We Make We Move Wednesday

Swimming Elk Lake / 5" x 7" / oil on panel by Jessica Lee Ives / 2017


Wednesday We Make We Move posts bring together the art of movement, and the movement of art.

 

The fine motor movements made by painters, writers, and musicians are not unlike the full-bodied exertions of runners, climbers, and swimmers; both express kinesthetic intelligence. Human movement is a privilege and a wonder to experience. It is how we make. It is how we move. It is how we live in this world. And it is how we make this world livable.

We Make We Move

Art Of The Pickup / 8" x 10" / oil on panel by Jessica Lee Ives / 2017


Wednesday We Make We Move posts bring together the art of movement, and the movement of art.

 

The fine motor movements made by painters, writers, and musicians are not unlike the full-bodied exertions of runners, climbers, and swimmers; both express kinesthetic intelligence. Human movement is a privilege and a wonder to experience. It is how we make. It is how we move. It is how we live in this world. And it is how we make this world livable.

Inflammation Medication

Our fridge can vary in appearance depending on how recently we’ve gone grocery shopping -- from a bountiful garden of plenty to a frozen desert of empty shelves. There is one thing that remains a constant no matter the landscape, however: a large glass pitcher filled with an orange-yellow liquid. This is our go-to drink. It is homemade and has more health benefits than can fit in this one blog post.

The main ingredient is turmeric, which contains curcumin. This is a powerful anti-inflammatory that serves as a natural pain killer. The journal Oncogene published the results of a study evaluating several anti-inflammatory compounds and found that aspirin and ibuprofen are least effective, while curcumin is among the most effective anti-inflammatory compounds in the world. Many people think diseases such as cancer, ulcerative colitis, arthritis, high cholesterol, and chronic pain can be the result of excess inflammation in the body.

We also use fresh ginger root which has a powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compound called gingerol. Gingerol has been proven to be effective against exercise induced muscle pain and even the proliferation of cancer cells. It not only has amazing health benefits, but it’s delicious too.

Just cut up 5 to 6 inches of ginger and turmeric into a metal bowl and add a full teapot of boiling hot water. Once this has cooled add a few shakes of cayenne pepper and a quarter cup of apple cider vinegar. This lowers blood pressure, detoxes the liver, and stimulates the circulation of blood vessels. It also helps your body maintain a healthy alkaline PH level. Finish by squeezing in a fresh lemon and strain the contents into a glass picture for the fridge. This inflammation medication is great mixed with hot water or cold, carbonated seltzer.

 

We Make We Move

Glide Outside / 5" x 7" / oil on panel by Jessica Lee Ives / 2017


Wednesday We Make We Move posts bring together the art of movement, and the movement of art.

 

The fine motor movements made by painters, writers, and musicians are not unlike the full-bodied exertions of runners, climbers, and swimmers; both express kinesthetic intelligence. Human movement is a privilege and a wonder to experience. It is how we make. It is how we move. It is how we live in this world. And it is how we make this world livable.


Frozen Sunset / 10" x 22" / oil on panel by Jessica Lee Ives / 2017


"Don't Be A Stupid" from Katy Bowman's Movement Matters

I've slowly been making my way through Katy Bowman's Movement Matters: Essays on Movement Science, Movement Ecology, and the Nature of Movement, digesting each paradigm shifting essay one by one. Katy uses human movement -- its mechanics, its history, and its theory -- as a tool to blow holes in the way we think. About everything. Because her essay "Don't Be A Stupid" is such a clear, concise, and convicting read I'm reproducing it here in an effort to tease you into buying, borrowing, or kindle-ing the whole book. You won't regret it.

***

Don't Be A Stupid

In a Huffington Post article "Sitting May Harm Health Says AARP," Ann Brenoff discusses the metaphor likening sitting habits to smoking habits. She isn't all that impressed by the information and isn't going to stop sitting because, frankly, it appears she believes that "mounting evidence" deserves sarcastic quotes:

Why don't I stand, you ask? For a few reasons. I once worked next to a woman who insisted on placing her office computer on a pedestal sot that she could stand all day in front of it instead of sitting. For her, it worked out well. For everyone else, not so much. For one thing, nobody appreciated being towered over. Her standing blocked our already limited view of office life (mostly people sitting in front of their computers in little cubicles) and projected her already-loud voice to an intrusive level. An office community is a delicate balance of personal needs and consideration of others. The others must trump the personal needs if there is to be harmony and productivity. It took mere minutes before my co-worker's standing raised people's blood pressure. She eventually sat down.

