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You are here: Home / Archives for Wellness

Wellness

1pose1day1year October-December 2020

2020-12-31 by laura

Everything fell apart with my daily sadhana practice due to COVID-19. I continued my practice intermittently, as best as I could, when I began making the earth shaking changes in my life which I described in an update.

I’m moving to Canada! When my house sells I’ll be in stasis at a temporary home in California until I am vaccinated and I tie up a few loose ends. Meanwhile, I’m doing the best I can with a daily bit of physical therapy work. There are a ton of yoga moves in my PT Rx.

My year of doing one pose each day was modestly successful, I’d say, looking back on it. I went for months with near daily attention with it. I don’t consider stopping something when one’s life is in the midst of upheaval to be a bad thing. One does ones best and carries on doing what one can do for today.

I may do another 1pose1day1year for 2022 after I’m more settled into my new home. My current daily focus is doing the physical therapy I need to allow me to return to activities I love. My challenge to myself is to hit 20 minutes of activity every day and to include a lot of recovery work. I’m nearly in my fifth decade and it’s time for me to adapt and accept that my body needs more respect and care as I age.

Filed Under: Wellness Tagged With: 1day1pose1year, daily practice, habits, mountain pose, routines, self care, tadasana, wellness, youga

1pose1day1year September 2020

2020-09-30 by laura

This month I tried to deepen my daily yoga practice of doing 1pose1day1year of tadasana. I recorded myself speaking the Iyengar yoga instructions for mountain pose. I’d been saying the words to myself while doing the work but I found myself worrying too much about aggravating my tender spots of chronic injury.

I got the instructions from Yoga: the Iyengar way. Cover of Yoga the Iyengar wayMy recording runs five minutes 26 seconds. That’s a big jump from the one minute I’d been doing since starting this yoga practice nine months (!!) ago. The recording has allowed me to relax into my body and think less while focusing on truly gaining the benefits of precision.

I practice Ashtanga dhristi while I am in tadasana. Dhristi is were one puts soft focus during the pose. Dhristi is the end of one’s nose in mountain pose.Occasionally I’ll also do a full minute of silence in the pose after I do the posture with the recording. It’s a form of meditation.

I will also practice the pranayama for tadasana. To do the Ashtanga breathing, keep the mouth softly closed. Inhale through the nose and down the back of the throat with enough vibration to sound like Darth Vadar. Exhale through the nose.

I recommend Tadasana by Himanshi Parmar if you would like a great set of instructions for mountain pose that you might record for yourself. It’s consistent with the instructions for tadasana in my Iyengar-based book.

I was sore the first days of doing my daily practice with audio instruction. The body gets into bad habits over a lifetime so holding the correct posture works the body in “new” ways. Of course there will be soreness.

I have not been consistent this month, however. I threw my back out mid-month and have been doing my physical therapy exercises in lieu of tadasa as my pain allows. Sometimes you need to go with the flow and honor what your body is telling you.

Filed Under: Wellness Tagged With: 1day1pose1year, daily practice, habits, mountain pose, routines, self care, tadasana, wellness, yoga

1pose1day1year July-August 2020

2020-08-19 by laura

My 1day1pose1year tadasana practice took a hit this summer. My mountain pose yoga stood still (hah! see what I did there?). My practice has continued randomly during July-August.

I’m keeping at it though. I continue to work on my toes and the soles of my feet.

I had a lengthier practice yesterday. I decided to record myself reading Iyengar-based instructions rather than continue reciting only some of them in my head. I want to be inside my body rather than my head. I want to quit worrying about guiding myself to correct posture due to fear of injury. I can simply relax into the strong balanced stillness. I’m sure I will listen to it so much that I will absorb them and the audio can fade to none.

Meanwhile It’s been a long hot interesting summer. I gave myself a vacation from social media to keep myself more centered in working with my coaching clients and looking positively forward. I continue to manage stress by not having strict posting schedule but posting when I get the urge.

Filed Under: Wellness Tagged With: 1day1pose1year, daily practice, mountain pose, tadasana, wellness, yoga

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2020-06-25 by laura

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Filed Under: Wellness

What to do after a binge

2020-06-18 by laura

Health coach confession time: I am in recovery from an eating disorder. Recovery doesn’t mean that slips don’t happen. Recovery means slips don’t become slides. Recovery – to me – means abundant self-kindness, body positivity, and getting back to my baseline habits that help me feel better.Photo of binge by fridge by Corie Howell

There are quite a few sources out there that discuss things one can do to resume self-care with healthy eating after a binge. My tips aren’t anything radical or new. What follows is simply what works for me and perhaps a general reminder of what you already know for yourself.

If you are in active disordered eating behavior please seek professional help. You deserve to feel good and this illness requires medical and psychological expertise. Meanwhile, you might do these things to begin feeling better immediately.

In the moment

Take a pause. Take a breath. Use this time to sit at your table and totally enjoy whatever it is that you’re eating. Follow the basics: chew and taste. Thank yourself for using food to manage the difficulty that led you to eating it.

Whaaat? Yup. There are benefits to your eating behavior! You get something out of it – relief! However temporary that relief may be. This is the tool you know. This is the tool that works. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with you for making this choice. No guilt. No shame.

IMHO binges are a form of self-care although they’re not great long-term or done often. Right now the benefit of relief outweighs all the cons.

