Friday, November 20, 2020

healthiest and fastest oatmeal recipes

 This is a good article with some oatmeal recipes of super elite marathon and triathalete types, so you know the ingredients will definitely be filling and energetically useful for sitting meditators as well.


I'll share my tips on the quickest and easiest way to make the healthiest oatmeal using steel cut oats with a video another time. 


from:

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/oatmeal-is-still-the-world-s-best-performance-breakfast?utm_source=pocket-newtab


Oatmeal Is Still the World’s Best Performance Breakfast

Sure, it’s old fashioned. But it’s also nutritional rocket fuel, and athletes are making it taste great. Here’s how.

Outside


    Wes Judd


Read when you’ve got time to spare.

oatmeal-peanut-butter-bananas_h.jpg

A bowl of oats is a blank canvas, ready to be paired with a truckload of other high-quality, nutritious ingredients.Photo by john shepherd/iStock.


In a world of green juice and chia seed pudding, this age-old dish is the original, and perhaps most powerful, superfood, especially for athletes competing at the highest levels.


“I’ve asked a lot of elite endurance athletes about their breakfast foods, particularly before races, and oatmeal comes up again and again and again,” says Matt Fitzgerald, endurance coach, nutritionist, and author of The Endurance Diet.


You’re most likely to see oatmeal served with a ton of fixin’s, but even a bowl of plain oats holds its own as a nutritional panacea. Oatmeal is a whole grain (unless you buy oat bran—just part of the seed—as opposed to rolled oats) filled with key vitamins and minerals, a low-glycemic carb that provides lasting energy for your workout and helps fuel recovery without causing a sugar crash, and high in fiber to aid your digestive and metabolic systems.


But a bowl of oats is also a big blank canvas, ready to be combined with a truckload of other high-quality, nutritious ingredients that make it even better training food. “That’s one of oatmeal’s great virtues. You can take it in so many directions,” says Fitzgerald.


Even energy bar companies use it. Two-time Ironman champion Jesse Thomas’ Picky Bars released Picky Oats, a lineup of better-for-the-athlete instant oatmeal chock-full of real ingredients to support performance, rather than added sugars or fake health foods. “I literally believe that besides energy bars, oatmeal is the next most pervasive food for athletes,” says Thomas.


It’s easy to make. All you have to do is boil a ratio of 1/2 cup rolled oats to one cup liquid—either water or a milk of your choice—and top it with whatever you need that day. (For steel-cut oats, change the ratio to 1/4 cup oats to one cup liquid.) Here’s how six athletes do it.

Gwen Jorgensen

Triathlete


Gwen Jorgensen is arguably the most dominant triathlete alive. In 2014 and 2015, she competed in 12 World Triathlon Series races and won every single one, becoming the back-to-back ITU World Triathlon Series champion. As such, Jorgensen trains a lot—often three or four times in one day—which means she needs to eat just as much. “When I first started training for triathlons, I wasn’t eating enough, and it showed in my performance,” she said last year. “I started to work with a nutritionist, and we decided to start front-loading my days. I now eat a larger breakfast and lunch.” Her breakfast staple: the world’s biggest bowl of oatmeal.


“Gwen Jorgensen’s oatmeal recipe is notorious,” says Fitzgerald. Jorgensen says she eats this at least six days a week, including before races, and never gets sick of it.

Big Bowl o’ Oats


    4 cups water or milk

    2 cups oats

    4 eggs (Poach ahead of time in water with a bit of vinegar and salt.)

    2 tablespoons coconut oil 


Cook and top with generous servings of sliced banana, raisins, yogurt, berries, dried fruit, nuts, and/or peanut butter.

Lucy Bartholomew

Ultrarunner


Lucy Bartholomew is a 21-year-old Melbourne-based ultrarunner who transitioned to an entirely plant-based diet a few years ago. “I first made the switch based purely on thinking it was the healthier choice. I quickly learned that you have to be educated about it, and that you can’t simply cut out a food group and hope for the pyramid to remain stable, especially as a female long-distance runner,” she says. Oatmeal, which Bartholomew enjoys before and after runs, has become one of her staple dishes, in part because it allows for a variety of ingredients and macronutrients—fat, carbs, and protein. “I always carry a bag of quick oats at airports and hotels,” she says. Before a run, she keeps it classic: a little maple syrup and nut butter stirred in right at the end, then topped with banana and cinnamon. But to expedite her recovery, Bartholomew has a more indulgent recipe.

Carrot Cake Recovery Oatmeal


    1 cup water

    1/2 cup oats

    One grated carrot

    1 tablespoon maple syrup 


Cook and top with 1/4 cup each walnuts and chopped dates, plus a sprinkle of cinnamon.

Mark Healey

Big-wave surfer


Surfer Mark Healey depends on oatmeal before big days on the ocean. His go-to recipe perfectly balances nutrients, delivering carbohydrates and immediate energy in the form of bananas and raisins, a bit of protein from chia seeds, and satiating healthy fats in coconut oil and butter.

Fatty Oats


    1 cup water

    1/2 cup oats

    Organic butter

    1 tablespoon coconut oil

    1 tablespoon brown sugar 


Cook and top with one sliced banana, 1/4 cup raisins, and one tablespoon chia seeds.

Cat Bradley

Ultrarunner


Cat Bradley, this year’s Western States winner, is a self-proclaimed oat queen. She’s been eating oatmeal for breakfast for years and sometimes doubles up in one day, eating it for lunch as well. Bradley’s simple breakfast oats dole out fats (nut butter and Frost’d Turmeric-Coconut Oil Snack Frosting, sugars (frozen blueberries and RAD almond-quinoa granola), and carbohydrates (mainly the oats) to keep her fueled and satiated. Her recovery recipe includes turmeric and eggs, which help reduce inflammation and build muscle, respectively.

Savory Oats


    1 cup water

    1/2 cup oats

    1/2 cup canned coconut milk

    Salt, pepper, turmeric, and chopped garlic, all to taste

    Fried egg (Prepared ahead of time.) 


Cook oats with salt, pepper, turmeric and garlic, and top with seasonal veggies and a fried egg.

Kirsten Sweetland

Canadian Olympic triathlete


“I always have oatmeal before races, but I rarely eat it as my daily breakfast otherwise,” says Kirsten Sweetland, a 29-year-old former junior world champion triathlete. She’s a fan of the KIS method—Keep It Simple—and wants just enough carbs to “keep me full but not too full and give me enough energy to race.”

KIS Oats


    1 cup water

    1/2 cup oats 


Cook and top with 1/4 cup frozen berries plus one tablespoon each cacao and hemp seeds.

Steph Violett

Ultrarunner


Steph Violett, a nutritionist, The North Face–sponsored ultrarunner, and winner of the 2014 Western States race, prefers her oatmeal after runs. Depending on her mood, Violett adds proteins and fats in the form of eggs, cheese, and pumpkin puree. “Oatmeal is one of my favorite comfort foods, especially when it’s cold outside,” she says.

Pumpkin Oats


    1 cup milk

    1/2 cup oats

    1/4 cup pumpkin puree 


Cook and top with cinnamon, one tablespoon maple syrup, and 1/4 cup pecans.


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Saturday, November 14, 2020

dental floss loop hack - salvages low quality wax dental floss, decreases material waste of floss

typical floss wasting way to floss, plus it strangles and hurts the two fingers on your hands.


 


The sure grip loop method, and floss mass conserving method (needs about 12" to start)




I learned this hack from the web somewhere, maybe lifehacks.

Whoever came up with the idea, we salute you.


What led to this awesome discovery, is after trying several different brands of wax dental floss over the decades, the only one that seemed to work properly was Johnson and johnson's brand.

J&J brand seems to strike just the right balance between not too waxy so that it's frictionless and sliding around your teeth when you need a little more grip and friction to extract food particles, but waxy enough so the floss doesn't just get cut up by your teeth and leaves tiny strands of floss like mango fibre that get stuck in your teeth and even after you remove them it feels like you still have something stuck in them. 

Anyway, one time the Target store had been out of J&J brand floss for quite a while, I couldn't wait any longer, so I bought their generic store brand wax floss.

Worst floss ever. Too waxy. So waxy, that even if you wrap 10 miles of floss on your left and right fingers, when wet the floss still slides off your fingers! I was debating whether it was worth the time to go return this worthless floss,  and decided to do some searching on the web to see if there was a better floss product or flossing technique to prevent finger slippage.

I found that life hack on making the dental floss into a loop.

I demonstrate in the video, using the shitty target brand floss. It's so waxy, I do the first knotted loop 4 times, and the second knot 3 times. Because if you don't loop that many times, it's so waxy the knot will come undone.

The starting length for the floss is about 12 inches.

Start with dry hands, dry floss, otherwise wet hands makes it really hard to tie the loop.

Before you secure the loop on the 2nd knot, you can adjust the location of the  intersection so that the loop is smaller or larger according to your preference.

The final part of the video, where I demonstrate grabbing the loop with many fingers from both sides, is the wondrous property of this floss hack that makes your grip possible when you floss, no matter how slippery the wax, or how wet your hands are. 


Additional bonus of this loop hack: Save the loop of floss and reuse it several times. I can usually get about 4-6 uses out of it before it starts to break apart and leaving string residue in my teeth.

This is great if you're going backpacking, just pre loop a few loops instead of a whole cannister of floss taking up weight and space.

