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Health
- Back ache ?
- Stress ?
- Bad sleep ?
The Perfect Exercise?
T’ai Chi & Qigong have exploded across the media landscape
recently. Time Magazine in an article on Tai Chi benefits called Tai
Chi “the perfect exercise.” While The Wall Street Journal
recently did a front page lifestyle story entitled “[Qigong] The
Next Yoga: A Sweat Free Workout – Tiger Woods’ Secret Weapon?”
So, why all the buzz on Tai Chi & Qigong? Partly because today’s
high stressed fast moving population is seeking, not only health & fitness,
but serenity. Serenity may sound superficial in today’s busy world,
but that aspect of Tai Chi, may be why it is increasingly utilized in
healthcare, corporate wellness, education, and even in prison and drug
rehabilitation programs.
The current hubbub about Tai Chi & Qigong may be that we are only
now seeing the breaking of a tsunami wave of growing evidence unearthed
by western medical research that has been quietly building for the last
decade. Qigong is a Traditional Chinese medical/health practice that
directly translated means “breathing exercise,” or “energy
exercise.” Tai Chi is a sophisticated form of moving qigong, which
involves a series of choreographed movements done in a relaxed and flowing
way. Both have gained increasing attention by western medical researchers
in the last decade that has been gaining steam, and resulted in more
research dollars going toward discovering their benefits. The National
Institute of Mental Health has increased funding to further research
these ancient, yet modern, health techniques.
A couple of such study’s findings, one
a ten year study through Harvard, Yale, and Emory Universities, stunned
researchers when they
discovered that the gentle, slow, relaxing, low impact Tai Chi improved
the balance of practitioners profoundly, reducing their risk of falling
by 47.5%. Another found that Tai Chi offered significant cardiovascular
benefits, roughly the same benefits as moderate impact aerobics. Yet,
another study sited in the Hawaii Medical Journal asserted that Tai Chi
increased breathing capacity and relieved back and neck aches in practitioners.
The pain relief and low impact aspects of Tai
Chi was good news for everyone, but offered even more hope for those
suffering from rheumatoid
arthritis (RA). Tai Chi being a weight bearing exercise offered the potential
advantages of stimulating bone growth and strengthening connective tissue.
The only concern was if they (RA sufferers) could handle a weight bearing
exercise without exacerbation of joint symptoms. The American Journal
of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation reported on a study that found
RA sufferers practicing a specially tailored form of Tai Chi suffered “no” significant
exacerbation of joint symptoms. This was great news, not just for RA
sufferers but for all maturing baby boomers looking for a health regimen
that is kind to the joints.
Surprisingly, given its gentle nature, Tai Chi burns a significant amount
of calories as well, 280 per hour. To understand how significant this
is, realize that down-hill skiing burns about 350 per hour. Yet, Tai
Chi is gentle enough to be done in business clothes in the office without
even breaking a sweat. Which is one reason Tai Chi and Qigong are increasingly
being used in corporate wellness programs. However, there are perhaps
even more important reasons Tai Chi is being used, not only in corporate
wellness, but health care, education, and even prisons and drug rehabilitation
institutions.
Tai Chi provides a grouping of benefits that
helps: reduce productivity losses in employees; may reduce health care
costs preemptively; enable
students to focus; and also empower those rehabilitating from drug abuse,
etc;. to evolve more healthy productive lifestyles. This is the result
of mood homeostasis Tai Chi practice fosters. The Journal of Psychosomatic
Research reports a Tai Chi study’s findings, “[Test Subjects]
reported less tension, depression, anger, fatigue, confusion and state-anxiety;
they felt more vigorous, and in general they had less total mood disturbance.
Given that 70 to 85% of illness sending patients
to the doctor are rooted in unmanaged stress, and that U.S. business
is estimated to be losing
upwards of $300 billion annually due to unmanaged stress, Tai Chi’s
potential mood-stabilizing benefits are gaining increasing attention.
Also in education, the rise in ADD and ADHD symptoms in our nation’s
youth, has peaked interest in Tai Chi by some education professionals.
This may be partly due to a recent study from the University of Miami
School of Medicine finding that Tai Chi provided substantial symptom
reduction in students suffering from Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD)..
In light of the multi-dimensional benefits these
ancient health practices offer, which are now being validated by modern
health research, Time
Magazine’s description of Tai Chi as “the perfect exercise,” may
be a very accurate description for this ancient mind/body health technique.
www.HealthNewsDigest.com
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