is gardening aerobic

Source: thecut.com

A moment that changed me: after a shattering rape, yoga helped put me back together – The Guardian

A moment that changed me: after a shattering rape, yoga helped put me back together – The Guardian

Gardening As Exercise

Yard work is an excellent way to exercise your body. Digging up soil, weeding, carrying water, pruning plants and mowing the lawn gives you plenty of activity that is good for your heart rate.

It also helps improve dexterity, muscle strength and aerobic endurance. It even boosts your immune system.

I was living in London in 2001 and had just completed my master’s thesis on feminist performance art. I’d left the printed copy at my new boyfriend’s rented flat and was on my way there to pick it up and turn it in after a doctor’s appointment for a bizarrely late case of chickenpox.

The flat my boyfriend had just started renting with two young women was in west London at the very top of an old building with a spiral staircase and a creaky elevator. As I approached the door with his key in my pocket, a stranger asked me for some water. My hackles rose as he’d appeared seemingly out of nowhere, and I bluffed having lost the key and instead offered him a bottle of water I had in my bag. He seemed satisfied and turned to leave.

I made a move to let myself into the flat as quickly as I could and as the key went in I felt the cold steel of a knife at my throat. Assuming he was going to steal things I did a quick scan of the room as he pushed me inside – stereo, maybe a laptop or two upstairs. Nothing that couldn’t be replaced. But then he pushed me to the ground and started to cover my head, tying some kind of cloth over it and repeating “shut up” as I protested.

Pulling me to my feet with the knife firmly at my throat, he said he wouldn’t hurt me if I did what he said. We began a sinister walk up the stairs and I realised this was not going to be your average robbery. Quiet inner panic set in.

Later, with my clothes in a pile on the floor and my face still covered, I joined the ranks of people who identify as rape survivors. I’d also learned the skill of dissociation – a blessing and a curse – and from that moment on my psyche called on it frequently. I would experience an unpleasant “out of body” sensation, as though watching the world through a long tunnel, disoriented, shut down and distanced from my surroundings and everyone around me.

My trust in people was also broken and my sense of the city as a place of possibility and excitement was replaced by the threat of potential danger everywhere. Footsteps behind me became intolerable. Wardrobes had to be checked every night before sleeping when I was alone in the house. The sight of a knife brought with it a cavalcade of unwanted smells and sensations. Childhood trauma was reawakened and compounded. My body and the world around me were no longer safe and predictable. I’d had a little window into what evil can look like and it changed everything.

My journey back to trusting people, trusting myself and trusting life in general was slow and not always steady. “I will love you through this,” my boyfriend told me. Twenty years later, he is now my husband and the father of my three children and it was true, he did and he does.

I also began to practise yoga. I’d heard about how it could help to unite body and mind and how they could separate after sexual violence. I didn’t want to take my chances so I went to the local community centre to try a class. I left that first practice finally feeling at ease in my body, and it was a relief and a joy.

I now live in Victoria, British Columbia, and while my work life began in arts education it gradually shifted to working for many years as the director of programs at Yoga Outreach, a non-profit with a mission to expand access to trauma-informed yoga programmes.

We work with social service facilities, prisons, mental health teams, addiction recovery centres, community centres, and transition houses for women and children who have experienced violence. I also teach classes for people living with complex trauma, and train professionals to use yoga as an empirically validated clinical intervention for complex trauma or chronic, treatment-resistant PTSD.

My work now is fuelled by the hope that anyone who wants to explore the sense of safety and greater ease in their bodies that yoga practice has brought me in my own healing has the opportunity to do so.

Yoga is by no means the only thing I attribute my recovery to. Healing is a complex journey influenced by many things. I have privilege as a white, able-bodied, cis-gendered woman, I have access to therapy and I have loving relationships in my life. Some people do not have these. Yet, yoga gave me the ability to find my feet on the ground when I felt I was floating and untethered. It allowed me to take a breath when I needed to come up for air. It has allowed me to feel myself here in the world when it seemed as though everything I knew to be true was upended. And for that I am extremely grateful.

Source: theguardian.com

Study suggests yoga may improve longevity indicators in older adults – The Washington Post

Study suggests yoga may improve longevity indicators in older adults – The Washington Post

Gardening As Exercise

Yard work – weeding, digging, and mulching – is a great way to get some activity into your day. And it’s a great way to burn calories and build muscle tone too.

Benefits of Gardening As Exercise

Gardening can boost heart health, weight loss, immune system health, sleep and even your sense of confidence. Plus, it’s a relaxing and hands-on hobby that gets your blood flowing and helps you feel good physically and emotionally.

Yoga has long been associated with a host of health benefits — and it may even boost physical capabilities associated with longevity, new research suggests.

A systematic review by Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston published in the Annals of Internal Medicine this week found that yoga improves health indicators linked to reduced frailty and increased longevity in older adults. Looking at 33 randomized controlled trials across 12 countries involving more than 2,000 participants, researchers determined with “moderate certainty” that doing yoga improved certain frailty markers including walking speed, lower extremity strength and endurance.

Julia Loewenthal, a geriatrician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital who was involved in the research, said this was significant because many frailty markers are “connected with clinically meaningful outcomes like living independently and mortality.” She said she hopes older adults will be “encouraged by this research and empowered to adopt a regimen that works for them.”

Yoga incorporates physical poses, breathing and meditation, and previous studies have looked at how it can improve balance and mobility, physical function and mental well-being in older adults. The authors of the Brigham review say it is the first to examine the effects of yoga on frailty — a multifaceted, difficult-to-treat health condition associated with increased falls, hospitalization and morbidity that is at the forefront of public health concerns as countries around the world deal with rapidly aging populations.

Yoga can make people cry. Here’s why that’s okay.

Frailty affects 7 to 12 percent of people over age 65 in the United States, according to the Medical University of South Carolina. It points out that the loosely defined condition has symptoms including weakness, slowness, easy exhaustion, low endurance and weight loss.

Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital were particularly enthusiastic about the strong association between yoga and walking speed, which has a “well-established connection” with survival, Loewenthal said. “Slower walking may indicate that the vicious cycle of frailty is developing, which is associated with earlier death,” she said.

While standards have not been established for optimal “yoga dosage,” the authors note that previous studies have recommended two to three one-hour sessions per week.

The Brigham researchers caution that the review has limitations. The studies they looked at used different yoga styles, though most were based on Hatha, and the length of the yoga interventions ranged from 4 to 28 weeks. Many studies also had small sample sizes.

Yoga also did not appear to improve handgrip, another metric associated with frailty, and there was less evidence it improved balance, possibly because many of the studies used chair-based methods. The practice is also not necessarily more beneficial than other forms of exercise, such as tai chi, the authors note.

“All of these practices work across multiple body systems, which is why they are likely helpful for frailty, and they are all healthy choices,” Loewenthal wrote, adding that more research is needed to compare different forms of exercise and their effects on frailty.

Christian Osadnik, a professor of physiotherapy at Australia’s Monash University who studies frailty, said it was “difficult to draw any firm conclusions” from the Brigham research. He added that the review “didn’t, unfortunately, have any strong outcome evidence that actually says even that yoga does help, prevent, or reverse frailty.”

Still, he says the review offers a pathway to further research and might counter negative stigma around frailty. “[Some people think that] if someone has frailty, they’re in the ‘too hard’ basket, and we can’t do much to help them,” Osadnik said. “This kind of information helps us to perhaps appreciate that we can do something.”

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Source: washingtonpost.com

Goat yoga sessions taking place at Echo Bay farm – SooToday

Goat yoga sessions taking place at Echo Bay farm – SooToday

Gardening As Exercise

Yard work can burn a lot of calories and improve your fitness level. It’s an excellent full-body workout that also increases flexibility and strengthens the muscles and joints of your arms and back.

Gardening is a great way to get some fresh air and vitamin d from the sun. It’s also a gentle form of exercise that is especially good for children.

Approximately 20 people took part in an introductory goat yoga session at an Echo Bay farm on Saturday evening.

Goat yoga combines regular yoga with baby goats that hop on to the backs of yoga practitioners while they are in yoga position, or they simply nuzzle around them.

The introductory goat yoga session – with three baby goats named Lenny, Karl and Homer – was organized by Sarah Domingue, a yoga instructor and owner of Bearable Yoga with Sarah.

“We’re trying a new, unique type of yoga incorporating animal therapy with goats. We have three Nigerian Dwarf baby goats participate and play around your yoga mat and jump on you in yoga positions in the barn while you’re doing yoga,” Domingue said.

“The basis for it is that animals are being proven – more and more so – in scientific studies, to show that not only do they benefit us, we benefit them. Through having animals around, like dogs, cats, goats or really any animal, by petting them, just having them in the room, lowers your anxiety and depression. Studies have come out that prove these methods work. A lot of prisons do a lot of animal therapy, primarily with horses and goats.”

Goat yoga began in the U.S. in 2015  and is popular in southern Ontario, so Domingue said she wanted to introduce it here in the north.

It is believed Saturday’s session marked the first time a goat yoga session was held in the Algoma District, Domingue said. 

All future goat yoga sessions held by Domingue will take place at the Echo Bay farm located at 786 Bar River Road East.

“We’re not going to transport them just because I’m so holistic. I don’t want to be cruel to animals and travel them around here and there. It’s not a circus act. We want the goats to feel at home while they’re doing this,” Domingue said.

Farm owner Andrea Moscicky reached out to Domingue after she began practicing yoga and then suggested bringing in the goats.

“We are planning on continuing. We’re going to do the sessions in May, June and July, and we’re going to be doing them outside in the field, so all the animals will be out in the field with us,” Domingue said.

