People Don’t Ail From Lack of Muscle Tone

Toned arms, a flat stomach, a well sculpted physique – are all very nice to have, at the very least on the cosmetic level. However, lack of these are not the leading causes of death. Healthy internal organs and their various bodily functions are the foundation of wellness.
Energetic Anatomy-summary graphic copy
There are major difference between fitness, health and wellness.

Fitness focuses on your physical health including nutrition, strength, conditioning, flexibility, and body composition with specific markers based on body size, gender, body type, training style, and training age. Fitness is a component of wellness, but wellness isn’t a component of fitness.

Health is a state of being – physical, mental, and social well-being. Primary determinants of health include the social, economic, and physical environments, and individual characteristics and behaviors.

Wellness (well-being) includes fitness but it’s broader. Wellness considers all of your choices and how they create your entire lifestyle. Wellness includes many facets, and looks at the way they interact to create balance or imbalance. Think of wellness as a web, then plucking it one part creates reverberations across the rest.

Wellness is the state of living a healthy lifestyle. Wellness is considered a conscious, self-directed and evolving process of achieving full potential. Wellness is multidimensional and holistic, encompassing lifestyle, mental and spiritual well-being, and the environment. Wellness is finding a balance between all of these and enhancing a sense of happiness.

The leading causes of death in the US for 2017-2018 (from the CDC):
1) Heart Disease
2) Cancer
3) Unintentional injuries
4) Chronic lower respiratory disease
5) Stroke and cerebrovascular diseases
6) Alzheimer’s disease
7) Diabetes
8) Influenza and pneumonia
9) Kidney disease
10) Suicide
Causes of death 2018
The path to good or poor health doesn’t happen overnight.

Which Path Are You On

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For more info, contact Jim Moltzan at info@mindandbodyexercises.com, 407-234-0119 or through my site at http://www.mindandbodyexercises.com

Jim

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Jim Moltzan started his martial arts training at the age of 16, starting with Korean martial arts and evolving into BaguaZhang, Tai Chi, and Qigong. Jim has been training, studying and teaching for almost 40 years effectively educating hundreds of students.

Master Instructor Jim Moltzan has trained with a diverse group of masters and high-level martial arts teachers of many different disciplines. Jim’s specialty is teaching exercises to improve chronic conditions, working with people of all ages, especially senior adults. Offering guidance and instruction, Jim has also worked with Parkinson Disease patients through Florida Hospital. Jim gives regular lectures as requested by AdventHealth (Florida Hospital) regarding the benefits of Eastern practices.

He is the author and graphic artist of numerous journals, graphic charts and study guides relative to the mind and body connection and how it relates to martial arts, fitness and self-improvement.

Jim continues his training and teaching in the Orlando, Florida area conducting classes, seminars and lectures as his schedule allows. He balances his teachings and businesses with his own personal cultivation and time spent with his wife and two college-age kids.

Today’s FREE class: Wrist Exercises for flexibility & strength

Today’s FREE class:
Wrist Exercises for flexibility & strength

Often times people don’t realize how little flexibility, strength or range of motion they have in their wrists, elbows and shoulders. But then some situation presents itself, and the individual discovers that their grip is weak, or they can’t reach to scratch their back or maybe the wrists ache after painting their house. Seemingly little things that make a big discomfort down the road.

Anyway, here are a few “strategic trauma” exercises where you stretch and manipulate the hands very deliberately to find the weak spots and make them release and move more freely. After repetitive practicing, the joints become more pliable. One wrist is strengthening while the other is increasing range of motion.

If you have questions about these exercises or other methods to maintain and improve wellness, contact Jim Moltzan at 407-234-0119 or info@MindAndBodyExercises.com

Today’s FREE class – Qigong Exercises for the Mind & Body

 

Today’s FREE class – Qigong Exercises for the Mind & Body

 

Most people are unaware of what qigong is. “Qi” is Chinese for breath or more precisely, energy. “Gong” means hard work or diligent effort. So “qigong” translates to energy work.

There is “soft” giqong which can have little or no body movement and can be practiced sitting or standing.

“Hard” qigong refers to exercises that puts specific tension on the muscles, bones, fascia and nervous system to engage the “chong mai” or energy vessel that runs vertically through the center of the body. These are usually considered as advanced practices and should be learned from a qualified instructor.

Both hard & soft qigong have many benefits, being that of physical strength, mental discipline, stress relief and management of thoughts and emotions.

This video shows a truly mind, body and self-awareness set of exercises that can be practiced anywhere with no equipment or special clothing. Practice at your own discretion or contact me for further guidance for these types of practice methods.

For more info, contact Jim Moltzan at info@mindandbodyexercises.com, 407-234-0119

 

Stress & the Benefits of Deep Deliberate Breathing

Most people breathe too shallow and too quickly!

Western medicine has acknowledged in recent years, that stress has an effect on the internal organs and consequently the immune system.

Thoughts-affecting the organs2

When humans are confronted with trauma or extreme stress, the body adjusts with rapid, shallow breathing that changes to the blood chemistry to deal with the tasks at hand. When the “flight or flight response” or the parasympathetic nervous system activates, adrenaline and cortisol dump into the blood stream. Prolonged adrenaline & cortisol in the blood is thought to cause deterioration of the internal organs and systems of the human body.