If you want to stop yourself, perhaps use physical rewards that are also pleasurable like food. I like to smell sandalwood and remember how much my grandfather loved that scent and happy times at his house. Lavender works for me too.  Ditto ginger and peppermint.

Immediately after

Take care of your body. Drink water and stay hydrated. Have an over the counter medication to help with any gastrointestinal discomfort. Or use that ginger and peppermint in tea or lozenge form – both are helpful for nausea. Fennel tea is great for gas and has a lovely licorice taste.  Have a warm soothing bath or self-massage with an aromatic oil.

If you can, try to consider the things that led to the binge.  What happened? Who were you interacting with? What were your emotions? What was the physical sensation of those emotions in your body? There is a chain of events that got you into the kitchen. Recognizing context and feelings can help you break the chain another time. Do not worry if you had no bodily sensation or can’t name the emotions. This is really difficult stuff, especially if you have past trauma or co-morbid conditions. This is one reason why working with pros is helpful.

Next day and beyond

Notice any lingering effects. For example, my body is impacted when I over do sugar. I have a hard time getting out of bed next morning. I am super groggy and the feeling lasts almost an hour. Sugar will also will give me an anxiety attack within 24-48 hours of consumption. It took me decades to match this type of anxiety with food since the impact is not immediate. And, if I consume too much sugar over a period of days, my joints and tendons will begin to ache worse than usual. Now that I know I get side effects, I can sometimes break the chain of events leading to the binge by weighing the consequences. Do I want to feel better now if it means I’ll feel even worse later?

You may feel like compensating with some sort of rigid rule or restriction. Compensate with your regular routine. Restricting food the next day doesn’t erase the past and is the beginning of the next disordered cycle. Exercising more won’t burn the amount of calories you ate unless you exercise for a looooong time. Doing your daily routine is a compensation. Congratulate yourself for doing a little bit every day.

Treat yourself with healthy food that you love. I love scrambled eggs and spinach for breakfast. I’ll treat myself by adding some feta. I might go out and get a little fresh salmon for dinner – I usually don’t get it due to cost. But, that money is less than what I will pay in health care later on down the line. And, I tell myself if I’m using food as love that I am totally worth the expense.

Eat when you’re hungry and stop when you’re comfortably full.

Use those CBT phrases. Your brain may be looping on beating itself up for binging. Let it. But, respond to it. Are those thoughts true? Phrases that work for me, “that happened but I can’t change the past. I am changing right now.” “That tasted really good yesterday and I can have more of x at some future point.” “I deserve excellent nutrition.”

Create a non-food rewards/comfort list. You might be able to use those tools instead of a binge in the future. If you have a list already, review it.

Create a “reasons why” you want to eat nutritious food. For me? Managing my risk of cardiovascular disease, avoiding anxiety, avoiding inflammation that increases my pain levels. Write them a small card you can carry around with you. Refer to it often, even when you’re not in the binge cycle.

Most of all remind yourself that you deserve love just for being you. Binging is not “bad.” It’s simply that other ways of coping work better long term. Taking the time and energy to practice self-care post-binge might help and certainly won’t hurt.

 

Filed Under: Wellness Tagged With: binge, cognitive behavioral therapy, confessions from a health coach, daily practice, eating disorders, food, habits, health, nutrition, routines, self care, self kindness, self love, tips, wellness

Changes are rarely due to just one thing

2020-06-16 by laura

Coffee latteIt’s convenient to have just one reason why something isn’t working. Sometimes that’s the case (hello flat tire!).

When it comes to health, however, our bodies and our life context are complicated. It’s a system.

I think it can be due to a perfect storm when we’re not feeling our best. I have an example. I’ve been feeling like crap all week.

I unpacked the reasons why. First, my medication was changed slightly starting this week. Stupid U.S. health system and the different insurance providers having different formularies. Different generic meds are different. They can be as different as generics are from name-brand. That’s a rant for another time.

The difference may be slight, but we are finely tuned.

Second, I couldn’t get my usual coffee brand. Different brands probably have different caffeine counts. This brand is delicious and I may have had an extra half cup, compounding the extra caffeine issue.

Third, my bike is in the shop getting the tires fixed. I’m getting less endorphins because I’m getting less cardio.

Boom. I feel more anxious, less energetic, and hence way more procrastinate-y on my to-do list.

Little things add up. This is why I recommend that my clients start with one small do-able habit change and wait a bit to see if consistency makes an improvement. Change is subtle when  a bunch of little things are involved. It may be difficult to be patient with the process when the change doesn’t seem to make too much difference. Yet, it’s a change you can stick to. It’s something where you can say, “it’s making *some* difference and every little bit helps. And go me! I’m doing the thing.”

After you get a habit that sticks, you add a new habit. You build up. I can’t tell you when the cumulative effect will kick in. But, it’s going to kick in. You will reach a point where you realize, “hey! I’m feeling so much better compared to where I started.”

And that’s the point.

And, I am SO not having any coffee tomorrow.

Filed Under: Wellness

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Smart On Health covers all things wellness from the perspective of Laura J. Smart, a London, Ontario  based health coach and writer. You can read more about Smart On Health on the details page.

About Laura J. Smart

Head shot of Laura J. SmartLaura helps you with nutrition, fitness, culinary skills, and sustainable habit change at laurajsmart.health

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