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Move More At Your Desk

Reduce back pain and increase your energy at work

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Reduce body stiffness, improve posture and core strength, and feel more energized with small, doable movements you can complete at your home or office.

A practical guide for office workers and work-from-homers who want to sit less and move more!
Most of us sit still for the majority of the day at our desks, not to mention hours binge watching Netflix. No self-respecting cat gets up without stretching, but humans have forgotten this need for regular movement. Back ache, migraines, RSI and even digestion issues can be aggravated by sitting still for too long. Move More At Your Desk shows you how to improve your sitting posture, strengthen, stretch and improve flexibility, to counter the issues caused by too little movement.
 
Illustrated throughout, the book is divided into 5 sections presenting movement snacks you can choose throughout your day:
• Neck and shoulders
• Moving your spine
• Legs and hips
• Hands and wrists
• Breathing
 
Each section provides exercises, tips and tricks targeting areas that are badly affected by stiffness and pain.
 
Build new habits, learn how to move just a bit more each day, and within 4 weeks aches and pains will be gone, you will feel more energized, positive and alive at work. Move More At Your Desk will give you everything you need to improve your overall health, posture and core strength.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 6, 2021
      Bradley, founder of the Pilates at Your Desk exercise program, debuts with a practical collection of stretches and gentle movements well suited for the office. “There is no disputing that for those of us who hold our bodies in a relatively fixed position for several hours a day, introducing a variety of movements is a good thing,” she writes, and lays out a desk-friendly practice divided into six parts. The first covers basic fitness facts, such as physiology (defining bones, joints, muscles, and fascia), the health benefits of movement (improved mood and coordination), and recommended frequency (between two and a half and five hours a week). Next come explanations of poses for sitting and standing, full-body movements and stretches, creative ways to get props involved (cans and door frames are called into action), and suggestions for ways to get more steps in (such as taking the stairs). A series of “mini movement routines” rounds things out. Bradley includes a wealth of testimonials from desk workers who squeeze movement into their days, and her analogies make the exercises easy to understand (she warns against a “croissant-like” sitting position, for example, and one neck exercise is called the “pez head”). Readers feeling stiff and crunched for time will find this a welcome guide.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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