I get it. She doesn't want to stand because she feels that standing disrupts others' personal needs and so forth. To each their own -- or to each everyone else's own, I guess.

But look at this part (emphasis mine): "You may never convince me that sitting is the greatest threat to my health; whereas smoking certainly remains one of the chart toppers. Smoking is a choice that some stupid people make..."

I read this as saying that people who smoke do so because they are stupid, and people who sit do so because they are considerate.

This attitude, that those who are doing the "right" thing are somehow smarter or better than those who aren't, doesn't appear to contribute to our health and happiness. 

I guarantee that no matter how well informed or well-read or degreed or dressed up or dressed down or organiked (a word, right?) or McDonalded or well-behaved or radical-ed up your life is, there is someone out there, right now, who is doing it better than you. There is someone out there messing up their kids less, eating better, doing more for the planet, doing more for humankind, using less fuel, giving more money, and being kinder to others. Which, by the reasoning used in the quoted article, makes YOU the stupid one.

People who do not share your views or behaviors are not stupid; they just don't share your views. They may never share your views in the exact same way that you may never share theirs. Who's to say which views are correct?

Your faith in your beliefs is equal in magnitude to the faith of every other person on this planet in their own beliefs. Every second of time you spend lamenting that others don't think like you is time spent not honoring your beliefs. If you believe improvements in your personal health, the environment, and to human rights are that great, wouldn't your time be better spent actually working on them?

Before you so easily drop the "S" bomb on others, realize that someone has just dropped the Stupid all over your head. And it sucks to be stupided on. The end

P.S. This is the letter I am writing to myself; I'm just letting you look at it.

Massage at SCCF!

Clinical sports massage at Stone Coast CrossFit! Decrease recovery time, treat and prevent soft tissue injury, increase athletic performance. We'll have two tables set up every Monday and Thursday with treatment slots running every 15 minutes from 3:30 to 6:30pm. $20 per 15 minutes; link two or three slots for a longer session. Reserve your time by signing up at SCCF or show up and we’ll treat on a first-come-first serve basis. Wear your gym clothes and come warmed up!

We Make We Move

Mid-Winter Walking / 6" x 6" / oil on panel by Jessica Lee Ives / 2016


Wednesday We Make We Move posts bring together the art of movement, and the movement of art.

 

The fine motor movements made by painters, writers, and musicians are not unlike the full-bodied exertions of runners, climbers, and swimmers; both express kinesthetic intelligence. Human movement is a privilege and a wonder to experience. It is how we make. It is how we move. It is how we live in this world. And it is how we make this world livable.


Cold Therapy

My wife and I love the sauna at the PenBay YMCA. We go there after snowboarding, ice skating, or long swims in the pool. We usually do three rounds of ten minutes in the sauna followed by one or two minutes under a cold shower. But today we were lucky because of a freshly fallen 6” of snow. After our first round of sauna, instead of taking a shower, we ran outside in our bathing suites and rolled around in the fresh powder making snow angels.

When exposed to cold, whether by snow or by an icy shower, the body closes off blood flow to its extremities forcing tiny blood vessels to contract. We each have over 77,000 miles of these tiny vessels which deliver nutrients and oxygen to our cells. In the same way that bicep curls make our arms stronger and able to lift more weight, exposure to extreme temperature changes causes the smooth muscle fibers of the blood vessels to open and close, making the circulatory system stronger and increasing overall blood flow.

Researchers at the British Thrombosis Research Institute suggest that when a person takes a cold shower the body tries to warm itself by shaking aggressively and, as a result, it increases its metabolism. When this occurs the body’s immune system is stimulated and the consequence is that white blood cells are increased. These are the cells which defend the body against infection from bacteria, parasites, fungi, and viruses. In addition, the mild electroshock delivered to the brain by the snow or cold shower sends an overwhelming amount of electrical impulses from peripheral nerve endings to the brain, which then releases norepinephrine, a natural antidepressant. Who would have thought that running out of hot water in the winter could cause you to smile?

 

Bring back the back!

At Sage School of Massage Jonathan and I learned different soft tissue approaches to correcting excessive lordosis in the low back. Jonathan has always had a very pronounced lumbo-dorsal hinge -- see the acute angle where his ribcage and lumbar spine meet in the before photo, below. 

Before

After

After receiving a "hold-relax stretch" to reduce the anterior rotation in his hips, the lordodic curve in his low back settled into a more relaxed and sustainable posture -- see the after photo, above. Jonathan received followup work over the next few days to help his body "remember" this new shape; he also began to integrate corrective exercises and mindful movements into his daily life in order to prevent the return of patterns and habits that caused his excessive lordosis in the first place.