Wednesday, October 28, 2015

sam col oct. 27 pls tell me you got it and  add blog at end as in the past

When is too much exercise too much exercise?
by sam
I’ve often mentioned my exercise program in the past, especially when I thought it might inspire other seniors to remain active. But now the two-hour daily stint is getting boring, particularly on the three days when I add aerobics on treadmill and bike.
My routine was something I had created from many sources over the years, starting when I was teaching skiing at Big Bear Mountain in Southern California.  
When I moved to Tahoe and began teaching at Heavenly’s Boulder Base, I enlarged the workout to about and hour, figuring that daily class work would keep me fit. (I never aimed at making myself bigger and better, just staying where I was and not declining.) The exercise was designed to keep me skiing as I aged.
But the long gaily workouts were demanding and eating into my mornings. I sought advice from some PTs I knew, but they of little help in examining what I was doing.
So after meeting Stephen Yasmer, manager of physical therapy for Carson Tahoe Health, I decided to talk with him about my fitness program. I did so and brought with me a printout with me that read something like this:
“Flat on back, lift knees on at a time to the chest for 30 reps.
“Using 8 -pound weights lift up, out, frontwards, over head each 30 times.” And so on.
The list was more than two pages long, and we went over it together. At the end he said if it wasn’t causing me pain, it sounded good but was way too long.
“Make some of the actions tougher and shorter,” he said. “Instead of 120 leaning pushups, do 10 or 15 traditional ones. And wherever possible make the action more demanding and with less reps.”
I said I was considering reducing my present routine to include tai chi once a week. (I had added some tai chi moves to the routine over the years.)
“Yes, that might add variety, but don’t cut back on your present routine except as I’ve suggested,” he said. And meanwhile sign up for some therapy now.”
So I did.
Meanwhile, I showed him my left knee, which had become painful a few days ago. No reason, I hadn’t bumped it or fallen on it. I had taken the inexpensive version of Aleve (naproxen) to ease the pain. (When I had my right knee replaced I took painkillers and vowed not to do so again.)
He checked and diagnosed inflammation. “Just use cold compresses for 20 minutes at a time. Take the naproxen for a day or so.”
I used the cold compresses every couple of hours and the hot knee cooled down, and the pain ebbed away and hasn’t come back.
Yammer also checked my flexibility and muscular strength  and suggested a series of physical therapy sesions to reduce my ever-present back pain, the result of too many falls on the ski trails.
I’ve had the back pain for years and many therapists have tried to help with little success. I ever tried at TV-ad therapy in Reno, but all he did was stretch my back with an elaborate device. I knew from experience that I could do that at home by hanging from a fixed horizontal bar in a doorway. Palliative, yes, but I simply hang from it for at  count of 25 and the back pain subsides.
I’ve got a schedule for therapy that stretches to ski season with a very professional therapist named Isabel, who worked me over in prep for the sessions. I’ll report on how those go in the future.
And I’m lucky that the apartment building I live in on Russell Way has an exercise room couple with stationary bike, treadmill and stair steppers. I’m apparently the only resident to use it, as well as the outdoor hot tub a couple of hundred feet from the exercise room.
While I use the treadmill regularly, I’m happy to enjoy the nearby bike and hike trail along highway I-580. And before the Big Mac multiuse athletic facility began to rise, there was a nice field of sagebrush where one could walk.
So I hope that this report encourages activity among seniors. As Yasner said, ”Not how good or bad the routine was but that I was active.” That’s what counts. Pant, pant.



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