Now before you say, "gross, that's not hygenic reusing floss."

Let me ask you this. Do you throw away your toothbrush after each use? Because the same bacteria that you think is gross and un hygenic goes onto the floss and brush. So if you can rinse and reuse the brush, same with the floss.


Summary of benefits

1. loop floss grip doesn't strangle your fingers, the pressure is distributed across many fingers 

2. you're not dependent on J&J brand (the best quality wax floss), you can now use all kinds of shitty brands of floss and make them work for you. 

3. using the loop grip, you start with 12" instead of 18", so right off the bat, you're using 33% less floss. And since you can reuse each loop let's say an average of 4 times, your cannister of floss will last more than 5 times longer (4 + 33% x 4)


discussion thread


post replydental floss loop hack - salvages low quality wax dental floss, eliminates wastage of floss also

from heuristic-dish via /r/EarlyBuddhismMeditati sent 

Is that a form of tantric dental flossing meditation?


Wednesday, November 11, 2020

pressure cooker, dry pasta in 10 min, no need to use 6 quarts of water, fresh pasta in 5 min.

 you can use way less water to make pasta than cooking directions require,

if you use a pressure cooker.

So with less water to heat up, the actual net cooking times are much faster.

more time saved cooking, more energy saved from not burning fossil fuels to heat unnecessarily large amount of water, save the planet,


save more time to do jhana.


(more details and concrete recipe examples later)


the reason they tell you to use so much water is so it won't make ravioli stick together. 

through trial and error i found with pressure cooker, even with so little water you wouldn't believe, the ravioli separate easily.

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

taiji bang/ruler - good for circulating qi to hands and forearms, coordinating whole body movement, twining

 good explanation in this video






originally the moves were designed not for qigong but qing na martial intent, grappling and breaking arms, etc. 

So some of the moves in the set are meant to be done with strong hand grip.

Qigong Gorilla's intention are purely internal energy development and health, so I do super soft grip 90-99% of the time, doing a few strong grips now and then to exercise muscle/ligament/tendon circulation/strength. 


Sunday, November 1, 2020

🙀🐈💩the cat and the scat: great exercise for sitting meditators, squatting safely

The Cat and THE SCAT 

You can see where I got the name for this exercise. It leverages the memory link with a popular children's book character. I was going to name the exercise "safe squats", but this is more memorable, easier for sati (rememberfulness) to recall. And it's a more fun name that brings a smile, great for physical and mental health. 



Regular squat exercise from standing

Looks something like this:



disadvantages: can be hard on joints, knees, especially if you're old, overweight, do too much sitting meditation, etc. 



The Cat and THE SCAT 

looks like this: 




The inspiration for this move, comes from the fact that after you do a long sitting meditation, your legs may be numb. You should do some gentle exercises to not only remedy that, but exercise long enough to prevent chronic damage, nerves dying out and partial paralysis of the legs, for long time sitting meditators like monks and nuns who meditate 8 hours a day. Stretching immediately is not advisable, remember the gorilla mantra "always WASTE FREE". (WAS = warm and soft)

Always get your body warm and soft before you stretch. So to do that, starting from sitting on the floor position, you can do some cat cow gentle stretches, or go into 'cat and the scat'.

Like the picture of the cat shows, your arms are going to be the base and support your squatting move, unlike the standard standing squat. So you've effectively taken half your body weight from pressuring your knees. Now the squatting action is just the legs squatting its own lower body weight. So you can do a lot more squats this way. Depending on your flexibility, you can go from a full squat on the ground initially, to an ending position where your legs are full extended into a standing forward bend posture. But don't force it. The idea here is getting enough reps and circulation back into your feet, knees, legs,  and undo the damage done from a long sit. 

In one set, you can probably do anywhere between 15-50 reps. Experiment with the speed of the movement, number of reps and sets,  breathing, etc., to make this a gentle, safe. and fruitful exercise to counter any damage you may have done with long sitting. Certainly spend at least enough time that no  part of your leg is numb or uncomfortable, everything is feeling warm and soft and nice. 

As a reference point for an example of what to do, right after a long meditation, while still seated on the floor:

*  I'll spend about half a minute massaging my legs. 

* Then another half minute doing some flying cat cow (regular cat cow with more spinal orientations)

* Then between 30-50 repetitions of 🙀🐈💩. Most of the reps will just be about half of the range of a full length cat scat, at a pretty fast speed. 50 reps is about the point where I start to feel some 'burn' from weaker parts of the leg getting tired, such as knees and ligaments/fascia around the knee. Notice that this kind of 'burn' is different than the 'burn' that a weight lifter who is trying to bulk up and build bigger and stronger muscles is aiming for. I'm doing high reps and a partial range of motion so I can pump a lot of blood into my feet, ankles, knees that were deprived from a long sitting session. The 'burn' I feel from doing 50 reps is because the circulation pathways are atrophied and weak (compared to non sitting meditators), and the goal is to do enough reps so that I can strengthen my circulation pathways, not to get bigger muscles. So if you're a meditator who has decades of long sitting damage to your lower legs, then do more reps, more sets, feel the right kind of 'burn' so you can heal yourself faster. If your feet get cold easily, your knees get sore easily, your balance standing and walking is kind of wobbly, those are signs you have problems and need to do more reps and sets.  

If you compare a standard squatting exercise to  🙀🐈💩, you'll see that cat scat gets a fuller range of motion on the ankles and knees. 


I spent time in monasteries where monks and nuns sit 10 hours a day. That is the place people really need to do this exercise. It will never catch on for group sits in a meditation hall, for decorum, etc. But in your own sits in your own space, you should do this. I've also notice long time sitters, and this started happening to myself, where parts of your leg get permanently numb and paralyzed, making your balance standing and walking wobbly, and impacting your overall health. I was able to fix these problems doing other physical exercises after many years, but better to prevent that problem from happening in the first place. I wish someone had taught me some of these great exercises.


Verified great results done many times a day

1/10/2021 update
This is currently what I do every day, after each sitting meditation session (typically 30-90 min each sit).
1 set partial range fast set 36 reps to get heat, circulation - note whatever parts of legs start to get burn or fatigue is where qi flow is suboptimal - should see improvement over time.
1 set 9-18 reps, slow speed,  full range of motion, depending on your flexibility I go from full cat squat into legs nearly fully standing and heels on ground. On the down part of the rep, I still go slow and controlled, not letting gravity take out my legs from working, unlike the first set where I do partial range fast set. 

This gets heat, circulation, legs feeling normal again quickly and efficiently with zero risk of injury, biasing and working the legs which for most people will have been slowly starved of blood and oxygen for the sit session.


Another fun exercise to combo with Cat and the Scat,

I call it bunny hopping:


From the Cat scat position, instead of squatting up into standing, you jump your legs off the floor completely. It's really fun. Land your feet in different spots. Left, right, forward, backward so you gradually even go from a pushup position into cat scat posture. (I'll make a demo video later)

It's really fun, and great exercise.


These pictures included just because









Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Monday, August 10, 2020

Qigong Gorilla important ear maintenance tips:

 Qigong Gorilla important ear maintenance tips:

(see 2 previous blog articles on my painful video documented experience with extreme ear wax built up over decades, for reason why you need to follow these maintenance tips)

1. otoscope is 30$, a great investment. You can look in your ear or any other hard to reach/see body part and see what's going on once a month, or at least a few times a year and monitor the situation.

2. debrox ear drops work well in breaking down wax. A tip from a pro that I used: instead of 15 min in ear, go for 30min, lie down on your side with a towel under head to catch spillover, and massage your ear area and make chewing motions with your mouth to really squeeze and work the ear canal from many angles, to make a little space for the ear drop to drip down the canal in serious cases where the wax is completely blocking the canal.

3. the reason the debrox drops say to stop using after 4 days, is because ear wax is a good thing that protects you, you want to keep a layer. The body naturally pushes out ear wax. If you meditate, you can feel it pushing, feels like any other bodily pushing like burping, farting, extreting feces, etc. I've had big chunks of earwax pop out during meditation before, or even just walking around shopping.

4. The reason you want to keep on top of the situation with wax buildup, the reason that I had to see a doctor, was because it was so clogged with ancient hard wax, thaat when I applied ear drops, the old dry wax absorbed the drops, expanding in size, and causing serious ear pain pushing on the canal due to the expansion.

5. Never use qtips, they just pack in the wax deeper where you can't get it out easily. You want to use qtips because you're ears itch and you think the wax is causing it. It's not from the wax. after removing all the wax, the ears still itch. Instead of using qtips and scopps, just using a towel or tissue to wipe down only as deep as your finger goes into your ear.

6. Don't use ear wax candles, they don't work. I've tried a few times over the years, and although it produces something that looks like ear wax, it didn't improve my hearing. I distrust western medical practices as much as anyone, but in this area with ear wax, debrox ear wax drops and water flushing has been working for decades very well. And for more serious cases, ear and nose specialists have special equipment for wax removal painlessly. Unlike my first experience as a child with serious ear wax buildup, the doctor used a metal scooping device that hurt like hell, scratched up my ear and needed antibiotics, and traumatized me and scared me off from dealing with ear wax buildup. 


Summary:

1. use otoscope regularly to check situation

2. no qtips and scoops, just clean ear with towel or tissue and fingers. let ear push things out - it will if the wax is not too hard and dry.

