Mind and Body Walking

Have you been able to start your walking program, do some re-arranging in your walking schedule to optimize weather and traffic and reduce injury risk?

Have you been able to set up a program and stay with the plan, or does it need some adjusting or a different time allotment?

As for me, I’ve taken my walking program “on the road” as I’ve been trying to attend to my walking program while I’ve been out of town and vacationing.

I’ve been enjoying the weather in the Northwest since last Wednesday, and the walking has been glorious! I’ve strolled in sunshine and rain, padded through a college campus and zoo, and enjoyed late sunset walks around the lake just a block from our vacation house.

 

Total engagement!

All of my senses have been engaged as I’ve encountered Canada geese of all sizes, night-prowling raccoons, nut-hunting squirrels, neighborhood dogs taking their owners for a walk and friendly residents. The vibrant spring flowers and verdant trees are a feast for my eyes. The aroma of fragrant flowers, trees and freshly cut grass lift my spirits.

I wish everyday could be like this. I’m determined to somehow make that dream a reality when I return home. My brain and body will thank me as I see to their health!

We’ll be leaving this gorgeous part of the country next this week, but I’ll be on hiatus for at least two weeks as I undergo extensive oral surgery next week. Although full recovery is six weeks, I hope to be up and writing again within two, so check in again the second week of July. (I may be back earlier.)

Until then, happy walking and exercising in fresh, healthful air!

Blessings,

Andrea

Celebrating Life’s Milestones—Body and Spirit

This weekend is another big one for the Owan clan. We’ll be celebrating with our older son as he is bestowed “with all the rights and privileges” of a Doctor of Philosophy in Mechanical Engineering, specifically robotics and artificial intelligence.

 

Several weeks ago we celebrated as our younger son was graduated with all the rights and privileges of a Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Computer Engineering, with a minor in International Communications. He outshined all of us with an impressive magna cum laude status and a host of other awards, including Engineering Ambassador for the University of Arizona. He’s on his way to law school, where he plans to focus on IP—intellectual property—law.

 

Boy, are we proud of them!

 

But the accolades and achievements didn’t come easy, even though our older son is unusually bright and picks up concepts faster than normal. Way faster than normal, actually. And our younger son has the enviable capacity to be deeply introspective, which helps him identify his weaknesses and strengths and work in a way to take advantage of his strengths and neutralize those weaknesses.

Aside from their natural God-bestowed gifts, their awards came through hard work, lack of sleep, heightened anxiety, and poor eating habits. Sacrifices and deliberate avoidance of certain activities. Making conscious decisions to choose the best over the good. Sometimes—even though you strive for a balanced life—life needs to be lived unbalanced, as long as it doesn’t become a habit and the norm.

And I think they took to heart something I repeated to them from the time when they were very young:

 

“Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might; for there is no work or device or knowledge or wisdom in the grave where you are going” (Ecclesiastes 9:10 NKJV).

 

I love how The Message renders this:

 

“Seize life! Eat bread with gusto,
Drink wine with a robust heart.
Oh yes—God takes pleasure in your pleasure!
Dress festively every morning.
Don’t skimp on colors and scarves.
Relish life with the spouse you love
Each and every day of your precarious life.
Each day is God’s gift. It’s all you get in exchange
For the hard work of staying alive.
Make the most of each one!
Whatever turns up, grab it and do it. And heartily!
This is your last and only chance at it,
For there’s neither work to do nor thoughts to think
In the company of the dead, where you’re most certainly headed.”

 

We taught them that if they had just B brain capacities, then they needed to be the best darn B brains they could be. No excuses for what they didn’t have. They needed to use the gifts God gave them to His glory. So they wouldn’t look back on their lives with regret about talents and gifts they’d wasted or neglected to mature and develop.

 

They were also reminded often of the verse from Colossians 3:23-24:

 

“And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the inheritance; for you serve the Lord Christ.”

 

And they were taught to dream big.

B-HAGS we call them in the Owan house. Big Hairy Audacious Goals.

