Posts Tagged ‘exercise’

Putting One Foot In Front of The Other Equals Success

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

The recent, very brief hot spell here was good for the souls of Northern California residents who were feeling guilty about how beautiful and temperate our summer has been compared to everyone else’s. I especially loved it as the mild weather helped me train for and achieve a goal I set for myself a couple of months back. Spurred by my daughters’ decision to come home and run the Santa Rosa Half Marathon, I decided to finally settle whether my many joint surgeries had put such running activities beyond my reach. Surprisingly, my strength training, minimalist shoes, and familial inspiration allowed me to complete the race, even bettering my hoped-for pace. Sure, my pace was 50% slower than my last marathon, but I have accepted that 30+ years does change people. (Photo from Santa Rosa Press Democrat)

Far more remarkable is the success of one of you. This patient is a young man with a number of significant health problems. His severe obesity made these problems much worse, and his life was difficult. He recognized the price he was paying and committed himself to doing all he could to make his life better. He began exercising daily. He focused his diet on healthy food, including lots and lots of vegetables. Today he weighs 200 lbs less than he did when he made his decision a year ago. He tells me that the change in how he feels is even more dramatic than the change in his appearance. He inspired his girlfriend to lose 85 pounds. They have married and are now seeking to adopt a little boy whose single mother is homeless and drug-addicted.

While we cannot achieve such dramatic successes every day, each of us has the power to make fundamental changes to better ourselves. I have learned that it all comes down to making the effort, focusing on the process. It is also important to remember that big successes are the inevitable result of comparatively minor daily successes. One day choosing to make one better dietary choice, getting some exercise, keeping yourself from overreacting as you normally would, making time to relax for a few minutes all seem insignificant and trivial. However, doing the right thing today inevitably leads to a better tomorrow. There is much that is out of our control, but taking care of what is in our power can make a very big difference for ourselves and for those around us.


Social Support to Change

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Most of us are social creatures. Other people are very important to our enjoyment of our daily lives. This has important impacts on our health.

Most of the time we think about this because of the difficulties social influences can present. A person who is working to overcome drug or alcohol addiction usually faces pressure from his/her old group, many of whom have the same problem. Sometimes people have to build a new social network in those challenging circumstances.

We often forget that social connections can, and should be, of great help. If your friends and family have good health habits, it can be uncomfortable not to go with the flow. You can also take an active role to better your own health and that of your friends or family.

I see this most often with exercise. Many times I have seen women training to complete their first running race together. Some people join walking groups, tennis clubs or join an athletic team because they then create a regula exercise habit built into their social network. There is social website called Get Up and Move where people challenge friends to be active by posing specific activity challenges for themselves. What better gift could there be for someone you care about than to come together in this way to feel better?



Marathon weirdness

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

A new study discovered some very unexpected and consequently extremely interesting findings. Examining the hearts of runners who had completed 25 or more marathons in the past 25 years, investigators found that the marathon runners’ coronary arteries were much more calcified than other people. This was the opposite of what was expected. Also, the people in the comparison group were not all healthy, some having the test to evaluate symptoms suggestive of heart disease. That fact would imply that the runners’ hearts should be WAY better then the comparison group. What’s the deal? Maybe too much stress on the heart? Other studies have shown that competitive endurance athletes are more prone to long term electrical disturbances of the heart. Some have shown chemical changes as we see with heart attacks following triathlons. While those chemical changes appear to not indicate meaningful heart damage, maybe this is an indication that pushing ourselves too much can be harmful. Seems common sense but then common sense is far from common.