3. if you tend to make hard dry wax, then occasionally add 1 or 2 drops of mineral oil to keep things soft and excretable by the ear. Debrox ear drops only if buildup is severe.

4. if you follow first 3 steps, then you should never get to this step. Seeing a doctor. The doctor, nurse, or medical assistant should not do anything to cause you pain. If they do, they're not doing their job properly. Ask for referral to ear and nose specialist or get a different doctor. If they know what they're doing, debrox ear drops and water flushing will fix most people.


Monday, July 13, 2020

otoscope - 30$, extremely useful - toenail fungus asubha movie - manasi karoti on that asubha nimitta!


otoscope - 30$,  great for getting pictures of video of places on your body you can't see, or need a close up on. For example, you can use the camera to check your backside for tick bites, etc. 

Works on PC windows 10, and android device.


Sunday, July 12, 2020

decades old ear wax from otoscope movie

synopsis:

Both of my ears were so blocked with decades old of ear wax, I was nearly deaf, and applying the debrox ear drops caused period sharp head and ear pain to my left ear from the wax expansion.
The videos you are about to see will disgust you. Perfect for asubha practice.

After a few weeks of debrox ear drops and a few times by the doctor and myself flushing with water and spray bottle, my right ear was working properly again, but on the left ear that wax had blocked 95% of my left ear hearing.

After 8/5 visit with specialist, left ear fixed.  The video of the ball of left ear wax (broken into two pieces) is massive. For scale in the video, the finger next to the wax, is my index finger (for size reference). Up close, the wax looks like a combination of feces, and heart attack artery clogging fat. Enjoy!



After watching video, 
be sure to read this article for summary of proper ear maintenance.

7/12/2020 

This is after 4 days of debrox ear drops and one doctor's visit which removed quite a lot of wax already.


right ear

left ear




 

7/13/2020 One day later,

applied debrox drops twice in both ears, about 10 hours apart, 
between 15min and 30min lying down for each ear. 
Right ear can hear and feel some of the chemical reaction, much less than yesterday.
Left ear, it broke through and can feel the drops dripping down deeper into canal, itching a little and sound of rice crispies with the wax dissolving, for about 20min or longer.

After flushing ears with water, new videos:

left ear: you can see compared to 24hrs ago, some of it dissolved away, you can see a little deeper into ear canal, whereas yesterday the camera was bumping right up against the thick layer of wax.




right ear: some more passage way cleared, you can see part of the ear drum now! major progress.


7/16 after another regular doctor with water flush, left side still blocked

7/16/2020 left ear scoop can't reach

7/16/2020 right ear mostly clear



7/16/2020 left ear completely blocked




8/5 two weeks later, specialist with special tools fixes problem in two minutes

he looked at right ear, didn't see it needed any more work.

8/5/2020 left ear wax vaccuum souvenirs from ear and nose specialist



8/5/2020 left ear clear



8/5/2020 right ear clear (from several days of debrox ear drops and self water flushing)




conclusion

I asked the ear and nose specialist what kind of maintenance I could do to prevent this problem in the future. He suggested one or two drops of mineral oil , maybe once a month. He said olive oil leaves yellow coloring that looks like wax, so better for clear oil. 

 

Thursday, May 7, 2020

shake and bake: why it's so amazing? resonant frequency



Not even a very strong wind took out the tacoma bridge.





Another video giving basic primer on resonance, including example of pushing a person on a swing, opera singer shattering glass not because of loud or power, but because of adjusting pitch to hit resonant frequency.






Similarly with shake and bake,

with a very tiny amount of input energy, by carefully experimenting with the frequency of your leg locomotion and subtly adjusting how your arms whip around freely, you'll find little timing patterns that seem to loosen, shatter, disrupt physical and energetic tightness and blockages in your body, with gentle shock waves.

Actually if you're really good at taiji, qigong, and completely relaxing, you have to be careful in how much you relax your arms from a cold start, you can easily pull a muscle or tendon to hurt yourself.  


a personal story of tap and slap


I lived in a Buddhist monastery in asia for 3 years. In a bigger branch monastery of the same lineage, hundreds of monks and nuns have tried a slapping technique similar to these two videos, with dramatic results. Some of the monks, they had purple and black blotches on their body such as the upper back from toxins in the body getting shifted by hard slapping therapy.

I tried it myself by slapping behind my knees, really hard. Skin turned red, some people might bruise with that much force. This was a few minutes of continuous hard slapping, loud smacking. Not long after, maybe less than an hour, my feet and lower legs started to itch so intensely, like I've never experienced in my life. It was so itchy I wanted to scratch it with a butchers knife and cut my feet off if that didn't stop the itching. It took a few days for the itching to become manageable, and a few weeks to completely go away.

So same idea with those monks getting large splotches of purple and black skin. The itchness in the feet is the result of toxins and sludge getting dislodged and slowly flushed out (over weeks). My feet didn't change color before or after, but the itchiness was real.

Now not everyone is going to get that result, but people like me who meditate 6-10 hours a day in a cross leg sitting posture are likely to have blockages like this in their legs, and other parts of the body.

Shake and bake if you noticed, is a gentle form of the same thing I did, with 30-60 minutes daily of gentle tapping and slapping at the foot quick stepping, causing gentle shock ways to disrupt and dislodge blockages of energy and physical stuff in the lymph vessels, and the arms whipping around at a resonant frequency is also issuing gentle shock waves along many points of the shoulder, arm, elbow, etc. 

So the amazing thing about shake and bake, is that with just about 10-15% more energy than it takes to casually walk, your dislodging, melting, gradually eliminating blockages and tension all over the body. The arms whipping around you get for free, like turbo chargers on cars catching exhaust and spinning turbines for an extra turbo boost of power, as well as letting your head bob around freely (not too much to give whiplash, but enough bobbing to dislodge tension near neck and shoulders). 
 

First video demonstrates a technique slapping near knee area.

second video same healer doing other body parts:





Thursday, April 30, 2020

GST: gorilla stick therapy, advanced version of foam rolling customized for meditators


My version:

GST: gorilla stick therapy


feedback from a friend:

I have done shake and bake for a while now and I am not experiencing any pain from it at 18-20 minutes length.
Q: I wanted to know more about Gorilla Stick Therapy, I have a foam roller and no pvc pipe to go. What's the origin of this technique? and any new discovery with it? I honestly found soaking my feet in hot water to be a good thing so thank you for that <3


A: The origin of GST, beyond what I already wrote in the linked article above? Foam rolling has been around for a while. But if the foam you're using is too soft, it's not going to hit deep spots. PVC pipe will, and because of smaller diameter, you can hit some important areas you can't do with a regular sized foam rollers, such as the ankle and foot being especially important.

Remember the priority principle. The fingers, hands, toes, feet, lower limbs, generally get the least amount of qi circulation, and should get extra attention. I try to spend at least a few minutes rolling with a pvc pipe everyday, and ankles and feet are especially important, because long and frequent sitting meditation cuts off circulation there way more than fingers and hands.

Article today describing some of  the limited scientific study of foam rolling


https://getpocket.com/explore/item/does-foam-rolling-actually-do-any-good?utm_source=pocket-newtab

excerpt:

              Foam rolling was once for professional athletes only. These days it’s hard to walk into a gym without tripping over somebody rolling around on a neoprene tube. Dedicated classes in hip New York gyms are frequented by the likes of Sarah Jessica Parker and Shakira. Forget protein shakers, resistance bands or Fit Bits: foam rollers are this season’s must-have gym accessory.
The rise of foam rollers owes much to the Israeli engineer and physicist Moshé Feldenkrais, whose pioneering work on body movements to improve muscle function became popular in the 1950s. A black belt in judo, Feldenkrais incorporated them into his system for physical improvement when he came across them in the US a couple of decades later.
More recently, the American sports therapist Michael Clark helped introduce these accessories to the general population with his 2001 book, Integrated Training for the New Millennium. The first US patent for a foam roller was filed as recently as 2004.
For the uninitiated, the practice involves applying your own body weight to a foam cylinder, using small repetitive undulating movements to exert pressure on the muscle. The internet is full of guides on how to do this right: YouTube contains over 600,000 videos that match the term; a quick hunt on a search engine returns around 40m hits.      



Friday, April 24, 2020

Can qigong gorilla recommend any specific teacher or book on TCM, taiji, qigong, yoga?




https://www.reddit.com/r/EarlyBuddhismMeditati/comments/g49mg6/tcm_soak_feet_in_hot_water_daily_for_excellent/fo6ai2a/?context=3

Q: I'd like to thank you for your recent Qigor posts. I for one will be taking notes on all of this stuff. This sort of information based on experience can be hard to find. Considering my situation (young and health issues) I've found the one blind spot for me in Early Buddhism seems to be a lack of focus on taking care of one's health. This is one thing I commend the ancient Chinese traditions for in particular. And on that note I was wondering if you might recommend any tangential materials worth reading ie. TCM, energy channels, basic healthcare and learning about the human body. I'm also interested in learning energy work/breath techniques ie. Daoist (imagining core Qi as a warm goey ball) and similar to the instructions laid out in Keeping the Breath in Mind.

I suppose the lack of focus on healthcare makes a certain degree of sense, as times were very different when the Buddha set out his Dhamma instructions for us. And of course core Dhamma was always the priority - however these days we are surrounded by health hazards, some of which we don't recognize as such due to lack of education on the matter. So knowledge about maintaining a good posture, not sitting too long, staying away from things like sugar and processed "foods", abstaining from pornography and media, are all very valuable and relevant to modern practice. After all, the longer one's healthspan and lifespan are, the longer one can practice on the path.

