More on Children’s Play Thing
My best friend Shannon has 2 children. Tiffany the older girl is 7, the little boy Justin is 2. Every time I call Shannon just to chitchat, I can hear the children running around at the background. I can pretty much visualize them screaming, grabbing each other, asking their mom for more candy, etc. etc. etc. While I admire their energy (yeah…), at the same time I wonder how can an adult deal with it. I remember when I was a little girl, I was just like them. Everyday I would skip home from school, too much energy inside to walk properly. Eventually I grew older and started reading a lot, then no more skipping. I became a teenager. Anyway… so children’s play thing. I saw this hop ball and thought this is a good thing to use to tire those restless children. I can imagine them hopping around. Come to think it I can probably use the hopping fitball myself! This way I can hop to the mailbox to pick up my mail. Kind of like how I was as a kid. Fun(ny)!
Add comment March 5, 2008
jenshu
Tags: children, children's toy, Fitball, Hop Ball, Hopping Ball
Pilates at Home
While I was getting my oil changed the other day, I picked up an advertising local magazine and saw an ad for Pilates classes right in my neighborhood. I was really excited so I put the website of the Pilates classes in my iTouch so I can visit the website when Wi-Fi is available somewhere. Later I went to the website, and hmm, the place looks great, nice brand new equipment, one to one classes, and… wait a sec, and I seeing this right? $1800? OK, let me click on that little trash can icon.
Then I started looking for alternatives. I found this Pilates on the Ball DVD. OK, this I can do. Since I already have those nice colorful FitBalls at home already. I certainly can do this at home. Be my own instructor. Good idea.
Add comment March 4, 2008
jenshu
Tags: benefits of pilates, Pilates, pilates at home, Pilates DVD
Helping Yourself to a Good Night’s Sleep
- From The National Sleep Foundation
Introduction
Difficulty falling or staying asleep is a common problem. About half of Americans report sleep difficulty at least occasionally, according to National Sleep Foundation surveys. These woes – called insomnia by doctors – have far-reaching effects: a negative impact on concentration, productivity and mood.Fortunately, there are many things you can do to improve your sleep. The first step requires some detective work. You’ll need to examine your diet, exercise patterns, sleeping environment, personal habits, lifestyle and current concerns. As you begin to see the connection between, for example, what and/or when you eat and nights of poor sleep, you can develop your own good sleep plan.Keep in mind that good sleep doesn’t always just happen. Like a successful play, a restful night of ZZZs demands a strong director’s hand and a stage set appropriately. If you’ve been sleeping poorly for some time, you may have fallen into some bad sleep habits that reinforce your problem. Read on to learn more about sleep.
Just Say No…to Caffeine and Alcohol?
All too often, we eat and drink without thinking about the effects. That afternoon cup of coffee seems like a good idea at the time. The dinnertime wine may appear a fitting celebration of the day’s success. But that same drink can prove an enemy of restful sleep.
Coffee contains caffeine, as do many teas, chocolate and cola drinks. Caffeine is a stimulant, which means it has an alerting or wake-up effect. For some people, a small amount of caffeine early in the day can cause problems falling asleep ten to 12 hours later. Others have learned to avoid caffeine-containing drinks and foods within six hours of bedtime.
How you respond to caffeine is individual; it is also related to how much caffeine you have regularly. For example, the more coffee you drink each day, the less powerful its effect as a stimulant.
How to determine caffeine’s effect on you? Try eliminating caffeinated food and drink after lunch for a few weeks. Are you sleeping better? If so, you may have identified the culprit.
Alcohol, in contrast, is often thought of as a sedative: a calming drug. However, while alcohol may speed the beginning of sleep, it actually increases the number of times you awaken in the later half of the night. If your sleep isn’t restful, alcohol (beer, wine, hard liquor) may be the cause. Skip the nightcap and see if your sleep improves.
Are You What You Eat?
Caffeine and alcohol aren’t the only substances that affect your sleep. Everything you eat can affect nighttime slumber. For example, tomato products and spicy foods give many people heartburn (as does eating too fast). What does heartburn have to do with sleep? Lying down makes heartburn worse, and heartburn itself makes falling asleep more difficult. Heartburn also awakens sleepers with middle-of-the-night discomfort.
Drinking too much of any beverage can lead to more awakenings because of the need to urinate during the night. Also, the older we get, the more we experience these nighttime awakenings.
