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Re: Balance and nutrition

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,

>Lately I'm coming to realize just how bad my balance really is, and I'm

>wondering whether there are any nutritional factors involved. Any pointers?

>

I recommend you get a balance ball to sit and do strength training on.

And do some standing yoga poses. The balance poses are best done while

focusing on one spot on the wall. It is necessary to train these

stabilizing muscles if you are losing balance. With your nutrient dense

diet, that is what I would concentrate on, if I were you. But then

again, if it is a sudden thing, then perhaps auditory health ought to be

considered as well. Equilibrium problems might be the cause.

Deanna

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Deanna-

>I recommend you get a balance ball to sit and do strength training on.

>And do some standing yoga poses. The balance poses are best done while

>focusing on one spot on the wall. It is necessary to train these

>stabilizing muscles if you are losing balance.

Well, I wouldn't say I'm losing balance, but I tried the test of standing

on one foot with my eyes closed, and I certainly didn't do well at

that! OTOH, I do a lot of one-legged squats twice a week and I'm more or

less OK at those, balance-wise (IOW I have no problem getting through

them). I've also been rather acrophobic since I was a little kid, and it

occurs to me those are (or can be, anyway) related.

-

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On 8/4/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote:

> I've also been rather acrophobic since I was a little kid, and it

> occurs to me those are (or can be, anyway) related.

I think so too. When I was a little kid, if I'd look out the big

window in a hotel room, I'd feel like I was going to fall out, like

there was no wall there. It wasn't a thought that I would, but a

physical feeling, that really seems like it's tied into balance and

equilibrium.

On the other hand, I think practicing can improve balance a lot.

Chris

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Chris-

>On the other hand, I think practicing can improve balance a lot.

No doubt, and I guess I could just incorporate eyes-closed balancing into

my workouts (just what I need -- MORE crap to stretch out my infernal

#*%*ing workouts even MORE) but since I believe this has its roots in my

early childhood, I was wondering whether there's a nutritional component to

the problem.

-

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On 8/5/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote:

> Chris-

>

> >On the other hand, I think practicing can improve balance a lot.

>

> No doubt, and I guess I could just incorporate eyes-closed balancing into

> my workouts (just what I need -- MORE crap to stretch out my infernal

> #*%*ing workouts even MORE) but since I believe this has its roots in my

> early childhood, I was wondering whether there's a nutritional component to

> the problem.

My suspicion is that it is rooted in nutritional deficiency during

development, where a lot of the equilibrium stuff goes through its

formative stages, rather than a current nutritional deficiency.

I don't know how your childhood nutrition was, but I was raised on an

apple juice diet as an infant, because I was allergic to everything

else.

Chris

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Chris-

>I don't know how your childhood nutrition was, but I was raised on an

>apple juice diet as an infant, because I was allergic to everything

>else.

Initially it was apparently fairly good in some ways -- plenty of beef,

chicken livers, vegetables -- though there was bread aplenty too. But then

later my mom went on all sorts of disastrous kicks. Macrobiotics,

veganism, massive quantities of soy, etc.

-

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Guest guest

,

>No doubt, and I guess I could just incorporate eyes-closed balancing into

>my workouts (just what I need -- MORE crap to stretch out my infernal

>#*%*ing workouts even MORE) but since I believe this has its roots in my

>early childhood, I was wondering whether there's a nutritional component to

>the problem.

>

FWIW, I find balance with eyes closed quite challenging as well,

especially if I am not used to the movement involved. I'd say, if you

can do it with eyes open, fine, then try the eyes closed after mastery

of the balance. Injury possibility is not worth the effort, imo.

Deanna

with twingy knee after 6 miler, resting on morrow

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