A: (lucid24-frankk)
Offhand, I can't think of something I can whole heartedly recommend, not because it lacks value, but because it can easily lead to spending too much time researching what is valuable and interesting methods from a certain perspective, but can easily make us lose focus on dukkha and liberation from it. This is the main reason I feel why the Buddha didn't talk about the benefits of yoga, stretching, and some cardio, it can lead to distraction. One thing I would recommend, if one is a total beginner with taiji, qigong, or yoga, is try out a few classes where its available to you just so you have some reference point of actual physical experience. It's hard to pick up many things from just reading about it or watching video. In the long term though, I'd recommend people practice yoga, taiji, etc. on their own.

Q: Alright thanks for the advice. The modern world is full of Mara’s lures beckoning us into distraction, and I’ve found if I’m not careful my mind is all too willing to rationalize why I need to do this thing or that as opposed to getting to work with meditation.

Anyhow I’ll look into possibly finding a teacher to learn a bit of Taiji or Qigong directly, sounds like a better idea than trying to start things up entirely by myself.

A: great thing about taiji, qigong, yoga, is that you can do it simultaneously with sati, jhana, samadhi. Say someone spends an average of 2-4 hours a day doing walking meditation. You can substitute in any of those 3 modalities for walking, and reap the benefits of all of that. The reason I'm really hesitant to recommend and books or specific teachers, is because if you learn those specific lineages in their natural environment with those teachers, they teach many time consuming nuanced details about those specific arts that are not important and completely irrelevant for jhana, optimal health. That is why I publish my notes on qigong gorilla, to extract the essence of what is useful and can be done simultaneously with jhana. But the limitation of qigong gorilla, is if you don't already have some personal experience with those arts, it's unlikely you'll fully grasp how much you can relax and how much tension you carry around until a good teacher can point it out in person.


Tuesday, April 21, 2020

shake and bake: questions, answers, feedback

Just as a precautionary note, some of the people who reported very quick and dramatic results, are long time meditators and/or already somewhat proficient in jhāna samādhi and similar practices such as taiji and qigong. So they were ripe to quickly harvest some of the benefits of doing 'shake and bake' for about 30 minutes or more daily, which taps into some movements that would not occur in their existing daily exercise routine.

You shouldn't experiment with any new practice with unrealistic expectations. Keep an open mind and always exercise critical thinking.

feedback: melted lower back energy blockage

2020-4-9
Wow, thanks!
I practiced and shake and bake, and I have to agree it is very potent since I had a weird melting-like energy blockage in my lower back and it eased it out and got rid of it.
Thank for this potent technique, my gratitude.
I will try to practice the kicking drills.

feedback: great aerobic exercise primer for samadhi

2020-4-21
Thank you for sharing the videos. The shake and bake video clarified the previous instructions. My hands were originally draped all the way down on my sides closer to the front. So far I did this exercise a few times and felt that it provides good cardio warm-up and mindfulness practice at the same time. I did a sit right after one of the sessions and it was very easy to get into concentration. The body was warm and loose with good chi flow. I will definitely incorporate all these in my daily routine going forward.

feedback: melted energy blockages in chest

2020-4-18
I only tried it consecutively for a few days, and I am getting some very obvious results.  On the first day, my chest and abdomen was getting disproportionately warm comparing to my normal exercises, which is my weakest areas in the micro-cosmic orbit.  I was skeptical at first and wonder if it was due to my increase mindfulness during the shake and bake making me aware of the warmth more acutely than my less mindful exercises.  Afterwards in my meditations, I definitely felt numerous smaller energy channels freed up all over my chest area, resulting in high levels of pitti.  In my mind, I was thinking, "Oh sh!t, this stuff works!!"  

I will check in on a later date as I have only started this exercise for a short time. 

(a few days later)
Okay, there is no doubt this is working extremely well for me.  My energy channels are becoming more open.  And it is alarming how easily the mind slips into meditative absorptions even when there was no intention to do so.  I could be doing the most mundane daily chores, and the mind just keeps slipping right in.  Loud music, disturbing neighbors have no affect on me.  Long sits are feeling sooo easy.  Thank you, Frank!  Gratitudes!  🙏


Question: How fast/frequent are the steps?

2020-04
Q: I have been trying to do your "shake and bake" exercise, but found it hard to do it for long period of time. What is the recommended frequency of the "hopping motion" per minute? 

A: Don't think in terms of target frequency. Tailor the pace and frequency to your needs. Walking meditation as people normally do it, wouldn't get you the cardio benefit we're aiming for, since you're only using 20% of your lung capacity, and you're not building up heat to melt ice in the body and make the body pliable. And jogging is too intense and tiring for most people. So what you're shooting for is:

1. using 80-100% of your lung capacity and range of breathing, instead of the sedentary 20%, in a taiji relaxed way.
2. enough leg locomotion to get some core/ab work, and enough frequency to build up some heat gently. but not so much leg locomotion to incur the problems with jogging. I don't put any more pressure on my knees and back doing shake and bake than when I walk.
3. not use more than 10-15% energy expenditure compared to walking.

If you're doing it right, it shouldn't be tiring you out, and after a few weeks you should be able to do it for hours effortlessly. If you get tired and want some rest, do some other stretches,pushups, pullups, etc, and then switch back to shake and bake. My typical routine is
1. 15-20min shake and bake to warm up,
2. and then mixing 1-2 min of pull ups, pushups, stretching, alternated with 1-2min of shake and bake to retain body heat for another 20-40 min total alternating back and forth.

Question: Do my heels come off the ground?

2020-04

Q: Do your heels come off the ground? If I do that then it's harder to sustain it.

A: Mine do, but if that's how you normally walk and jog (with heel touching ground) and it doesn't give you any problems, no reason to worry about it. Remember the qigong gorilla ethos: you adapt any useful health modality for your needs.

Question:  I can't work up a light mist of sweat with shake and bake. Is that part important?

Q: I  cannot work up a light mist of sweat with this workout even if I jump high.  Is that part important?  Or is there a tougher variation?

A: The 'light mist of sweat' is meant as a general rule of thumb for upper bound in body heat and intensity of exercise for the 30 minute session so people don't expend more energy than necessary. The main point of shake and bake, is that people in general, especially sedentary meditators who do too much sitting meditation (6-10 hours a day), don't get enough aerobic cardiovascular exercise (30min RDA) because it can be tiring and painful to do. Shake and bake should only require 10-20% more energy exertion than walking, and as long as your body is heated up to the point that you feel good, hands and feet warm and soft, cold parts that felt stiff  before the exercise have thawed, you feel like a bag of water, elastic, pliable, lightweight compared to before the exercise, using your full lung capacity for 20-30min. (rather than normal sedentary shallow breathing only using 20% of your lungs), then mission accomplished, no need to get a full body light mist of sweat, unless you were specifically shooting for that goal. Remember gorilla (guerrilla) improvisation is about adapting any health modality to meet your current exercise needs or goals.

If you have other health objectives, for example looking to have some net weight loss, and need more intense exercise, the gorilla approach would be find something that you enjoy doing, and is energy efficient so it doesn't compromise your sitting meditation (drain your energy making you too tired to do a good long sit). Jumping rope is one idea, doing hikes on steep hills (go up and down several times if you only have one small hill), climbing stairs (up and down many times), swimming is a great whole body exercise, etc. If you can incorporate the same principles as with shake and bake, do it with taiji quan, jhana samadhi quality relaxed state of mind, then you can incorporate much of the shake and bake benefits even with a more intense exercise. Though in general, full jhana relaxation/pacification is at odds with intentional bodily energy exertion for quick intense exercise.

Other related Q&A

Can qigong gorilla recommend any specific teacher or book on TCM, taiji, qigong, yoga?




"wujushu" ("unrestrained," "follow your honed muscular intuition"...)

A friend and I years ago had researched a Japanese Professor's practice and teaching of 'slow jogging'. I caught up with him recently and found that the version of slow jogging he currently practices had evolved into something that shared many key characteristics with my
shake and bake 🏃👨‍🍳🥧 and qigong gorilla philosophy. This is not surprising since we had the same objective of optimizing cardiovascular aerobic exercise for a contemplative lifestyle involving lots of meditation.

I share the following, his brief description of what motivated him to develop that exercise, because it serves as a good case study of 500 of his students for the past two years practicing an aerobic exercise daily and getting great results.

"wujushu" ("unrestrained," "follow your honed muscular intuition"...)
"無拘束" 禪修



I was very interested in issues like:
How do I maintain motivation to work out?
Can I minimize unnecessary discomfort so to maintain my motivation?
How to combat my "cold" constitution (apparently due to many years of vegetarianism and short stints of veganism/raw veganism/sedentary meditation style)?
I know how unreliable my "good" motivation is, and therefore my approach to workout and meditation emphasizes a lot on creating favorable environmental factors that makes giving rise to and maintaining certain intentions easier/natural (I'm very much into subjects like habit formation and habit changing).

For the minimizing discomfort part, I read about cortisol and other stress-induced hormones which apparently are partly responsible for the post-workout fatigue. Cortisol and so are secreted in copious amount when we over-exert ourselves, and a lot of that over-exertion doesn't translate to physical-mental benefits in an efficient manner. Our intuition picks up on that inefficiency and therefore finds workout "unjustifiable"--a theory I have on why I can be lazy when it comes to work out.