Try to restrict your fluids before bedtime to help promote an uninterrupted night’s sleep. If the problem persists, talk to your doctor.
Another cause of sleep problems can be eating too much – of any food – that can make sleep difficult. A heavy meal close to bedtime may make you less comfortable when you settle down for your night’s rest. At the same time, going to bed hungry can be just as disruptive to sleep as going to bed too full.
Bedtime Snack Facts
Saying Goodbye to Tobacco?
Smokers and nonsmokers alike may not be aware that nicotine, like caffeine, is a stimulant. And when smokers go to sleep, they experience nicotine withdrawal. Research suggests that nicotine is linked to difficulty falling asleep and problems waking up. Smokers may also experience more nightmares. Giving up smoking may cause more sleep problems at first, but the long-term effect on sleep and health is much better. So kick those cigarettes goodbye.
Exercise Has Many Benefits
The next place to look for the cause of a sleep problem is your exercise routine. Exercise can be a boon for good sleep, especially when done regularly in the afternoon and not too close to bedtime. If you don’t exercise regularly, add good sleep to a long list of reasons why you should take up the practice.
Why not try an afternoon brisk walk, run or bicycle ride instead of a coffee break? Consider combining aerobic (activity that increases the heart rate) exercise with a weight-bearing or resistance workout. (Be sure to check with your physician before beginning any exercise routine.) Research suggests that exercise at this time can help deepen your sleep, which means that you spend more time in deeper stages of sleep. During the lighter stages of sleep, awakenings are more common. Also, people who exercise may take less time to fall asleep than people who don’t.
When you exercise, whether you are physically fit and a regular or occasional exerciser, the type of exercise you select, and your age or sex may all affect sleep. Some studies suggest that exercise 2-3 hours before bedtime can keep sleep at bay.
Traditionally, sleep experts have cautioned people to avoid strenuous exercise right before sleep and even up to three hours before bedtime. That’s because exercise has an alerting effect and raises your body temperature. This rise leads to a corresponding fall in temperature five to six hours later, which makes sleep easier then. That’s why late afternoon may be the perfect time for your exercise. If you’ve been exercising close to bedtime and having trouble falling or staying asleep, try to arrange your workout earlier in the day.
Sleep Tips
Want a better night’s sleep? Try the following:
Is It Hot…or Humid Enough for You?
Finding and maintaining the right temperature for sleep sounds easy…but it isn’t. Even sleep researchers fail to agree on the ideal temperature. In general, most sleep scientists believe that a slightly cool room contributes to good sleep. That’s because it matches what occurs deep inside the body, when the body’s internal temperature drops during the night to its lowest level. (For good sleepers, this occurs about four hours after they begin sleeping.)
But how cool should the bedroom be? And what should couples do who share a bed but disagree about the desired sleep temperature? Turning the thermostat down at night in cold weather saves on fuel bills and sets the stage for sleep. Blankets or comforters can lock in heat without feeling too heavy or confining. An electric blanket may help. Or the heat-seeking partner might dress in warmer bedclothes (even socks!), while the warmer partner might shun sleep clothes or bed covering.
In summer, a room that’s too hot can also be disruptive. In fact, research suggests that a hot sleeping environment leads to more wake time and light sleep at night, while awakenings multiply. An air conditioner or fan can help.
Remember the common summer complaint: It’s not the heat, it’s the humidity? If excess humidity is a problem, consider a dehumidifier.
If too dry an environment is your problem, consider a humidifier. Clues like awakening with a sore throat, dryness in your nose, or even a nose bleed are signs of too little humidity. Note: Be sure to change the water daily.
Body Heating and Sleep
Interestingly, body-heating can have a very different effect from a warm room during sleep. Some studies suggest that soaking in hot water (such as a hot tub or bath) before retiring to bed can ease the transition into a deeper sleep.
This may be due to a temperature shift (core body temperature drops after leaving the tub, which may signal the body it’s time to sleep). Or the sleep improvement may be related to the water’s relaxing properties, which may also have sleep- promoting effects.
A pre-bedtime bath may set the mood for children and adults alike. Why not try soaking in hot water to ease your journey to sleep?
Are You Enlightened About Light…and Dark?
