Mindful Living from Kandice Leaf (RMT with NSWC)

NSWC’s very own Registered Massage Therapist, Kandice Leaf, gives insight to healthy and mindful living through muscle tension. Read on to learn more about her professional take.

Photo by: Danielle Tabo

Is Body Tension Holding You Back? Reduce Tension So You Can Be At Your Best.

“How much tension is in your body right now?

Are you as relaxed as you can be?

Do you feel any tightness or strain in your posture?

Wherever you are right now, take a moment to do a self-scan. Close your eyes and imagine a beam, like the scanning light on a photocopier, starting at the top of your head and slowly working down to your toes.

How do your neck and shoulders feel?

Are your shoulders up by your ears?

Are holding the weight of the world on your shoulders?

Do you feel aches and pains in your muscles from holding pent-up energy?

How about your low back?

Are you sitting or standing tall with a natural curve in your spine?

Are your core and abdominal muscles engaged?

Or are you letting your body to rest on the structural ligaments that hold you up instead of engaging the proper muscles?

Notice any tension in your legs and feet. Are your feet flat on the floor or are you sitting with one leg crossed over the other? While this position may feel comfortable, it puts unnecessary stress on your hips and low back. If you find that your back starts to ache at the end of the day, even though you have been sitting all day, chances are it’s because of your posture.

Take a deep breath and bring consciousness to the areas that you felt the tension. Contract the muscles in that area and purposely increase the pressure. Now relax the intensity.

Do you feel a difference?

Did this bring awareness to stress you were holding but maybe didn’t even realize?

Tighten the muscles again, hold it… Now release again. Were you able to decrease the tightness more than before?

Our bodies function at their best when we are relaxed as blood and nerve impulses can flow unimpeded. Tension stops the flow and increases the pain we feel. Just like a dammed river, the water builds up to the point where the riverbanks can no longer maintain the pressure. The pain we get from unnecessary strain, just like the water breaching the banks.

The first step in correcting this is to bring attention to it. If you don’t realize you are doing it, you can’t fix the behavior.

Completing a quick body scan, a few times a day can have astounding effects on your productivity, health and mental state. Like opening the channels of the river, it allows you to discover places of unease, decrease adverse effects of stress, tension and pain and increase the flow of energy.

We know the importance of getting up from our desks during the day and moving at least every hour, but it’s so easy to forget to do it. Try incorporating the above body scan before you get up from your chair. When you are ready to get up, take a deep breath and focus on maintaining the relaxed posture.

When you sit back down, are you still in control of the new posture? The more you practice, the easier it will become to recognize the feelings of tightness and release.

One of the best techniques to decrease body tension is the modified Progressive Muscle Relaxation. Squeeze the muscles in the strained area for five seconds then letting go. Repeat up to five times. Focus on the differences of the feelings before and after. Make a note of which areas you felt were tighter than others. The next time you do the scan, notice if that area was still tight or has something changed.

Mindfulness, both physically and mentally, is currently a hot topic and it’s not without reason. Most people are not aware of how much stress they are carrying so much tension and stress these days. Awareness is one of the first steps in fighting the battle of tension and improving how you move through your day.

BE BIG. BE BOLD. BE BEAUTIFUL. BE YOU!!!”

 

Read more from Registered Massage Therapist, Kandice Leaf, here.

Follow her on social media!

 Facebook

Instagram

Twitter