I want a workout routine that doesn't diminish a desire to meditate afterwards due to fatigue and discomfort. I want a routine that ideally combine elements of stretching, shaking, massaging, swinging, aerobic, something that would quickly warm up many parts of the body and gets the circulation going in a very specific way as to help jhanic bliss...

For about 2 years now I've been teaching my meditation group (@500 regular attendees) a style of workout called "wujushu" ("unrestrained," "follow your honed muscular intuition"...). This technique is explained in a few of my weekend teaching audios, and is practiced by retreatants at my place. It involves elements of:

adding a great variety of variations to routine yoga postures;
slow jogging in a way that combines
spontaneous waving of limbs,
"bobbing" of head,
stretching of spine,
relaxing and "swinging away" tension,

getting massages/reflexology sessions if one can afford them;
making sure that the intensity of your workout is such that you can smile/not-frown/chat easily during a session (an idea I borrow from the slow-jogging founder);
allow sitting meditation to become something you feel like doing and spend more time on exercising meditation (i.e. sit when you feel that your samadhi is about to culminate, or when you feel like wanting to enjoy bliss in a more settled, intense way)...

Sunday, April 19, 2020

👣 TCM soak feet in hot water daily for excellent health benefits

Especially as you get older, if your feet are cold and stiff, and you get foot pains and foot injuries easily, you got health problems.

Most meditators who do very long sits and many times daily, are regularly strangling circulation to their feet (and other parts of their legs). I've seen too many meditators (this includes me), where too much sitting meditation actually starts killing some of the nerves in the legs, affecting balance and walking. I've seen many monks and nuns stumbling and falling down while walking on flat ground. From sitting too much, I developed some knee problems that prevented me for sitting in my normal full lotus for 2 years while I waited for the nerves to regenerate and legs to heal from the injury. This is really insidious problem, because when your nerves start dying in your legs, you lose the feedback that would normally give you the pain feedback to let you know you need to stretch out your legs and switch to walking and other forms of moving meditation.

Below I quote in full a good article on daily soaking of feet in hot water.

Now TCM says don't do it one hour before or after meals.

I do daily soaks, and I found a safe way to do it 15 minutes after eating. The reason I do this, is for environmental and energy efficiency concerns. After I wash the dishes at breakfast, the pipes have hot water on tap ready to go. In the morning, my feet tend to be cold. So I fill a foot soaking tub with hot water, up to my ankles, not up to the calves. And I do it with the purpose of warming my feet, not to induce sweat and full cleanse as described below.

How I know I'm doing it safely, is the water is not too hot. Not enough to sweat, not enough to feel hot and to start having to peel off layers of clothes I'm wearing, but hot enough to warm up my feet and legs. I soak for about 10 minutes. If my feet are still feeling cold I go for a second round and dump the cold water and get some more hot water.  If you soak too hot, then you'll start feeling messed up energetically, just as TCM warns. But if you soak just to warm up cold feet, no problem, at least from my experience. As always, full standard disclaimers apply.

I've been taking advantage of this foot soaking practice for several years now, doesn't take much time to use the hot water from after washing breakfast dishes. Fast, energy efficient, and great cumulative health benefits, and preventative health.


TCM calls for feet soaks

https://archive.shine.cn/feature/ideal/TCM-calls-for-feet-soaks/shdaily.shtml


By Zhang Qian | January 21, 2016, Thursday | Print Edition

Foot baths were once a daily habit for many in China. Today though, this tradition has been largely washed down the drain.

However, adherents of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) still recommend this particular tradition to promote blood circulation and drive away “pathogenic energy,” especially during cold winters.

“The feet are very important in health maintenance. The ancient Chinese often compared the human body to a tree, with the torso as the trunk, the arms the branches and the feet the roots,” says Jiang Zaifeng, director of the Traditional Chinese Medicine Health Department at the Bao Zhi Di Culture and Arts Salon. “It is said that a dying tree withers first in its roots, and an aging person first feels their health recede from the feet.”

For this reason, Jiang and others say, foot care is an important part of overall health.

Massages, foot exercises, soaking in hot water and taking herbal soaks are all recommended. There’s also acupuncture, accupressure (reflexology) and application of herbal pastes to the feet.

Simple soaking can be surprisingly effective, say TCM practitioners. Six meridians (liver, gall bladder, kidney, spleen and stomach) reach the feet, each of which has more than 60 acupunture points. The feet have points that correspond to many parts and organs of the body.

Soaking in hot water activates blood and energy throughout the body. In herbal foot baths, the skin absorbs elements through the skin and these travel through energy channels to target points. Soaking until there’s a sweat can relieve symptoms of cold, flu and menstrual cramps.

Herbal soaks can be beneficial to those with chronic stomach inflammation, high blood pressure and stroke patients.

Ideally, the feet should be soaked once a day in a relatively deep basin, more than 15 centimeters deep so the calves can be soaked as well. Start with hot (about 40 degree Celsius) water but don’t fill up the basin. As the water cools, keep adding hot water to keep up the temperature.

When you start to break a sweat, remove your feet. A little sweating is a good sign of unblocked energy channels, yet too much sweating isn’t ideal as it consumes too much energy. Healthy people usually start to sweat after around 20 minutes of soaking; it may take longer for those with energy-flow problems. If you don’t sweat in 40 minutes, don’t soak any more. Try again the next day.

It’s best to soak feet before going to bed, especially in winter. This will help you stay warm and get a good night’s rest. Don’t soak an hour before or an hour after meals; don’t soak after consuming alcohol or when feeling fatigued.

If you feel dizzy when soaking your feet, add some cold water so the blood vessels contract. That should help relieve dizziness.

A daily hot water soak is enough for healthy people who sweat quickly. Adding herbs can help unblock energy channels and relieve problems. First boil the herbs in water and then add the mixture to the foot basin.

Most of foot-bath herbs are available at TCM pharmacies.

Herbal ingredients for feet baths:

Ginger and baijiu

Ingredients: Ginger slices (50g), baijiu (50ml)
Directions: Boil the ginger in water for a few minutes. Add ginger soup and baijiu to hot water in a basin. Soak for 15-30 minutes or until there’s a slight sweat.
Benefits: Helps unblock energy channels, dispels pathogenic yin (cold energy), reinforces yang (hot energy). Especially good for those with cold extremities in winter.

Ginger and dandelion

Ingredients: Ginger (50g), dandelion (50g)
Directions: Boil ingredients in water. Add soup to hot water in a basin. Soak feet in mixture for around 20 minutes or until there’s a slight sweat.
Benefits: Ginger helps dispel pathogenic cold. Dandelion helps dispel pathogenic heat and toxins. This mixture helps relieve symptoms of flu, fever or headache.

Mung beans and baizhi (angelica dahurica root)

Ingredients: Mung beans (100g), baizhi (15g)
Directions: Soak bean and baizhi in water for 20 minutes. Boil ingredients. Add soup to foot bath. Soak feet for 15-30 minutes.
Benefits: Mung beans help relieve swelling and nourish skin; baizhi is anti-bacterial, helps relieve inflammation and accelerates metabolism. This mixture can also prevent and relieve chilblains.

Motherwort, chrysanthemum, huangqin (baikal skullcap root) and yejiaoteng (Tuber Fleeceflower Stem)

Ingredients: motherwort (30g), chrysanthemum (15g), huangqin (15g) and yejiaoteng (15g)

Directions: Boil ingredients together for 40 minutes. Filter the decoction and add it to hot water for a feet bath. Soak feet in it for no more than 30 minutes.

Benefits: Activates blood circulation, warms the uterus and relieves painful menustration.

Wuzhuyu (Fructus Evodiae) and vinegar

Ingredients: wuzhuyu (40g) and vinegar (30ml)

Directions: Boil wuzhuyu in water for 40 minutes. Put the filtered decoction in a basin together with hot water and vinegar. Soak feet in mixture for no more than 30 minutes.

Benefits: Helps dispel pathogenic coldness, relieves headache, vomiting and sleeplessness.

Danggui (Angelica) and longan

Ingredients: danggui (40g), longan (25g)

Directions: Boil the ingredients in water for 40 minutes. Pour filtered decoction in a basin. Add hot water. Soak feet for 15-20 minutes, or until there is a slight sweat.

Benefits: Helps nourish blood and benefits skin, relieves pigmentation in the skin.


Saturday, April 18, 2020

shake and bake 🏃👨‍🍳🥧: "it's better than jogging"


I borrowed the name "shake and bake" from a decades old, popular cooking product. 30 second video. If you're vegetarian, pretend she's baking tofu cutlets or mock chicken made of wheat gluten. Let's all pretend we don't know about the 40 day life cycle of where your fried chicken came from (5min video) or 2min video UK farm



"shake and bake" is also the signature move of Jamal Crawford, a professional basketball player who uses it to fake out and advance past the defender trying to impede his progress. It has nothing to do with gorilla qigong version of shake and bake, but just an example of how catchy and frequently that phrase is used.



My version of 'shake and bake' is ostensibly an aerobic, cardiovascular exercise, but it's power and extraordinary usefulness comes from reaping the benefits from several exercises simultaneously, drawing from many eastern and western health modalities.  You get 5 different exercises for the price of one, so your time and input energy is getting exponential returns. You use only 1/5th the amount of time, and the same input energy has accomplished 5 tasks had you targeted each specific area individually.

