Osteoporosis and Osteopenia (bone porosity & bone loss)
Are you age 40 or older? If so, you might want to make sure you stay active as you continue to age. After 40 or so, the average woman losses 8% of their bone mass; men loss about 3% per decade. So, by 70 a woman can lose 25%; a man 18%. Bones can become more porous and weaker, usually starting to increase after age 45.
Wow, not good!
Consistent (and appropriate) exercise puts strain on the muscles, joints and bones, causing the bones cells to stay active and continue to remodel, often until the end of life. (Wolff’s Law)Appropriate exercise as we all age depends upon the individual. However, Tai chi, yoga and qigong are all low-impact and can be practiced by most people regardless of age and health issues.
I offer private lessons in Wekiva and weekly group classes at Winter Park Presbyterian Church.
We all grow older, but do we ever really grow up? Growing up usually refers to being more responsible, more independent, more aware, more giving of oneself.
However, it usually takes a better part of a lifetime to realize what is most important in our lives. Our family and our health, right? How cliché. We say it because it sounds wise and moral. But really, what we as humans seem to value the most is our home, cars, money, and other material possessions. Our ego tops the list of our priorities as we like to think that what we offer more than we receive in our daily existence within the universe.
Often we look to point the finger how others should be better. Another perspective would be to make ourselves better. Be the best version of ourselves that we can be. Set the example because this action alone can be contagious in a positive way.
Wisdom is a recipe of knowledge and experience obtained over time (age) allowing one to differentiate when is the correct timing to react or not to react. When to do, when not to do. Coming up to a stop sign, you really don’t care to stop your vehicle (your true feeling) but you do because it is the right action (the law) to stop. If a blaring fire engine were to suddenly appear in your rear view mirror, you might choose to move through the intersection and to a space clear of the oncoming 370,000 pounds of moving metal and water (correct action for this situation).
Learn how to maintain health, fitness and wellness with tai chi, gigong and other time-proven methods. Private, small or group instruction.
Take care of yourself because no one else should care more about you than you. Eat better, move more, stress less, be nicer. Be well!
A perspective of top causes of death in the US and that most are somewhat preventable through choices we make. The US did not become ill overnight. We have been working hard at this for decades.
Take note that top causes 3, 4 & 5 are all very much preventable and directly affect others, even with no deliberate ill-will towards others.
Take care of yourself because no one else should care more about you than you. Eat better, move more, stress less, be nicer. Be well!
Learn how to maintain health, fitness and wellness with tai chi, gigong and other time-proven methods. Private, small or group instruction.
“I run everyday, but my knees and back always ache.”
“Stretching is great for my hamstrings and back, but I get winded walking up 2 flights of stairs”
“My muscles look strong and athletic but I can’t touch my toes and my stomach is always bloated or uncomfortable”
“I workout at the gym everyday but still trip walking up or down stairs”
“Staying active is so important to me, but I don’t have time to learn about how my body works”
People walk, run, swim, stretch and many other methods to stay healthy. In the US Only 23.2% of U.S. adults 18 to 64 met the 2018 CDC guidelines for both aerobic and muscle-strengthening exercise. Most people that do exercise, do so with the intention that by increasing their heart rate, strengthening the main muscles groups and breaking a sweat, that they will maintain a greater level of overall fitness and/or wellness. These actions don’t always provide whole body wellness.
Does anybody really exercise with specific goals of maintaining joint strength, bone density, spinal flexibility, range of motion, balance, control, eye-hand coordination, lung capacity, stress relief or health of all of the internal organs? Maybe.
Those that are knowledgeable in their practices of yoga, qigong, Pilates, Tai Chi and other martial arts, often exercise specifically to engage the whole body and mind with every exercise. They don’t wait to have arthritis in their body to strengthen the joints. Or begin to stumble and lose balance to realize that vestibular balance diminishes as we age with muscles weakening and stiffening. These practices inherently provide benefits that most conventional exercises (walking, running, swimming, weight lifting, cycling, etc.) offer at limited amounts or are somewhat geared towards younger or more fit individuals.
For example, will running strengthen the joints, provide flexibility in the spine or improve digestion? Does weight training help prevent arthritis in the toes and fingers or strengthen the immune and lymphatic systems? Does swimming increase bone density or balance? Each method has its own set of pros and cons.
So if want to increase your lung capacity, practice exercises that can offer deliberate and deeper breathing. If you have a stiff or injured lower back, practice methods that stretch and strengthen the muscles, tendons and ligaments relative to the spine. If your bones are weak, weight bearing exercises are needed. Yoga, qigong and tai chi provide all of the the prior benefits and many more, all within their respective curriculums.
Learn how this all works from private, small or group instruction.
Qigong, Tai Chi & Wellness lectures, seminars & discussions. These events are for a 1-hour, consisting of explanations, question & answer time and various amounts of physical interaction depending upon the theme. Cost varies upon event and amount of attendees.
Qigong, Tai Chi & Wellness group classes at Winter Park Presbyterian Church, Most Mondays & Fridays, 11:30am to 12:30pm. Classes usually in the Fellowship hall or the Education Building upstairs. Free to church members, $10.00 per drop-in class for non-church members. Class is open to all 18 years of age and older. Average age though, for this class is about 65 & up. Every month we practice a set of movements which changes from month to month.
Qigong, Tai Chi & Wellness group classes are available in the Longwood-Wekiva neighborhood. I offer many levels of self-improvement and awareness through:
– Qigong – Kung Fu (tai chi, baguazhang and various other types of training) – acupressure/reflexology – iron palm/iron body/bone marrow washing – Traditional Chinese Medicine methods and concepts – herbal extracts for injuries and conditioning – weapons training for enhanced awareness – core strengthening methods – practical self-defense methods – management of chronic pain issues through movement, meditation and herbal extracts – study guides and booklets showing graphics of various exercises, concepts & theories
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