The Holistic Parent | Page 14

BODY | HEALTHY POSTURE POSTURE CHECK Realigning your posture for overall health Story by DR. SHANNON VIANA W ith increasing numbers of devices available to us, we’re spending more and more of our lives plugged in. Estimates across the globe suggest that we spend a whopping 8 to 11 hours a day on technology; this is not without effect. Laptops, tablets and cell phones, while convenient, fall flat in terms of ergonomics and encourage sloppy posture and bad habits. While mainstream media has coined the phenomena “iposture,” the long-term effects are far from comical. Common symptoms include headaches, which squeeze at the temples or start at the base of the skull and move up over the head, neck and shoulder pain, cold or tingling into the hands and low back pain. For many, it’s difficult to draw the connection between poor posture and a sudden onset of pain or headaches. While the pain and dysfunction seem to begin quite suddenly, for most, the process has been progressively worsening over years. Fortunately — and unfortunately — the human body is an amazing, adapting machine which compensates by allowing us to function with limited range of motion and by recruiting other muscles. The pectorals, scalenes, hamstrings and gluteus muscles become extremely tight while the opposing muscles (the rhomboids, upper neck muscles and low back muscles) become stretched and painful. Over time, these tight muscles act like tethers on our bones and joints and restrict motion further. Often one of the first changes people notice in their day-to-day living is the inability to check their blind spot by turning just their head. By the time they present with pain they have resorted 14 THE HOLISTIC PARENT Winter 2015 think your posture is in check? ... Ask a friend or coworker to take a side profile photo of your hear, neck and shoulders. to turning most of their upper body to accomplish this simple task. Fortunately, for most, the solution is really quite simple. We must get up, we must move and we must stretch. Changing posture begins by first recognizing that how you act in your environment is causing the problem in the first place and to change it you must change how you are in that environment. First, you must accept that it’s unnatural and unhealthy to sit and slouch forward all day long. Next, you must isolate during which activities you tend to adopt poor posture. Many of us function on autopilot and we rarely check-in to see how we are feeling in different situations so that we can recognize where the posture problems are originating. Think your posture is in check? Ask a friend or co-worker to take side profile photos of your head, neck and shoulders with your phone to see how your posture has changed. Next, check to see that your ear opening is in line with the middle of your shoulder and that shoulders are not curving forward. Ask yourself these two simple questions: When was the last time I could check my blind spot by only turning my head? Do I have any of the above symptoms at least two days of the week? Chances are if you are like most of the population you will fail at least one and likely all of the above posture checks. Common signs to look for: forward rounding of the shoulders, unleveling of the shoulders (one higher than the other), humping at the base of the neck, head extended forward past the shoulders. DR. SHANNON VIANA , DC, is a chiropractor and owner of Inspire Health & Wellness in Kitchener. Beyond the traditional chiropractic care, she also employs the use of ultrasound, electrotherapies and orthotics in the care of her patients. www.inspirehealthandwellness.ca theholisticparent.ca