The 'baking'  from 'shake and bake' that I'm referring to, has an esoteric secret meaning.

1. at a physical level, the heat generated melts gross energetic tightness and tension that had you not done some warm up, would easily lead to injuries like pulling muscles, etc.
2. at an energetic level, the heat and samadhi of doing jhana simlutaneously (to the best of your ability), helps to melt the ice of some energetic blockages more easily and quickly than sitting, standing, static posture meditation.
3. doing jhana simultaneously, you charge your jhana battery, building up spiritual capital,  and you're baking immortal PIE (precious internal energy) 👨‍🍳🥧.  This is the highest level of 'shake and bake' we're aiming for.

Some other types of exercises that are done simultaneously with shake and bake

*  shake and bake: "it's better than jogging": better than jogging which is high impact, hurts your knees and lower back, and expends way more energy than necessary to reap the benefit of doing an optimal form of the 30minute minimum of aerobic cardiovascular exercise daily recommended by experts.

Unless you have the great form, relaxed energy efficient mechanics of a Kenyan olympic distance runner running on soft grass, too much jogging is going to lead to knee, back, joint problems.
  1. olympic runner in barefoot relaxed training mode, not slow at all, but good model to study for good mechanics and relaxed natural movement.
  2. kenyans relaxed training jog
1. 2.


* incorporates some of the benefits of 'arm swinging' type of exercises, and then some, because the full release of the entire arm and shoulder means the individual joints within the arm are getting yanked, whipped, swung, stretched, due to the locomotion of the lowerbody causing arms to whip around in random directions. Normal arm swinging routines will not build up heat, will not challenge you aerobically, will not hit the joints at various angles like 'shake and bake'.

* incorporates some of the benefits and effects of 'tapping qigong': depending on how hard your feet strike the ground.

* most importantly, 'shake and bake' incorporates the benefits of charging your jhana battery, walking meditation, standing meditation, breath meditation. You can also practice contemplation of Dhamma, chanting suttas, etc., as an alternative to the noble silence of charging the jhana battery.

* shake and bake is evolutionary cousin of taoist brisk walking and various Buddhist fast walking meditation methods to counter drowsiness and gain some cardio aerobic benefit.



Video examples of some exercises mentioned above


30 minute arm swinging program that's typical of what you see Chinese Qigong people doing in China town parks in groups.  This isn't the way I do arm swings, and I didn't watch the whole video.  It's just to give you an idea that it's a wide spread practice with many different styles.



Tapping qigong 6min routine: I don't do it this way, it's just to show you it's a common qigong practice that people do. What I do is much more qigong gorilla improv style, tapping all over the body with various amounts of pressure.


A 10min. tapping routine:


The shaking he describes is similar to what I do as part of 'shake and bake'

I don't know this guy in the video, and he doesn't know me, but I watched his entire video (about 10min) and it's good stuff. I know because I do almost everything he does in here daily, slightly differently, but the basic principles are universal, and taught by many different qigong schools. I can tell he practices what he preaches  because of the way he combines many techniques, the unorthodox names for the moves that he uses, and because he can feel how useful they are, and not simply going through a rigid set system like many qigong instructional videos that are rote, mechanical, and detailed (where often many of the details are arbitrary and not important). Also other details are telling. He wears loose clothing, is out in sunshine and nature, his kung fu shoes probably have cloth soles that can breathe through and exchange qi with the earth. He looks like he's about the qigong, and not about looking neat and professional to gain followers and 'likes'.


Tap and Slap document

I found a good description of what they called 'tapping and slapping',  naming it independently almost exactly the same as what I call 'tap and slap', as part of the qigong gorilla heart sutra:
(lines 3&4)
3. aware but don't care: don't care if they stare, don't care what you wear, don't care about hair,4. shake and bake, tap and slap, jiggle and wiggle, fiddle and twiddle, splice and dice

Slow jogging (5min video)

A Japanese professor popularized this with a book, scientific study, and an international following of practitioners.


difference between 'slow jogging' and 'shake and bake':

While the distance travel pacing is similar, I have a much greater foot frequency (smaller distance step, much higher number of steps) to more easily modulate body heat generation, deep breathing, and  'tap and slap' benefits of gentle shock waves dissipating energy blockages through foot strikes.

shake and bake🏃👨‍🍳🥧

So you can see from the video below, I'm super relaxed, it doesn't even look like I get off the ground, but I am doing a mini-slow jog, and do get airborne with every step. My weight is on the balls of the feet all the time, the most strenuous part is towards the end where I demonstrate the legs kicking back in alternation, then kicking forward, and hopping on one continuously is the most strenuous.

This 2 minute sample, is about my usual pace. It takes about 15% more energy than it does to walk, and doesn't stress any joints, knees, spine, any more than walking does. I could do this hours nonstop easily. The difference between this and walking, is here I consciously do deep breathing (but relaxed, not forcing and stuffing my lungs beyond capacity), plus the gentle shock waves of the feet hitting the ground is a tap and slap, and the arms whipping around randomly give a much better stretch than the normal arm swinging exercises people do.


Bounce, lightbulb, arm swings

bounce:
What I'm doing with the bounces, there are lots of subtle things going on you can't really see unless I see you in person and show you. My arms are parallel to the ground, I'm bouncing with the whole body, so the ankles, knees, wrists, elbows, are not moving independently but bouncing in unison. You can see also I use 4 different angles on my wrist, to flex them in different directions. I'm not flexing the wrists independently, I'm letting the inertia of the whole body bounce flap the hands rotating about the wrist.

lightbulb:
The move where I'm rotating my hands as if I'm screwing in a light bulb, what you should notice that I do that's unusual, is I move my arms through all kind fo configurations. This is a great move not only to open up channels near your hands, one of the extremities where qi channels tend to get weak first, along with the feet, but it's a great diagnostic move to check how your qi is flowing in other parts of the body. For example, if the one configuration of lightbulb, say the one with your arms hanging down relaxed, feels a lot easier to do then the one where your arms are raised up in the sky, that shows weakness elsewhere in the body. If the lightbulb feels the same in any arm configuration, it means you got great qi flow. But if some configurations feel a lot harder to do, it means somwhere upstream the qi is getting choked off. So as you keep doing this move over the years, you'll notice it feels smoother, you can turn the lightbulb faster, and eventually it feels smooth in any configuration.

arm swings:
The key in getting the most out of arms swings, move with the whole body except for the arms. In other words  pretend you can't move your arms independently. You can only propel them through the inertia of your feet, legs, core, pushing off the ground in unison.

The most subtle and hard to do properly version of the arm swing, is the last one, where I balance on one leg, let gravity inertia do the arm movement, the only arm muscle I'm exerting is the brief moment of pause between alternating between left and right side, and keeping the arc of the arm swing on a rail and not drifting off into wave cancelling random patterns.




Chappanaka exercise, named after SN 35.247

Instead of pushups and planks, which are boring and limited in what angles and muscles get used,
you should do pushups and planks with many variations: various hand angles, width, distance between hand and feet, etc.
Especially good at hitting all angles, is what I call chappanaka. your hands are post for kayagatasati. You walk in a circle, revolving around the post your hands are 'tied' to. In the video, I walk about 180 about the post, alternating between crossing the leg under, or over the body. I do it about medium speed, usually I go slower, and sometimes faster.

At the end of the video, I do what I call 'flying cat cow', basically forward and backward bends alternating with each other, but hitting all kinds of angles people normally don't even attempt.




How do you know you're doing all of these shake and bake and related exercises correctly?


The ultimate test is this:

When you sit in jhana, you know how it feels, how a force pervades your entire body, like a water balloon being inflated.

In standing meditation, it feels about 90% the same force as sitting.

In walking meditation, walking slowly, about 70% of the forces you feel from sitting.

In doing shake and bake and similar classes of qigong gorilla exercises, you feel 50% - 70% of the jhanic forces as you do in sitting meditation.




expert recommends at least 30min a day of cardio, as part of defense against sars-covid


https://www.businessinsider.com/exercise-may-help-prevent-a-deadly-coronavirus-complication-2020-4

https://news.virginia.edu/content/exercise-may-protect-against-deadly-covid-19-complication-research-suggests


I recommend shake and bake, as the optimal form of cardio. Only requires about 15% more energy expenditure from walking, so it's easy and safe to do for everyone, and no need to muster special willpower to do something as strenuous as jogging. You also don't need any space to do this exercise, you can even do it running in place.

shake and bake: heat up the body, aerobic, cardio

Monday, March 2, 2020

doing yoga safely, even famous teachers get injured in droves

This is an important article. I'm a big proponent of yoga, but I agree with the author about the very real dangers of it.

