“You’ve heard of a fashionista, but what about a fitnessista”

“Mediation is the discovery that the point of life is always arrived at in the immidiate moment“
If you’ve been looking for the motivation to begin an exercise program or get back into working out regularly. Here are fitness facts that may help inspire you to get off the couch
- Try these three simple stretches in bed to ease back pain
- Fit and fine: Fitness in the festive season
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Try these three simple stretches in bed to ease back pain
Try these three simple stretches in bed to ease back painYou can do these stretches in bed after waking up in the morning and before going to sleep at night. s your back or body hurting after working on your laptop all day? Experts recommend stretching exercises as a way of alleviating the pain. Celebrity…
Fit and fine: Fitness in the festive season
In the middle of all the festivities its important to take care of your health too and shift to a maintenance modeIn the middle of all the festivities, its important to take care of your health too and shift to a maintenance mode (Shutterstock)The festive season is right round the corner. Partying, going on a…
3 Best exercises for neck and shoulder

Feeling more aches and pains these days?
Feeling more aches and pains these days? Our new work-from-home situation has stripped many of
us from our usual desk set-up, and as a result, created a whole new world of pain – a literal pain in
the neck.
Unexpectedly moving from a typical workspace to a makeshift at-home office has resulted in people
sitting in all kinds of new set-ups: chairs propped up with cushions, hunched over laptops or staring
down at phones while seated on sofas, at coffee tables, even beds for those at home trying to steal away to a quiet space away from children.

Add to that, the tension associated with this new way of living as we navigate new normal, potential changes in finances and associated stress with not seeing (or hugging) loved-ones.
With many office-based workers remaining in their new work-from-home office space for the foreseeable, now is the time to address those tight shoulders and necks.
3 effective tips and exercises to help reduce tension
- First off, turn your attention to reducing stress levels by incorporating movement and mindfulness into daily work-from-home regimes.
- Start by calming your mind. Listen to your body. Find a quiet area with few distractions and a comfortable position.
- Take a deep inhale while circling your shoulders forwards and up.
- Exhale as you circle your shoulders back and down. Lift your head, lengthening your neck. Soften your face and relax your eyelids.
- Find a comfortable position for your arms to rest. Notice your breath. Focus all your attention on the rhythmic rise and fall of your belly, and the flow of air in and out of your lungs.
Perform this for 60 seconds and then fo these three simple tension-relieving stretches:
1. Thoracic Rotations
- Lie on your side with the bottom leg straight and the top leg bent. You can rest your top leg onto a
- folded towel. Stretch your bottom arm out in front of you as far as you can.
- Place the hand of your top arm on the opposite shoulder, and rotate your body backwards, stretching throughout your spine.
- Reach both hands in opposite directions and take three deep breaths.
2. Deep neck flexor strengthening
While the temptation is to stretch the neck, this is rarely a beneficial or accurate way to relieve
tension. The neck and shoulders are a complex juncture through which many nerves and arteries navigate tight anatomical spaces.
Sometimes, these nerves can be aggravated with sustained stretches, so the strengthening of the deep muscles which flex our necks is critical to reducing an over-reliance on the superficial muscle which can become sore and inflamed.
The strengthening of these muscles is often the key to altering the underlying cause of your tension.
- Lay on your back with a folded towel under your head.
- Lengthen the back of your neck by tucking your chin down towards your chest and drawing the back of your head upwards slightly.
- Note, the back of your head should not move off the towel.
- Press your tongue to the roof of your mouth at the same time and relax your jaw.
- Hold initially for 2 seconds and repeat.
3. The Two-Part Stretch
- Start in a seated or standing position.
- Place one hand behind your back and take you other hand, place it on your head and gently pull your ear towards your shoulder on the opposite side to the hand behind your back and hold for 7-10 seconds.
- After 10 seconds, angle the head looking down towards the armpit and gently pull the head with comfortable tension.
- Once again hold for 7-10 seconds and perform 2-3 times throughout your day.
- The exercises above are designed for initial steps to help rebalance and reinvigorate the
- muscular system.
If you have more complex symptoms with neural symptoms such as tingling/ pins and needles or unremitting pain, please consult your GP or Physio before beginning a programme

