Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2016

Goal-setting and your body

Goal-setting is an efficient way to visualize and reach your targets. It seems to work in sales, academia, fundraising, test-taking and saving money.

It may however not work when it comes to your body. Or specifically, when it comes to reaching a body shape you desire.

Because the human body is far more complex than any of the examples above.

When you want to score well in a test, the equation is simple – set a goal of scoring so-and-so, study well, learn the concepts, practice taking the test, figure out where you might be going wrong and correct yourself.

In most cases, this will ensure you get the desired results. Sure, many other factors play a role – your health has to be good during prep and on test day, no major accidents on test day, need money for the test or buying supplies and study materials etc. But the other factors play a relatively minor role.

If you compare two test takers who have similar facilities available to them, the one that has a clear goal and studies better, scores better by and large.

But bodies, their health and fitness are affected by so many variables that it is impossible to account for all of them.

There’s a long long list of things that go into making a body healthy – amount and quality of food, exercise, mental health, financial health, social capital, genetics, how your body processes stress, your metabolism, family support, preexisting diseases, parental health and habits, your habits, childhood influences, your native culture (especially the position of food in that culture), your relationship to food and so on.

So when you set a goal of having a waist size so and so inches or having so many packs in your abs, there’s a ton of things you have to get right to reach that goal.

Sure, many people, reach their health goals. They probably do so because many of the above factors are already in their favor and they manage to get in control the few factors that aren’t with their goal setting.

On the other hand, I’m sure the numbers of those who don’t succeed is far far greater. Or we wouldn’t have billion dollar industries in nutritional supplements, fitness instruments, apps and programs, reality tv shows, and diet books.

So the take-away? Avoid setting body-shape and size related goals that are influenced by complex factors beyond your control.


Instead, set goals that are in your control, like waking up early or running a set distance every week or avoiding sugar for 21 days or lifting x amount of weight. Your body might respond the way you like or you may have to adjust your goals. 

Monday, December 3, 2012

Yo! ga

"Imagine a ball of energy between your navel and pubic bone. It's orange in color. It is glowing, soft, gentle, juicy, warm and its glow is spreading to cover your abdomen and thighs and arms and legs and head and your entire body as you breathe in. And as you breathe out, its glow spread to those around you to bathe the world in tranquility and peace."

I've been trying yoga for some days now and it's hard to keep a straight face through monologues like the one above by the yoga instructors at my place.

They're very professional and helpful though. And they know what they are doing.

They have this knack of describing body movements in strange exquisite details.

So, a simple 'straighten your back' becomes 'pull your shoulders to the back of the room and the floor, zip up your stomach, push out the heart center, reach the crown of your head to the roof (reach! reach! reach!) and let your chin float farther away from your chest as you inhaaale deeply taking in all the positive energy from the atmosphere into your body and let the negative energy with all the stress, anxiety and tension out to feel a sense of alert calm coursing through your entire body'.


And this is just for a basic standing posture. I really need to record some of the descriptions they give for asanas.


The only quibbles I have are that some of them tend to mix in pilates with asanas and some have a habit of playing music that really doesn't go well with the practice. I can see how chants and slow instrumental music can be a part of a deliberate, slow yoga sadhana, but blues? jazz? pop? Silence is much better.

The best part of the practice is the end of course - shavasan, where you simply lie down like a corpse and let each body part relax gradually. It is much more enjoyable if the practice immediately before the shavasan has been rigorous and taxing.