She plans on holding the sessions every weekend beginning in May with a mid-week class to be added depending on demand.

Domingue said she was pleased with the interest and reaction from participants at Saturday’s session.

“I’m overwhelmed in such a positive way,” she said.

Farm owner Moscicky – with dogs, cats, three goats, four horses and a cow – said “animal therapy has really helped me so I contacted Sarah to get something going. I’m so happy to bring animal therapy to people. It makes me feel great to share animal therapy with other people. Eventually I do want to open an animal therapy barn.”

Another goat yoga session is planned for the barn at Moscicky’s farm at 786 Bar River Road East for Sunday evening from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.

The session will cost $30.

Those interested in attending may contact Sarah Domingue through her Bearable Yoga With Sarah Facebook page, by calling 705-206-3674 or by email.

“I’ve been around barns all my life but this is definitely the first time for goat yoga for me,” said participant Holli Devoe of Goulais River after Saturday’s introductory session.

“Actually it felt kind of nice. It was like a massage almost. He didn’t nip or bite. It was like a deep tissue massage. I’d absolutely recommend it. It was so much fun. This was very engaging. It’s fun,” Devoe said. 

“‘Unexpected’ would be the best word to describe it. I didn’t expect them to just jump right on me that way but it was kind of neat. Once the goat was on my back, it was like a massage. It was enjoyable. I would recommend it. It was relaxing, different and therapeutic,” said Heather Mathison of the Sault.

“It was interesting. It was the first time I had ever done goat yoga. It was a good experience. It’s nice to see this moving toward the Sault, it’s something different for people to get into for exercise, mental health and well being,” Mathison said. 

Source: sootoday.com

King Charles ‘blocks Andrew’s £32k-a-year bill for live-in yoga guru’, telling younger brother to pay himself – LBC

King Charles ‘blocks Andrew’s £32k-a-year bill for live-in yoga guru’, telling younger brother to pay himself – LBC

Benefits of Gardening As Exercise

Yard work, whether it is raking and digging or lifting bags of soil, gives all the major muscle groups a workout.

It can help lower blood pressure and cholesterol or prevent diabetes, heart disease, depression and osteoporosis when practiced on a regular basis.

11 March 2023, 08:01 | Updated: 11 March 2023, 17:01

Charles has reportedly refused to pay Andrew’s annual yoga bill. Picture: Alamy/Getty

King Charles has reportedly told Prince Andrew he will no longer foot the bill for his live-in yoga instructor.

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Prince Andrew had submitted the £32,000 annual yoga fees to the privy purse, expecting it to be given the green light without any further questions.

But King Charles, Andrew’s older brother, has told him that he has to pay for the live-in yoga instructor himself.

The Duke of York has been using the yoga teacher for several years, the Sun reported. The guru comes to live with Andrew in the Royal Lodge for a month at a time.

The instructor, a man, is said to work with Andrew using chanting, massages and holistic therapy.

The Queen used to sign off the yoga bill every year, but Charles is proving more parsimonious with the royal purse strings.

The King has reportedly told Andrew that indulgences such as the expensive yoga instructor are hard to justify in an era of belt tightening among the British public at large.

Prince Andrew
Prince Andrew. Picture: Getty

“The treatment, it must be said, is very expensive,” a source told the Sun.

“While the Queen was always happy to indulge her son over the years, Charles is far less inclined to fund such indulgences particularly in an era of a cost-of-living crisis.

Read more: Prince Andrew ‘demands top role managing Royal estates including Balmoral’ – but King tells him ‘no chance’

Read more: Prince Andrew to be ‘evicted’ from 30-room royal mansion, as King Charles tells him ‘use your own money to pay for things’

“Families are struggling and would rightly baulk at the idea of tens of thousands paid to an Indian guru to provide holistic treatment to a non-working royal living in his grace and favour mansion.

“This time the King saw the bill for the healer submitted by Andrew to the Privy Purse and thought his brother was having a laugh.

“In the past these types of expenses would be signed off no questions but that is not the climate in the new era.”

Charles has reportedly blocked the request
Charles has reportedly blocked the request. Picture: Getty

It comes after Prince Andrew has been lobbying for the prestigious role of managing the Royal Family’s estates, including Queen Elizabeth’s beloved Balmoral, but the King has told him ‘no chance’.

King Charles has reportedly told the Duke of York that he has to move out of his Royal Lodge in Windsor due to planned budget cuts.

Prince Andrew is thought to have been offered Frogmore Cottage, previously used by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, but the 63-year-old has offered to run some of the family’s most prestigious estates instead.

His demands come as he tries to rehabilitate his public image and take on more responsibility within the Royal Family.

“Andrew is insisting on having a job despite being made to stand down from his duties and now he’s being kicked out of his home,” a royal source told the The Mirror.

King Charles also told his brother “there is no chance of that happening”, according to the source.

Source: lbc.co.uk