People who work at night know all too well the problem of trying to sleep when the world around them is wide awake. When the sun’s rays come streaming in, it’s even harder. But the sun is more than a sign that it’s daytime. Light – strong light, like sunlight – is the most powerful regulator of our biological clock. The biological clock influences when we feel sleepy and when we are alert.
When do you get your sunlight exposure? People who are housebound get little. In fact, the cause of your sleep difficulty may be just that: too little exposure to sunlight.
If you find yourself waking earlier than you’d like, why not try increasing your exposure to bright light in the evening? If sunlight isn’t available, consider a lightbox (or light visor) available from a specialty store. Either way, as little as one to two hours of evening bright light exposure appears to help you to sleep longer in the morning. This may be especially helpful for the elderly.
During sleep, bright lights can disturb your sleep. Keep your bedroom dark (consider light-blocking shades, lined drapes, even an eye mask) so light doesn’t interfere with your passage to slumber.
A sleep specialist can help determine whether changing your exposure to light might improve your sleep, and when would be the best time for you to experience bright light.
What’s All the Noise About?
Do you find your sleep disrupted by noises such as the screech of sirens, the rumble of trains, the rise and fall of conversation, airplanes overhead, a dog’s barking, or a partner’s snoring? You may be surrounded by a steady stream of noise or it may occur in sudden peaks.
Older people may be particularly bothered by noise. Because their sleep may be frail, it is more likely to be disturbed by lower levels of noise.
Noise Control
If noise is disturbing your sleep, consider:
Is Your Bed All that It Can Be?
Many people change where they live or what they drive more often than they change their mattress or pillows. Yet nothing lasts forever.
Although there isn’t much published research on mattresses, mattress quality may affect how sleep feels to the sleeper. Discomfort can make falling asleep more difficult and lead to restless slumber.
Does your mattress provide the support you like? Do you wake with your back aching? Is there enough room for you and your sleep partner? Do you sleep better, or worse, when you sleep away from home?
Mattresses may be made of inner springs, foam, fabric, water or air. They may be firmer or more responsive to your body. This, in turn, may affect body temperature and humidity, as well as comfort.
What Does Your Bed Mean to You?
If you can fall asleep easily on your sofa or chair, and it is difficult to fall asleep in your own bed, you may be associating your bed with everything but sleep. Do you use your bed for work? Balance your checkbook while propped against the pillows? Watch television there? These are ways to tell your body to be alert in bed, not to go to sleep.
To teach patients to associate their bed and bedroom with sleep, sleep specialists advise a strategy called stimulus control, performed under the supervision of a specialist. Patients learn to use their bed only for sleep and to follow a regular wake-up schedule.
Another effective approach involves restricting your time in bed, initially, to the number of hours you actually sleep. Then, as you can rely on sleeping these hours regularly, you increase your time in bed by 15-30 minutes per night. A less dramatic approach would be to decrease your time in bed by 30 to 60 minutes.
Reclaiming Your Bed for Sleep
Are You Trying Too Hard?
Some sleep specialists say that anxiously watching the clock while focusing on how much time you have yet to sleep may actually cause insomnia. Try setting your alarm, then hiding it and your watch before you go to bed.
Are You Playing by the Numbers?
The time you go to sleep and the time you rise may sometimes seem beyond your control. Consistent bedtimes and wake times are advisable for those experiencing insomnia. Sleeping in may make for a more enjoyable weekend, but Monday morning – and Sunday bedtime – may suffer as a result. You choose: sleep late on the weekends…or feel refreshed and alert every morning?
Napping Notes
To nap or not to nap, that is the question. If you suffer from insomnia, try not taking a nap. If the goal is to sleep more during the night, napping may steal hours desired later on. However, napping can help promote short-term alertness, for example, to prepare for driving or in the middle of a long car trip.
Napping Tips
How Can You Relax?
Relaxing may mean choosing the bedtime ritual that’s right for you. Does gentle music lull you to sleep? A calming soak in a warm bath or hot tub? Cozy pajamas? Cuddling with your partner? Meditation or a prayer? Find what works for you…and do it! Sweet dreams.
If you find your thoughts turning to worries when bedtime approaches, keep a worry book by your bedside. Jot down a brief note about what’s on your mind. Schedule time the next day to focus on the problem and a solution. Problems often seem smaller in the daylight. However, if problems persist, consider talking to your doctor or a psychotherapist.