Sometimes I think our older one goes a bit overboard with this, but he really is his father’s son, so I’m not surprised.

So this weekend we’re celebrating what he’s accomplished, where he’s come from and where he’s going. Memories of the last 28 years are already causing me to break out in melancholy.

It’s going to be a weekend to celebrate both the spirit and the body. And rejoice that our lives are a combination of both.

 

We all have stories to tell. Our lives are stories.

 

I’m having a grand time watching my sons’ stories unfold! Here’s the younger one on his big day!

 

 

Until next Friday,

Dream big, explore your potential, and celebrate body and spirit!

Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

Photos by Andrea A Owan

When Walking is Bad for You

Walking is one of the most rewarding forms of exercise, physically, mentally and spiritually. You can walk and pray, you can walk and socialize with a walking buddy. You can strengthen the body, heart and mind. It’s inexpensive and handy—just lace up those walking shoes, step outside and hit the road.

So, with all of these phenomenal benefits, why would I say that there might be a reason for when you shouldn’t walk?

Today I’m going to cover one big one.

You need to rethink walking for exercise if you are an urban dweller.

 

A 2016 University of Cambridge study published in Preventive Magazine indicated that the benefits of walking in polluted city air far outweighed the negatives. But they used a computerized health model, not real people for their research.

Now a new study published in The Lancet, one of the world’s oldest and best-known, peer-reviewed medical journals, suggests that where you choose to walk does matter.

 

What happens when you walk those city streets—

Researchers found that walking along heavily polluted streets does cancel out many of walking’s benefits.

The researchers gathered 119 people, all over the age of 60. Of this group, 40 of them were considered healthy, 40 had diagnosed chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which is a chronic inflammatory lung disease, and 39 had ischemic heart disease, a condition caused by artery narrowing that reduces blood flow and oxygenation to the tissues.

Then the researchers gave them their walking assignments. Some were instructed to walk two hours a day along London’s Oxford Street, a downtown road heavily traversed by buses and cars. The other group spent two hours strolling through a quiet part of London’s Hyde Park.

After each workout, the researchers measured the pollution concentration in each location and then measured the following health markers in the participants:

  • lung capacity
  • breathlessness
  • wheezing
  • coughing
  • arterial stiffness (related to high blood pressure).

 

What do you think the researchers discovered?

If you think that walking in Hyde Park allowed the walkers to experience better health, you’d be partially right. Actually, they experienced big improvements in lung capacity and arterial stiffness.

After the participants walked along Oxford Street, inhaling its air pollutants, they experienced modest improvements in their lung capacity, but they experienced a worsening of arterial stiffness. Those findings led the researchers to suggest that the poor air quality negated many of walking’s benefits.

 

What about the COPD walkers? While they did experience some lung capacity improvements during their walks in both locations, the researchers considered the improvement to be negligible.

But the walkers with COPD demonstrated more respiratory issues, like coughing, wheezing, and shortness of breath, after walking Oxford Street. They also ended up with more arterial stiffness.

The walkers with heart disease also suffered in the polluted urban environment. Unless they were taking cardiovascular drugs, which appeared to offer some protection against the bad air, they suffered more severe arterial stiffness.

Kian Fan Chung, lead researcher and professor of respiratory medicine at Imperial College London’s National Heart and Lung Institute, said, “You should avoid polluted areas for doing any form of exercise, specifically walking.” He added that if an outdoor, less-polluted green space is not available, then you should probably exercise indoors.

And I think even suburban dwellers need to think carefully about when and where they walk around their neighborhoods.

 

 

Case Study—

Within the last thirteen months, I’ve suffered and recovered from a decent bout of pneumonia and been diagnosed with lung nodules. Not large enough yet to be considered cancerous, but still there, and disconcerting. My once clean lungs have caused me to rethink, re-plan, and re-execute my neighborhood-walking program.

After trying both late afternoon and morning walking programs, I’ve discovered the times people are usually leaving for work, which means I get to inhale a lot of carbon monoxide fumes and burned gasoline byproducts if I walk when they drive. I usually end up feeling worse when I arrive home. And I cough a lot.

So when the weather was cooler, I’d wait until after 9:00 AM to walk, or walk around 3:00, before the coming-home rush. That worked well for several months.

But now it’s HOT, and I can’t handle walking in the blazing inferno here in Tucson. (I’m a beach babe by design, not a desert rat.) So I needed to alter my walking times again.

On the weekend, the engineer and I roll out of bed at 4:30 AM, get dressed and drive to a local mountain to walk while the sun’s rising and for about an hour after it starts warming up the desert floor. At a 2.25 mph pace (this mountain’s grade is STEEP!), we can do the 2.9 miles up and back in about an hour and twenty minutes. But now we’re walking up, back, up halfway and then back down to increase our mileage and stamina for our hike over the Pyrenees for our Camino pilgrimage.

On weekdays, we’ve switched to strapping on our headlamps and walking at night around our neighborhood. We’ve discovered that garden spiders are nocturnal and have the most glorious, prism-like eyeballs that reflect our light beams! Sometimes we even catch cottontail bunnies or a pack rat enjoying the cooler night air. And we can also see the airborne dust particles floating across the light beams. We’re stunned at how much dust floats around us that we never see! But it’s a truly lovely time of day to walk.

But when it’s windy here and the dust is really flying, I head to the gym to walk on a treadmill. I’m allergic to dust (really), and it’s one of the environmental issues that will clog up my respiratory track and flatten me within hours. This year, thank the Lord, is the first time in three or four springs that I have NOT succumbed to dust-triggered bronchitis or pneumonia!

I think my new training plan is reaping benefits!

 

 

How about you?

Where and when do you usually walk (run or bike), and is it a potential health hazard for you?

Would it be possible for you to drive to a green belt location or park to walk instead of walking vehicle-clogged city streets?

Start monitoring your breathing after walking in different environments, and maybe measuring your blood pressure.

 

NEXT WEEK: More on walking, and finding green space to enjoy it!

Until then,

Happy walking, wherever it may be!

Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

Photos courtesy of Google Images

Are You Mostly Body or Mostly Spirit? Part 1

I am not a human being on a spiritual journey,

I am a spiritual being on a human journey.

 

While studying my Camino de Santiago guidebook by John Brierly (the one I’m using as my primary guide for the pilgrimage the engineer and I will soon embark on), I came upon the above quote, about not being a human being on a spiritual journey but a spiritual being on a human journey.

 

Profound?

It sure sounded deep, spiritual, enlightening, and inspirational when I read it. But then I really started thinking about it, and I came to the conclusion that I don’t fully agree with it.

The quote is a paraphrased and personalized spiritual maxim based on a quote attributed to both Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and G. I. Gurdeiff. Well-known author Wayne Dyer popularized it and evidently uses it in his presentations. It can be considered a paraphrase of the German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s dictum that matter is spirit fallen into a state of self-otherness.

 

True, or false?

You can find a lot of psychoanalytic assessment and articles online on the idea of “otherness,” but a rough definition would be to say that it is a state of being different and alien to the self.

And that’s what hangs me up about this saying and causes me to ask myself the following questions:

  1. Am I mostly human, or mostly spirit?
  2. Is my human form less important than my spirit?
  3. Does my soul feel alien to my physical self, and vice versa?
  4. What’s God’s opinion about this view?

 

A few of my conclusions—

  1. Being mostly spirit sounds Gnostic to me.

(We’ll be covering Gnosticism in a future Meditation Monday post.) Gnostics are heavy on spirit and having an “inward knowing.”

  1. God created us to be both spirit and bodies.

And when He originally created humans, He intended for them to live forever, in perfect bodies that didn’t wear down, break down, get sick, or die. The ugly—sinful degradation part—came at the fall. So the original intent seemed to be a nice balance of both body and spirit.