How I prevent the dangers described in the article:

1. I always get really warmed up, soft, pliable (see shake and bake), for about 20 min. before I start doing some yoga and/or dynamic stretching.
2. And in between each pose or sequence, I do some 'shake and bake' to maintain body heat and pliability.
3. Most important: Each pose or stretch sequence I do, I don't just go into autopilot and pop into a fully extended version of the pose I know I can do. I always gently and slowly ease into the pose, never edging into the pain zone. At most, I play with the edge of mild to medium discomfort. 


https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/08/magazine/how-yoga-can-wreck-your-body.html

(excerpt from article)

How Yoga Can Wreck Your Body

By William J. Broad

    Jan. 5, 2012



On a cold Saturday in early 2009, Glenn Black, a yoga teacher of nearly four decades, whose devoted clientele includes a number of celebrities and prominent gurus, was giving a master class at Sankalpah Yoga in Manhattan. Black is, in many ways, a classic yogi: he studied in Pune, India, at the institute founded by the legendary B. K. S. Iyengar, and spent years in solitude and meditation. He now lives in Rhinebeck, N.Y., and often teaches at the nearby Omega Institute, a New Age emporium spread over nearly 200 acres of woods and gardens. He is known for his rigor and his down-to-earth style. But this was not why I sought him out: Black, I’d been told, was the person to speak with if you wanted to know not about the virtues of yoga but rather about the damage it could do. Many of his regular clients came to him for bodywork or rehabilitation following yoga injuries. This was the situation I found myself in. In my 30s, I had somehow managed to rupture a disk in my lower back and found I could prevent bouts of pain with a selection of yoga postures and abdominal exercises. Then, in 2007, while doing the extended-side-angle pose, a posture hailed as a cure for many diseases, my back gave way. With it went my belief, naïve in retrospect, that yoga was a source only of healing and never harm.

At Sankalpah Yoga, the room was packed; roughly half the students were said to be teachers themselves. Black walked around the room, joking and talking. “Is this yoga?” he asked as we sweated through a pose that seemed to demand superhuman endurance. “It is if you’re paying attention.” His approach was almost free-form: he made us hold poses for a long time but taught no inversions and few classical postures. Throughout the class, he urged us to pay attention to the thresholds of pain. “I make it as hard as possible,” he told the group. “It’s up to you to make it easy on yourself.” He drove his point home with a cautionary tale. In India, he recalled, a yogi came to study at Iyengar’s school and threw himself into a spinal twist. Black said he watched in disbelief as three of the man’s ribs gave way — pop, pop, pop.

After class, I asked Black about his approach to teaching yoga — the emphasis on holding only a few simple poses, the absence of common inversions like headstands and shoulder stands. He gave me the kind of answer you’d expect from any yoga teacher: that awareness is more important than rushing through a series of postures just to say you’d done them. But then he said something more radical. Black has come to believe that “the vast majority of people” should give up yoga altogether. It’s simply too likely to cause harm.

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Not just students but celebrated teachers too, Black said, injure themselves in droves because most have underlying physical weaknesses or problems that make serious injury all but inevitable. Instead of doing yoga, “they need to be doing a specific range of motions for articulation, for organ condition,” he said, to strengthen weak parts of the body. “Yoga is for people in good physical condition. Or it can be used therapeutically. It’s controversial to say, but it really shouldn’t be used for a general class.”

Black seemingly reconciles the dangers of yoga with his own teaching of it by working hard at knowing when a student “shouldn’t do something — the shoulder stand, the headstand or putting any weight on the cervical vertebrae.” Though he studied with Shmuel Tatz, a legendary Manhattan-based physical therapist who devised a method of massage and alignment for actors and dancers, he acknowledges that he has no formal training for determining which poses are good for a student and which may be problematic. What he does have, he says, is “a ton of experience.”

“To come to New York and do a class with people who have many problems and say, ‘O.K., we’re going to do this sequence of poses today’ — it just doesn’t work.”
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Image<strong>Salazar:</strong> I would say I’m a 7 out of 10 on the flexibility scale.
Salazar: I would say I’m a 7 out of 10 on the flexibility scale.Credit...Danielle Levitt for The New York Times

According to Black, a number of factors have converged to heighten the risk of practicing yoga. The biggest is the demographic shift in those who study it. Indian practitioners of yoga typically squatted and sat cross-legged in daily life, and yoga poses, or asanas, were an outgrowth of these postures. Now urbanites who sit in chairs all day walk into a studio a couple of times a week and strain to twist themselves into ever-more-difficult postures despite their lack of flexibility and other physical problems. Many come to yoga as a gentle alternative to vigorous sports or for rehabilitation for injuries. But yoga’s exploding popularity — the number of Americans doing yoga has risen from about 4 million in 2001 to what some estimate to be as many as 20 million in 2011 — means that there is now an abundance of studios where many teachers lack the deeper training necessary to recognize when students are headed toward injury. “Today many schools of yoga are just about pushing people,” Black said. “You can’t believe what’s going on — teachers jumping on people, pushing and pulling and saying, ‘You should be able to do this by now.’ It has to do with their egos.”

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When yoga teachers come to him for bodywork after suffering major traumas, Black tells them, “Don’t do yoga.”

“They look at me like I’m crazy,” he goes on to say. “And I know if they continue, they won’t be able to take it.” I asked him about the worst injuries he’d seen. He spoke of well-known yoga teachers doing such basic poses as downward-facing dog, in which the body forms an inverted V, so strenuously that they tore Achilles tendons. “It’s ego,” he said. “The whole point of yoga is to get rid of ego.” He said he had seen some “pretty gruesome hips.” “One of the biggest teachers in America had zero movement in her hip joints,” Black told me. “The sockets had become so degenerated that she had to have hip replacements.” I asked if she still taught. “Oh, yeah,” Black replied. “There are other yoga teachers that have such bad backs they have to lie down to teach. I’d be so embarrassed.”

Among devotees, from gurus to acolytes forever carrying their rolled-up mats, yoga is described as a nearly miraculous agent of renewal and healing. They celebrate its abilities to calm, cure, energize and strengthen. And much of this appears to be true: yoga can lower your blood pressure, make chemicals that act as antidepressants, even improve your sex life. But the yoga community long remained silent about its potential to inflict blinding pain. Jagannath G. Gune, who helped revive yoga for the modern era, made no allusion to injuries in his journal Yoga Mimansa or his 1931 book “Asanas.” Indra Devi avoided the issue in her 1953 best seller “Forever Young, Forever Healthy,” as did B. K. S. Iyengar in his seminal “Light on Yoga,” published in 1965. Reassurances about yoga’s safety also make regular appearances in the how-to books of such yogis as Swami Sivananda, K. Pattabhi Jois and Bikram Choudhury. “Real yoga is as safe as mother’s milk,” declared Swami Gitananda, a guru who made 10 world tours and founded ashrams on several continents.

But a growing body of medical evidence supports Black’s contention that, for many people, a number of commonly taught yoga poses are inherently risky. The first reports of yoga injuries appeared decades ago, published in some of the world’s most respected journals — among them, Neurology, The British Medical Journal and The Journal of the American Medical Association. The problems ranged from relatively mild injuries to permanent disabilities. In one case, a male college student, after more than a year of doing yoga, decided to intensify his practice. He would sit upright on his heels in a kneeling position known as vajrasana for hours a day, chanting for world peace. Soon he was experiencing difficulty walking, running and climbing stairs.

Doctors traced the problem to an unresponsive nerve, a peripheral branch of the sciatic, which runs from the lower spine through the buttocks and down the legs. Sitting in vajrasana deprived the branch that runs below the knee of oxygen, deadening the nerve. Once the student gave up the pose, he improved rapidly. Clinicians recorded a number of similar cases and the condition even got its own name: “yoga foot drop.”

More troubling reports followed. In 1972 a prominent Oxford neurophysiologist, W. Ritchie Russell, published an article in The British Medical Journal arguing that, while rare, some yoga postures threatened to cause strokes even in relatively young, healthy people. Russell found that brain injuries arose not only from direct trauma to the head but also from quick movements or excessive extensions of the neck, such as occur in whiplash — or certain yoga poses. Normally, the neck can stretch backward 75 degrees, forward 40 degrees and sideways 45 degrees, and it can rotate on its axis about 50 degrees. Yoga practitioners typically move the vertebrae much farther. An intermediate student can easily turn his or her neck 90 degrees — nearly twice the normal rotation.

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Hyperflexion of the neck was encouraged by experienced practitioners. Iyengar emphasized that in cobra pose, the head should arch “as far back as possible” and insisted that in the shoulder stand, in which the chin is tucked deep in the chest, the trunk and head forming a right angle, “the body should be in one straight line, perpendicular to the floor.” He called the pose, said to stimulate the thyroid, “one of the greatest boons conferred on humanity by our ancient sages.”
Image
<strong>Aduba:</strong> You know when people jump up into those crazy positions, like they stand on their eyeballs or something, while you’re sitting there just trying to figure out which side of the mat you used the last time? I envy them.
Aduba: You know when people jump up into those crazy positions, like they stand on their eyeballs or something, while you’re sitting there just trying to figure out which side of the mat you used the last time? I envy them.Credit...Danielle Levitt for The New York Times

Extreme motions of the head and neck, Russell warned, could wound the vertebral arteries, producing clots, swelling and constriction, and eventually wreak havoc in the brain. The basilar artery, which arises from the union of the two vertebral arteries and forms a wide conduit at the base of the brain, was of particular concern. It feeds such structures as the pons (which plays a role in respiration), the cerebellum (which coordinates the muscles), the occipital lobe of the outer brain (which turns eye impulses into images) and the thalamus (which relays sensory messages to the outer brain). Reductions in blood flow to the basilar artery are known to produce a variety of strokes. These rarely affect language and conscious thinking (often said to be located in the frontal cortex) but can severely damage the body’s core machinery and sometimes be fatal. The majority of patients suffering such a stroke do recover most functions. But in some cases headaches, imbalance, dizziness and difficulty in making fine movements persist for years.

