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Standing and
Posture
Good posture
protects
your back
and can
improve your
appearance.
Follow these
guidelines
for correct
posture
while
standing:
-
Your
head,
shoulders,
hips,
knees,
and
ankles
should
be in a
line.
-
Your
shoulders
should
be
square,
not
rounded.
-
Hold
your
pelvis
in
mid-position
with a
slight
hollow
in the
low
back.
-
Keep
your
knees
relaxed,
not
locked
straight.
-
Place
your
feet a
few
inches
apart
with
your
weight
evenly
distributed.
Good posture
doesn’t come
overnight.
You have to
work at it.
Try this
exercise:
Press your
heels,
buttocks,
shoulders
and head
firmly against
the wall.
Walk 3-5
steps away
from the
wall; hold
for 5
seconds.
Return to
the wall by
walking
backwards.
Did you have
to readjust
your
posture?
Pay
particular
attention to
your head
and neck.
Practice
this
exercise a
few times
per day
until you
are able to
walk back to
the wall
without
making any
postural
adjustments.
Were you
able to get
your heels
and
shoulders
against the
wall?
Increasing
your
flexibility
will allow
you to do so
over time.
Good Posturere
"Good
posture"
is much more
than "stand
up straight
and don't
slouch." In
fact, that
advice is
often not
helpful:
most people,
told to
"stand up
straight",
adopt a very
rigid or
"held"
position
which they
can't
maintain for
more than a
few minutes,
and which
can strain a
back as
surely as
any slump.
Children
naturally
use
themselves
well, but as
we get
older, a
free,
natural way
of moving
gets
overlaid by
poor habits,
particularly
habits
around your
head, neck
and back.
You can
learn to
stop these
habits and
get back a
large
proportion
of a child's
lightness
and freedom
of movement,
right into
old age.
The Good
Stuff about
Good
Posture!
Don't just
improve your
posture
because
someone's
moaning at
you! There
are some
very good
reasons to
consider
improving it
anyway.
-
Good
posture
is calm
and
comfortable.
If you
have
good
posture,
it is "a
joy to
move",
and you
will
move
more.
Moving
more
keeps
you
happy
and
healthy
-
Good
posture
improves
your
self-esteem
-
Good
posture
is
beautiful
-
Good
posture
is
athletic
and
well-balanced
-
Good
posture
is
strong
and
resilient
...other bit
boring
benefits
are!
-
Good
posture
looks
after
your
back
-
Good
posture
improves
your
circulation,
digestion
and
waste
elimination
keeping
you
fresh.
-
Good
posture
helps
your
breathing.
Asthmatics,
for
example,
have a
characteristic
"set" in
their
chest
and
upper
back.
There
are few
asthmatics
with
good
movement
in their
upper
spine. A
fixed
upper
spine
prevents
you from
breathing
properly
and
contributes
considerably
to
breathing
difficulties.
This
condition
is
habitual,
not
permanent,
and can
be
unlearned.
Many
asthmatics
can
reduce
or
eliminate
their
medication
as a
result
of
looking
after
their
posture.
Posture,
Movement and
Back Pain
Good posture
is
particularly
important
now that our
way of life
doesn't
support
natural good
posture very
well. We do
less
exercise,
sit still in
front of TVs
and
computers,
and spend a
lot of time
sitting in
traffic
jams.
But our
bodies are
built for
moving.
Staying
still for
long periods
is difficult
and
stressful
for us.
Its not
surprising
that back
pain is
rampant in
our country
about 60% of
adults.
If you are
seriously
worried
about your
posture,
seek
professional
help.
Strengthening
and Exercise
Undoubtedly
your ability
to stand
naturally
can be
affected by
how well
your muscles
and joints
are working.
Keeping fit
and flexible
will help
your
posture.
Is Slouching
A Problem? ?
Slouching
every once
in a while
is
absolutely
fine, unless
it hurts
your back.
It only
becomes a
problem if
you slouch
all the time,
i.e. it has
become a
permanent
habit. Keep
your slouch
for special
occasions!
Slouching in
the lower
back puts
quite a bit
of weight on
your sacrum
and tailbone
(coccyx) and
this
shouldn't be
repeated too
often. If
you're going
to develop a
habit,
develop a
habit of
sitting on
your sitting
bones.
"Stand Up
Straight"t;
Some of the
traditional
advice by
parents &
well wisher
on posture
is not that
good. Infect
it is not so
easy to give
good advice
about
posture.
-
If a
person
has
injuries
or
weaknesses
in their
body
structure,
it may
cause
further
damage
to tell
them to
"stand
up
straight".
A
deeply-curved
upper
back
should
not be
asked to
stand up
straight,
particularly
not if
the
sufferer
has
fused
vertebrae
or a
condition
such as
osteoporosis
-
Posture
is
partly
an
expression
of our
emotional
state
howow
anxious
parents,
friends,
medics
and
teachers
say
"Stand
Up
Straight,"
how
and when
advice
is
given,
can have
a huge
impact
on a
person's
posture--
before
you even
get to
the
advice
itself
-
Human
backs
are not
straight
(and
shouldn't
be!)
A spine
naturally
has four
curves,
in the
neck,
upper
back,
lower
back and
buttock.
"Stand
up
straight"
is
anatomically
inaccurate.
Your
spine is
your
body's
suspension
system,
and the
curves
in your
spine,
much
like the
springs
in a
car's
suspension,
ensure
that the
body's
delicate
systems
don't
get a
shock at
each
step we
take
-
"Stand
up
straight"
sounds
like
it's
about
"looking
good."
Well,
people
who use
their
bodies
well
often
look
wonderful,
but not
everyone
who is
bent
over is
"lazy"
or has
something
that can
be
remedied
simply
by
following
postural
advice.
And not
everyone
who
looks
"straight"
is free
from
back
pain.
You can
get back
pain
from
being
"over-straight"
as well
-
It is
easy to
set up
muscle
conflict
and
tension
with
well-meant
advice.
If my
awareness
of my
posture
is poor,
asking
me to
stand up
straight
will not
improve
it. It
may lead
to
"stand
up
straight"
being
overlaid
on my
habitual
"poor
posture",
so that
I have
some
muscles
pulling
me into
a
slouch,
and
others
pulling
me
upright,
simultaneously.
Two
wrong
and
opposing
sets of
directions
to the
muscles
where
before
there
was only
one!
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