  1. Body and Spirit are equally important.

Since Scripture says we’ll eventually have new bodies in which to house our incorruptible spirits (after death and our resurrection), it seems as though both body and spirit are important to Him—now and later.

  1. Do I have a healthy balance with both?

It seems to me that, in order to live the fullest and most fruitful life, you need to have a healthy opinion toward both your body and soul.

 

Food for thought—

Throughout the summer we’ll be exploring this body versus spirit idea more carefully. But for this weekend, I invite you to mediate on the following questions:

  1. What is your opinion about this spiritual maxim, or philosophical view?
  2. In your life, do you focus more on your physical body or your spirit?
  3. Are your decisions driven more by your physical needs than your spiritual ones?
  4. Which do you believe you need more work on—your body or your spirit? Or do you feel you are living a life in balance, so both the body and spirit are growing and bearing fruit?

 

Until next week,

Happy journeying, with both body and soul!

Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

Photo courtesy of Andrea A. Owan

10 Steps to a Successful, Injury-Free Walking Program

You’re excited! You’ve decided to start a walking program and are ready to launch out on the streets and sidewalks around your house. Or you’re headed to the local recreation facility to pad around their indoor track.

You’re off to a great start!

Or are you?

 

Setting a walking goal to improve fitness, and reduce injury risk—

Would you like to start a walking program, one that improves your fitness level and reduces your risk of injury? If you answered “yes,” then let’s get started!

If you haven’t read my previous post, May 23—“How to Begin an Effective Walking Program Part 1” http://andreaarthurowan.com/2018/05/23/209/blog, on choosing the right shoes, then make sure you do that first. Then grab a journal and start planning your 12-week program.

 

Follow These Steps to an Effective Program—

  1. Aim to walk at least 5 days a week. (I’m a proponent of taking a day off, so I walk 6 days out of 7. While casual walking on Day 7 is okay, your body will appreciate a brisk-walk break.)

 

  1. Always start out with slow stretching for your legs, knees and Achilles tendons.

It’s best if you can do some light calisthenics prior to stretching, so you can get the blood moving, and the body warm, which makes the muscles more responsive to stretching.

 

  1. Make the first 5 minutes of your walk a slower pace, so your heart has some time to respond. Don’t blast off like a race horse out the gates.

 

  1. Make your goal a brisk pace.

How is brisk defined? Brisk is defined as a 3 – 4 miles per hour pace. That’s moving at a pretty decent clip, with you breathing deeply while still being able to carry on a conversation.

Don’t worry if you can’t do the brisk walk right away. If you must, work up to it slowly.

 

  1. To avoid injury, plan to increase your walking pace by 10% a week, OR increase your mileage by 10%, BUT NOT BOTH!

This is where I probably differ with the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, that advocates increasing your walking time by 2 minutes every week.

To avoid acute, or chronic (long-term) injury, I insisted that my athletes and patients follow this 10% rule.

Let’s say you’re able to warm-up, and then walk a mile, followed by a cool down your first time out. You feel pretty peachy and proud of yourself. And you’re really tempted to push it to over one mile the next day out.

Don’t do it! Continue with your one-mile distance for that week, without pushing the speed up, either. Be patient, and give your body time to respond, without unduly stressing those previously dormant muscles, tendons and ligaments.

So many of my regular patients and competitive athletes tried to push through (or defy) this rule, and they ended up having chronic injuries that were difficult, if not impossible to heal. Better to take it slowly—and avoid injury—than have to back up, treat a persistent problem, and park it back on the couch for six weeks.

The following week, increase your mileage by 10% (to 1.1 miles) OR increase your pace by 10%, to 3.3 miles per hour.

By using that format, you can see where, as your mileage gets higher, your mileage jumps up very quickly. If you’re walking 4 miles and then increase that 10%, you’ll jump to 4.4 miles the following week.

Sometimes it takes longer than a week to move up another 10%, but don’t try to defy or ignore the one-week rule. Pay attention to how your body feels and is responding before deciding whether or not to increase your mileage OR your pace.