Russell also worried that when strokes hit yoga practitioners, doctors might fail to trace their cause. The cerebral damage, he wrote, “may be delayed, perhaps to appear during the night following, and this delay of some hours distracts attention from the earlier precipitating factor.”

In 1973, a year after Russell’s paper was published, Willibald Nagler, a renowned authority on spinal rehabilitation at Cornell University Medical College, published a paper on a strange case. A healthy woman of 28 suffered a stroke while doing a yoga position known as the wheel or upward bow, in which the practitioner lies on her back, then lifts her body into a semicircular arc, balancing on hands and feet. An intermediate stage often involves raising the trunk and resting the crown of the head on the floor. While balanced on her head, her neck bent far backward, the woman “suddenly felt a severe throbbing headache.” She had difficulty getting up, and when helped into a standing position, was unable to walk without assistance. The woman was rushed to the hospital. She had no sensation on the right side of her body; her left arm and leg responded poorly to her commands. Her eyes kept glancing involuntarily to the left. And the left side of her face showed a contracted pupil, a drooping upper eyelid and a rising lower lid — a cluster of symptoms known as Horner’s syndrome. Nagler reported that the woman also had a tendency to fall to the left.

Her doctors found that the woman’s left vertebral artery, which runs between the first two cervical vertebrae, had narrowed considerably and that the arteries feeding her cerebellum had undergone severe displacement. Given the lack of advanced imaging technologies at the time, an exploratory operation was conducted to get a clearer sense of her injuries. The surgeons who opened her skull found that the left hemisphere of her cerebellum suffered a major failure of blood supply that resulted in much dead tissue and that the site was seeped in secondary hemorrhages.

The patient began an intensive program of rehabilitation. Two years later, she was able to walk, Nagler reported, “with [a] broad-based gait.” But her left arm continued to wander and her left eye continued to show Horner’s syndrome. Nagler concluded that such injuries appeared to be rare but served as a warning about the hazards of “forceful hyperextension of the neck.” He urged caution in recommending such postures, particularly to individuals of middle age.

The experience of Nagler’s patient was not an isolated incident. A few years later, a 25-year-old man was rushed to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, in Chicago, complaining of blurred vision, difficulty swallowing and controlling the left side of his body. Steven H. Hanus, a medical student at the time, became interested in the case and worked with the chairman of the neurology department to determine the cause (he later published the results with several colleagues). The patient had been in excellent health, practicing yoga every morning for a year and a half. His routine included spinal twists in which he rotated his head far to the left and far to the right. Then he would do a shoulder stand with his neck “maximally flexed against the bare floor,” just as Iyengar had instructed, remaining in the inversion for about five minutes. A series of bruises ran down the man’s lower neck, which, the team wrote in The Archives of Neurology, “resulted from repeated contact with the hard floor surface on which he did yoga exercises.” These were a sign of neck trauma. Diagnostic tests revealed blockages of the left vertebral artery between the c2 and c3 vertebrae; the blood vessel there had suffered “total or nearly complete occlusion” — in other words, no blood could get through to the brain.

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Two months after his attack, and after much physical therapy, the man was able to walk with a cane. But, the team reported, he “continued to have pronounced difficulty performing fine movements with his left hand.” Hanus and his colleagues concluded that the young man’s condition represented a new kind of danger. Healthy individuals could seriously damage their vertebral arteries, they warned, “by neck movements that exceed physiological tolerance.” Yoga, they stressed, “should be considered as a possible precipitating event.” In its report, the Northwestern team cited not only Nagler’s account of his female patient but also Russell’s early warning. Concern about yoga’s safety began to ripple through the medical establishment.

These cases may seem exceedingly rare, but surveys by the Consumer Product Safety Commission showed that the number of emergency-room admissions related to yoga, after years of slow increases, was rising quickly. They went from 13 in 2000 to 20 in 2001. Then they more than doubled to 46 in 2002. These surveys rely on sampling rather than exhaustive reporting — they reveal trends rather than totals — but the spike was nonetheless statistically significant. Only a fraction of the injured visit hospital emergency rooms. Many of those suffering from less serious yoga injuries go to family doctors, chiropractors and various kinds of therapists.
Image
<strong>Blaemire:</strong> The plow was the easiest position of the day — though it is quite a strange feeling having your face that close to your knees.
Blaemire: The plow was the easiest position of the day — though it is quite a strange feeling having your face that close to your knees.Credit...Danielle Levitt for The New York Times

Around this time, stories of yoga-induced injuries began to appear in the media. The Times reported that health professionals found that the penetrating heat of Bikram yoga, for example, could raise the risk of overstretching, muscle damage and torn cartilage. One specialist noted that ligaments — the tough bands of fiber that connect bones or cartilage at a joint — failed to regain their shape once stretched out, raising the risk of strains, sprains and dislocations.

In 2009, a New York City team based at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons published an ambitious worldwide survey of yoga teachers, therapists and doctors. The answers to the survey’s central question — What were the most serious yoga-related injuries (disabling and/or of long duration) they had seen? — revealed that the largest number of injuries (231) centered on the lower back. The other main sites were, in declining order of prevalence: the shoulder (219), the knee (174) and the neck (110). Then came stroke. The respondents noted four cases in which yoga’s extreme bending and contortions resulted in some degree of brain damage. The numbers weren’t alarming but the acknowledgment of risk — nearly four decades after Russell first issued his warning — pointed to a decided shift in the perception of the dangers yoga posed.

In recent years, reformers in the yoga community have begun to address the issue of yoga-induced damage. In a 2003 article in Yoga Journal, Carol Krucoff — a yoga instructor and therapist who works at the Integrative Medicine center at Duke University in North Carolina — revealed her own struggles. She told of being filmed one day for national television and after being urged to do more, lifting one foot, grabbing her big toe and stretching her leg into the extended-hand-to-big-toe pose. As her leg straightened, she felt a sickening pop in her hamstring. The next day, she could barely walk. Krucoff needed physical therapy and a year of recovery before she could fully extend her leg again. The editor of Yoga Journal, Kaitlin Quistgaard, described reinjuring a torn rotator cuff in a yoga class. “I’ve experienced how yoga can heal,” she wrote. “But I’ve also experienced how yoga can hurt — and I’ve heard the same from plenty of other yogis.”

One of the most vocal reformers is Roger Cole, an Iyengar teacher with degrees in psychology from Stanford and the University of California, San Francisco. Cole has written extensively for Yoga Journal and speaks on yoga safety to the American College of Sports Medicine. In one column, Cole discussed the practice of reducing neck bending in a shoulder stand by lifting the shoulders on a stack of folded blankets and letting the head fall below it. The modification eases the angle between the head and the torso, from 90 degrees to perhaps 110 degrees. Cole ticked off the dangers of doing an unmodified shoulder stand: muscle strains, overstretched ligaments and cervical-disk injuries.

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But modifications are not always the solution. Timothy McCall, a physician who is the medical editor of Yoga Journal, called the headstand too dangerous for general yoga classes. His warning was based partly on his own experience. He found that doing the headstand led to thoracic outlet syndrome, a condition that arises from the compression of nerves passing from the neck into the arms, causing tingling in his right hand as well as sporadic numbness. McCall stopped doing the pose, and his symptoms went away. Later, he noted that the inversion could produce other injuries, including degenerative arthritis of the cervical spine and retinal tears (a result of the increased eye pressure caused by the pose). “Unfortunately,” McCall concluded, “the negative effects of headstand can be insidious.”

Almost a year after I first met Glenn Black at his master class in Manhattan, I received an e-mail from him telling me that he had undergone spinal surgery. “It was a success,” he wrote. “Recovery is slow and painful. Call if you like.”

The injury, Black said, had its origins in four decades of extreme backbends and twists. He had developed spinal stenosis — a serious condition in which the openings between vertebrae begin to narrow, compressing spinal nerves and causing excruciating pain. Black said that he felt the tenderness start 20 years ago when he was coming out of such poses as the plow and the shoulder stand. Two years ago, the pain became extreme. One surgeon said that without treatment, he would eventually be unable to walk. The surgery took five hours, fusing together several lumbar vertebrae. He would eventually be fine but was under surgeon’s orders to reduce strain on his lower back. His range of motion would never be the same.

Black is one of the most careful yoga practitioners I know. When I first spoke to him, he said he had never injured himself doing yoga or, as far as he knew, been responsible for harming any of his students. I asked him if his recent injury could have been congenital or related to aging. No, he said. It was yoga. “You have to get a different perspective to see if what you’re doing is going to eventually be bad for you.”

Black recently took that message to a conference at the Omega Institute, his feelings on the subject deepened by his recent operation. But his warnings seemed to fall on deaf ears. “I was a little more emphatic than usual,” he recalled. “My message was that ‘Asana is not a panacea or a cure-all. In fact, if you do it with ego or obsession, you’ll end up causing problems.’ A lot of people don’t like to hear that.”

This article is adapted from “The Science of Yoga: The Risks and Rewards,” by William J. Broad, to be published next month by Simon & Schuster. Broad is a senior science writer at The Times.

Editor: Sheila Glaser
A version of this article appears in print on Jan. 8, 2012, Page 16 of the Sunday Magazine with the headline: All Bent Out Of Shape. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe