fitbody
by Stacey Redfield-Dreisbach
It’s About Your Posture
I
n childhood, while many of us listened to our mothers repeat the well-worn phrase, “stand up straight,” few of us were ever interested enough to ask why good posture was so important. Now as adults, we can better appreciate that poor posture produces pain, poor health, and a body language that reveals a timidity or lack of self-confidence. In simple terms, posture is how the body stands up. How straight and how tall you stand is determined by the balance, strength and flexibility of your muscles. Some- times we think of muscles only as a source of strength. Muscles not only provide the strength we need to lift objects, walk, run or move from one place to the other; they also provide enough strength to support the size and weight of the body. Since the majority of the weight of the body relies on the legs for its support, it is important to pay attention to the muscles located above the hips to ensure that they stay properly developed. The weight of the body is the sum of its parts. On average, the head accounts for ap- proximately 10 pounds of the body’s total weight. Each arm can be credited with about 5% of the body’s total weight and each leg is approximately 10% of the body weight. The rest of the weight is assigned to the torso. This means that 80% of the total body weight is focused above the line of the legs, and how well we develop this portion is the key to your posture.
Activities that are one-sided or create any type of impact to the body, especially during the phases of growth and development can cause imbalances or changes to the posture. A bat hitting a ball may not look like much, but to a
The increasing need for functional exercise programs have been part of our physical culture since Hippocrates. As we become more and more competitive in sports, we increase the amount of impact and stress we place on the structures of the body. Posture specific pro- grams, such as Pilates are needed not only to counter the structural stress that our hectic lives are placing on our bodies, but also to help neutralize the affects. By paying more atten- tion to your posture, not only will your body feel better, but it will look better. How you look in your body and how you feel in your body can only be as good as the structure you provide for it.
Stacey Redfield-Dreisbach
is a writer, researcher and the
owner of the Physical Methods Pi- lates Studio in Bethlehem. For more information about how Pilates can help develop good posture, call 610- 814-0603 or visit www.
physicalmethods.com
developing body it can result in a variety of physical issues with scoliosis being the most common. Any type of repetitive movement to one side of the body creates an imbalance in the development of the muscles leaving one side of the body over-developed and the other side under-developed. Devel- oped muscles are heavier than under-developed ones, which causes an imbalance in the posture creating a shift in the spine.
46 Lehigh Valley
www.healthylehighvalley.com
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