 

Much recent research has linked stress to poor breathing habits and consequently many ailments. Many modern chronic conditions can be traced back to insufficient cell oxygenation otherwise known as cell hypoxia.

 

Lung capacity

 

Most humans are breathing on the average, with normal activity of standing, sitting, walking, etc. about 12-18 breaths per minute (BPM). This amounts to very shallow breaths, using primary the top 1/3 of the lung’s capacity.

Fitness experts suggest that 6 BPM is optimal for the lungs to properly oxygenate the whole body while also removing toxins. The lungs are responsible for removing 70% of the body’s waste by-products through exhalation. This is best accomplished by mindful breathing patterns through exercises such as mediation, qigong, tai chi and yoga.

 

Root ProblemShallow chest breathing fills only the upper portion of the lungs. This reduces the ability to effectively oxygenate the circulation system.

This “over-breathing” and “under-inhaling” causes an imbalance in oxygen/carbon dioxide gas exchange. This further leads to a ripple effect of other chemical (and hormonal) imbalances.

Poor oxygenation is linked to many modern chronic conditions such as asthma, COPD, obesity, diabetes, insomnia and cancer.

Faster breathing is necessary when experiencing truly stressful situations, like being chased by an animal, running from a fire or similar life-threatening situations. However, continued breathing at this pace for an extended period of time puts accumulative stress on all of the body’s systems.

Root Solution

 

Too much activity within the sympathetic nervous system causes the body to constantly respond as if in the “fight” or flight” mentally eventually deteriorating many body systems.

When respiration slows to 10 breaths per minute or slower, the parasympathetic nervous system is activated. Qigong, tai chi, baguazhang, yoga, etc. are all effective methods of exercise that activate this nervous system.  These techniques have proven the test of time in being an option to remove or manage the inner critical dialogue and learn to regulate the fast-paced modern existence we all experiencing.

 

 

Parasympathetic Graphic

Breathing is one of the few bodily rhythms that we can consciously adjust, along with sleep and elimination. All of these rhythms directly affect our body’s delicate blood chemistry. However, our breath is the root power in bringing oxygen (qi) into our body to nourish it down to the cellular level.

Deep breathing encourages pumping of cerebrospinal fluid (fluid around the spinal cord). This increases brain metabolism while promoting feelings of physical and mental well-being, as well as enhanced mental alertness.

When the parasympathetic nervous system is activated, “happy” hormones are released, decreasing heart rate and blood pressure. This relaxes the nervous system, slows and calms all the body systems. This process then promotes regeneration through decreasing metabolic rate at all levels.

Qigong balances breathing and promotes conditions in your body for it to be able to regenerate and heal itself. Qigong does not treat symptoms, but rather solves the problem at its root.

Meditation, tai chi, qigong and yoga are time-proven methods that help regulate thoughts, emotions and the resulting blood chemistry.

Methods to Slow BreathingBenefits

For more info, contact Jim Moltzan at info@mindandbodyexercises.com, 407-234-0119 or through my site at http://www.mindandbodyexercises.com

 

Jim

vs181006-004cropped-header-image2.jpg

Jim Moltzan started his martial arts training at the age of 16, starting with Korean martial arts and evolving into BaguaZhang, Tai Chi, and Qigong. Jim has been training, studying and teaching for almost 40 years effectively educating hundreds of students.

Master Instructor Jim Moltzan has trained with a diverse group of masters and high-level martial arts teachers of many different disciplines. Jim’s specialty is teaching exercises to improve chronic conditions, working with people of all ages, especially senior adults. Offering guidance and instruction, Jim has also worked with Parkinson Disease patients through Florida Hospital. Jim gives regular lectures as requested by AdventHealth (Florida Hospital) regarding the benefits of Eastern practices.

He is the author and graphic artist of numerous journals, graphic charts and study guides relative to the mind and body connection and how it relates to martial arts, fitness and self-improvement.

Jim continues his training and teaching in the Orlando, Florida area conducting classes, seminars and lectures as his schedule allows. He balances his teachings and businesses with his own personal cultivation and time spent with his wife and two teenage kids.

Opening of the Small Circulation Exercises

Stress is known to compromise the immune system. Tai Chi and qigong (yoga) are exercises that have passed the test of time. By relieving stress and balancing body movements, deliberate deep breathing and control of ones thoughts and emotions these methods work.

No need for a gym. No need for special equipment. No treadmill, Peleton nor Mirror to make the user dependent upon the device rather than self-disciple to do the work. YOU are the health care program. You are accountable to yourself to maintain YOUR health and well-being.

I am providing many FREE online classes to educate people to the wide spectrum of health benefits available through tai chi, qigong and various martial arts practices.

Now is a great time to realize that we are in control and responsible for our health and well-being. We have been all along, but crisis puts our priorities back in proper focus. Proactive rather than reactive.

For more info, contact Jim Moltzan at info@mindandbodyexercises.com, 407-234-0119 or through my site at http://www.mindandbodyexercises.com  

or https://www.youtube.com/c/MindandBodyExercises

Enjoy, get moving and stay healthy!