 

  1. Remember to keep track of your heart rate!

You may want to use your smart phone, or another fitness device, like a Fitbit to track your heart rate and blood pressure. If you’re aiming for a moderate (or a little more) cardio workout, you would want to stay in a 50 – 70% target heart rate range for the entire brisk walk phase.

(Please see my post http://andreaarthurowan.com/2018/04/25/the-best-way-to-calculate-your-exercise-training-heart-rate/admin/ 

to properly calculate your training heart rate using your resting heart rate as a guideline!)

 

  1. Do not sit down after your walk until you’ve slowed to a heart rate-reducing pace walk and performed 5 minutes of stretching.

It’s stressful on your heart to just stop exercising, without continuing to move around and “cool” down, so keep a leisurely pace until your heart rate drops to a comfortable level. It should begin to drop immediately after you reduce your pace.

And with all of that accumulated lactic acid making your legs feel heavy, and the flowing blood, puffed up tissues and muscles and on-alert nerves, you need to try to get it flowing out of the limbs so they can recover.

Contrary to popular opinion, lactic acid does not cause pain. It causes a heavy feeling and sluggishness. The blood and squeezing of nerves and vessels from muscle contraction can cause the pain. Elevating the legs for twenty minutes after exercise, or light massage with hand movement toward the heart (not toward the feet) can help with this.

And ice any joint or tissue that feels any pain twinge for 20 minutes. Make note of that in your journal.

 

  1. Set your goal for 40 minutes of walking 5 -6 days a week, including a 5-minute warm-up (after stretching) and a 5-minute cool-down.

The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute chart says you should be reaching that by week 12. If you don’t, don’t worry. Just keep at it—consistently—until you do.

It’s very important to be consistent. Rain or shine. Hot weather or cold. If you miss a couple of days, it usually isn’t a problem. If you miss a week, you may need to work back up to the level where you stopped before the blank week. If you’re over 50, your fitness level zooms downhill like a fast-moving roller coaster, so try as hard as you can to stay with it and be consistent!

 

  1. Aim for walking outside!

For a variety of reasons, fresh air is the best environment in which to walk. But if you don’t have a fresh air supply—because you live in the city—then find an indoor track to pad around. Or get on a treadmill in the gym. Treadmills are always a nice option because they can increase the exercise level with hill-like ramping capability.

 

  1. If you do walk outside, alter the direction you walk every day!

Ever been walking in an indoor track or rec facility track where they have you walk clockwise one day and then counter-clockwise the next? There’s a good reason for that, one you need to consider when you’re walking out on a road.

Another common problem I saw in my patients and athletes, especially runners, was chronic injury on their “downhill or inside leg.” The leg that always ended up closest to the curb on a street.

The problem arises from the fact that when you’re always running or walking the same direction, one leg is almost always having to compensate for a roadway that curves down toward the gutter, or curves inside toward the track. Day after day after day of that is stressful on the body. Change directions to keep your lower limbs from chronic stress. (The uphill leg isn’t happy about it, either.)

One problem with running or walking on a road, though, is that you should always walk against the traffic. That way they can see you. (Cyclists are to ride with the traffic flow, not against it. Just the opposite of a walker.)

 

So there you go! Ten tips for setting up a successful walking program.

But we’re not done!

 

In the future, we’ll look at when walking outside isn’t a good option, and what to do when you’ve reached your 40 minutes and start feeling as though you’ve hit a workout wall.

 

If you need some additional guidance, drop me an email at andreaarthurowan@gmail.com. Or leave a comment to let me know how you’re doing with the program.

 

And if you think this post might be helpful for someone you know, please share it!

 

NEXT WEEK: When you really shouldn’t be walking outside!

Until then,

Happy walking!

 Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

 

*The advice in this blog is not meant to be a substitute for a physician’s recommendation or treatment plan!


NOTE:
If you have serious health issues, are on medications, or are over 40 and have been sedentary for a while, make sure you see your doctor first for approval or special recommendations.

Photo courtesy of Andrea A. Owan