve brain and body health with ONE activity! What’s the ONE activity? Read more to find out!

Brain Synapses

The human brain is incredibly complex and diverse. It contains 1 billion trillion synapses! (Yes, one billion trillion is grammatically correct!) The synapse is where neurons meet to send messages for communication.

Brain synapses contain approximately 1000 different proteins, and each and every synapse is diverse from any other.

What does this tell us about the purpose of the brain and the nervous system?

And, even more importantly, what does this tell us about how to keep our brain and ourselves healthy?

The Sea Squirt

Did you know that without one particular phenomenon occurring in any organism, there would be no brain present?

Let’s see if thinking about a tad pole like organism, the sea squirt, can give us a clue as to why we have brains…

The sea squirt has a brain and a spinal cord connected to a single eye and a tail for swimming. But once it attaches itself to something, it no longer moves. It then actually absorbs its own brain!

It no longer needs it because it is no longer moving!

Photo courtesy of Brittanica.com.

Photo courtesy of Brittanica.com.

Brains are for Movement

Yes, movement is why we have brains!

And what of the quality of movement do you think keeps the brain active, engaged, and thriving?

You got it! —movements that stimulate curiosity, activities that engage in a variety of shapes and rhythms—three dimensional movements that keep us young and healthy!

If you will, please visualize the following:

  • children who have just been let out for school recess

  • the joy of participants in recreational sports and dance

  • dogs romping at a dog park

  • the sheer ecstasy of an infant discovering the ability to crawl and eventually walk and run!

The variety and pleasurable aspects of movement are what keep the brain flowing, maintaining the complex synapses as well as the simple ones.

Pain Prevention

Sadly, most of us decrease the complexity and variations of our movement experiences as we get older. The old “use it or lose it“ saying.

Our body and brain suffer—less variety of movement creates more tension in the tissues and pressure on the joints, and thus pain and diminished mobility result.

What can we do to prevent and even reverse these changes?

The good news is with what we know about neuroplasticity, we can always revitalize and create more functional brain tissue for greater mobility and pain-free well-being.

Movement Classes

And the key to that is movement…

…especially of the nature that you will experience in the Feldenkrais “Awareness Through Movement“ educational classes.

The movement class series “Superflow” begins in January and continues through March. Get more information about the classes, and sign up for one class…or sign up for a monthly series… or sign up for all three months!

Remember, “As the brain flows, so the pain goes!“

We look forward to joining you in 2021 as we achieve happier and healthier bodies and lives!