Getting Help
If your sleep problem persists, there may be an underlying cause that can be successfully treated or controlled once properly diagnosed. Sleep disorders centers are staffed by physicians and other medical professionals who specialize in helping people with persistent sleep problems.
1 comment February 29, 2008
jenshu
Tags: Better Sleep, Eye Mask, Good Night's Sleep, Sleep, Sleep Awareness, Sleep Awareness Week
Get Toned with Aqualates
- by Brooke Showell, Health Magazine
Is Pilates all wet? Yes. But not in the way you might think. At health clubs across the country, fans of the super intense workout are abandoning their mats and doing their leg circles and mermaids underwater in classes known as Aqualates. But who needs a health club?
These four simple moves from Pilates and Aqualates instructor Kara Tatelbaum of New York’s Crunch Fitness will get you the same benefits in any pool, lake, or ocean. Do this workout two to three times a week, and you’ll see results in just six weeks.
1. Plié with Calf Raise, For thighs, butt, and calves
Stand with your heels together and toes apart, making a V with your feet. Lean forward slightly with shoulders relaxed. Slowly bend both knees as far as is comfortable, then raise onto balls of feet and hold for 2–3 seconds. Return to starting position and repeat. Do 2 sets of 8–10 reps.
2. Single Leg Circles, For legs and core
Stand with your feet together. Lift your right leg in front of you, toes pointed down. Make 5 small circles clockwise with your toes; repeat the circles counterclockwise. Keeping your hips facing forward, repeat the sequence with your leg out to the side, then extended behind you. Repeat with your left leg to complete the set. Do 2 sets.
3. Tap and Lift, For hips, legs, and core
Stand with your feet together. Lift your right leg to the side as far as is comfortable, keeping your toes pointed down. Bring your right leg around to tap your toes 2–3 inches in front of your left foot, then lift it out to the side again with toes pointed up; return to starting position. Repeat with your left leg to complete 1 rep. Do 2 sets of 8–10 reps.
4. Standing V with Jump, For legs and core
Stand with your heels together and toes apart, making a V with your feet. Bend your knees slightly and jump, maintaining the V shape. Land with knees bent and repeat. Do 2 sets of 8 to 10 reps.
* A word from me, the blogger: For added resistance, try working out with AquaJogger. This is a wonderful product which makes water workouts a little bit more challenging.
Add comment February 28, 2008
jenshu
Tags: AquaJogger, Aqualates, summer sport, Water Aerobics, water sport, Weight loss
American Heart Month
A follow up to yesterday’s post to stress how important it is for us to workout regularly!
February is American Heart Month. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States and a major cause of disability. An estimated 1.2 million persons in the United States will have a myocardial infarction (i.e., heart attack) in 2007. Recognizing and responding quickly to symptoms and receiving appropriate care can limit heart damage. Prevention measures reduce the risk for heart disease and its effects. At the individual level, persons can eliminate or control their own risk factors, including high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, tobacco use, physical inactivity, unhealthy diet, obesity, and diabetes. At the community level, the American Heart Association (AHA) recommends school, worksite, and health-care facility education programs on heart disease; policies that ensure access to screening, referral, and counseling services for stroke and heart-disease risk factors; and measures that ensure access to healthy food and safe environments for physical activity.
Information regarding CDC heart-disease programs is available at http://www.cdc.gov/dhdsp. Information regarding American Heart Month and heart disease is available from AHA (http://www.americanheart.org) and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health (http://www.nhlbi.nih.org).
Add comment February 27, 2008
jenshu
Tags: American Heart Association, American Heart Month, Healthy Diet, Heart Disease
Work Out At Home
I was talking with my co-worker via emails today, I told her I need a workout partner. She said since she is so busy she bought an Elliptical Machine so she works out at home while watching her baby. Smart idea. However, unlucky for me I live in a condo, so I barely have enough space for a bathroom and a kitchen, so forget about the Elliptical.
Then Valerie Bertenelli went on Oprah yesterday to talk about this walking vest. I think it is a pretty good idea. The neighborhood I live in is really nice and the city built a workout path so lots of people walk, run or bike there. It’s kind of funny to walk with dumbells (hey, just personal opinion), but walking with a vest on I don’t have a problem with it at all. Pretty good idea indeed. No wonder she lost 40 lbs!
Add comment February 26, 2008
jenshu
Tags: dumbbells, Elliptical, walk vest, walkvest, weight vest, weights, workout at home
Child’s Play Thing
I don’t have any kids, but am planning on having 1 (or 2) really soon. However, lots of people I know have young children and every time I see them, I just think they are like little miracles running around. Then I started thinking about when I have children, I will do everything I can to make sure I encourage brain & physical activities while they are young, so their minds & bodies can develop fully at a young age. I know little kids like movement and colors. Their dendrites grow by visual and outside stimuli. Please don’t quote me because I got this information from a Discovery or Health Channel special I saw many years ago, and the information just stuck with me. There is this really simple, but genius design called Body Sox. They come in bright colors and different sizes, so parents can do the same activities with their children. Actually in the beginning of the babyhood, parents are probably going to enjoy this item more than their babies because those Body Sox Therapeutic Sacks aren’t designed for infants. They are for toddlers. I like them just the same though.
Add comment February 7, 2008
jenshu
Tags: baby, Body socks, Body Sox, Body Sox Therapeutic Sacks, children, children's toy, infant brain development, kids
Seasonal Affective Disorder – SAD
The other day I was watching Oprah, and she had this lady doctor on the show (sorry I forgot her name, she wrote many books on health so she is kind of a big deal herself too, but I am bad with names). One of the audience members asked the doctor why she is always so depressed during winter, and the doctor mentioned Seasonal Affective Disorder – SAD, it’s also know as Winter Depression. Some people lose their cheerfulness during winter season. I have a friend who lives in Chicago and she takes the underground train to work everyday, when she leaves the office, it’s already dark outside. She tells me she is always depressed. When she told me that it was like a light bulb coming in my head (Oprah calls this the “Ah-Ha” moment), my friend needs sunshine! This is when I am so glad that I live in Arizona. The other day when I went to get the oil changed for my car, I walked around the parking lot looking at new cars. It was a beautiful and sunny day. I remember I was in such a good mood all that that day. Now I realized it must have been the sun that made me so happy! Not to mention the sun gives you a tan and makes your body generate vitamin D. Anyway… people who suffer from this disorder is recommended to take a walk in the park when it is sunny, or simply add a few more warm lights in the house. I guess in a way we are kind of like plants.
Add comment February 6, 2008
jenshu
Tags: Depression, SAD, Seasonal Affective Disorder, Sunlight, Vitamin D, Winter Depression
No More Waking Up with Loud Ringers!
My parents don’t own an alarm clock, they rely on their biological clock to wake them up everyday. I guess they are the lucky ones. For the rest of us, some sort of wake up device is required to make sure we don’t lose our jobs because we couldn’t get ourselves out of bed in time (yeah, one of my biggest scare in life). However, I really don’t like being waken up by really loud ringings or loud noises. Just not the best thing to start one’s day with you know. The other day I was looking around online and noticed this really cute, pink, heart shaped alarm clock that comes with a bed shaker. It’s perfect for Valentines’ Day! It kind of reminds me of how my parents used to wake me up in the morning. They shake me gently to make sure they don’t scare me, and if that doesn’t work, my mom sprays my face with water! She has this spray bottle she uses to water her flowers. Ah… all the wonderful childhood memories!
Add comment January 30, 2008
jenshu
Tags: Alarm Clocks, Heart Shaped., Pink, Valentine's Day
BATTLE WITH WINTER DRY SKIN
I love Arizona weather. When some folks are shoving snow off of their driveway, we Phoenicians are drinking beer on the green golf course wearing a light sweater. However, Arizona is a desert, and the dryness in the air does not moisturized skin made. Good skin care product is definitely a must have.
One of the crowd favorite is the Paraffin Wax Bath Spa Therapy. It comes in 5 different scents: Lavender, wintergreen, peach, orange and unscented. Imagine on a cold night, dipping your hands, elbows or feet into this fragrant warm wax, allow the moisture to sink deep into your skin. Gently peel off the wax, out comes the smooth skin you have always wanted! What a wonderful feeling. This system also serves as Heat therapy which provides muscle and joint pain relief.
I always say, a well moisturized girl is a happy girl! What winter dry skin? Never even heard of it!
Add comment January 23, 2008
jenshu
Tags: Arizona, Arizona weather, coldness, Dry Skin, Golf, Phoenix, skin care, sunshine, Wax bath spa therapy, Winter
| Previous Posts |