Movement At Work epub
Description Table of Contents Author Bring intentional movement into your workday with targeted exercises. Spending eight or more hours a day sitting or standing at a desk is a major contributor to chronic pain, stiffness, fatigue, and stress. Movement at Work: Your Guide to Pain-Free Productivity provides you with a solution to this problem—moving throughout your workday. Movement is good for the body, but with constraints on time and space, it can be challenging to incorporate meaningful movement into your busy workday. Movement at Work provides a variety of exercises, breathing practices, and visualization techniques to break up long bouts of prolonged inactivity with both physical and mental breaks throughout your day. The book features the following: 72 exercises and movements to ease pain, alleviate stiffness, and build strength Try It Out activities to make use of the ideas about improving posture, mood, and range of motion Personal stories from real people who have incorporated exercises from the book Guidance on implementing techniques from the book Postural considerations for work requiring sitting or standing Simple plans to help cope with stress Practical sequences of 5 to 10 minutes or 10 to 20 minutes The book explores the biomechanics behind the movement strategies to not only improve your body awareness but also help you understand why these techniques work. Navigating the book is easy, with color-coded tabs to help you quickly find the movements you need. Using the Franklin Method and functional movement approaches, you’ll find a multitude of ways to add movement and reduce stress without taking up lots of time. Movement at Work offers a realistic, accessible way to incorporate intentional movement into your long days. Take back your workday with movements designed to help you move more, ache less, and work better with purposeful breaks. Earn continuing education credits/units! A continuing education exam that uses this book is also available. It may be purchased separately or as part of a package that includes both the book and exam. Audience Individuals who stand in one place or sit most of the day, either in an office or at home. Human resource and worksite health professionals looking to create movement programs. Part I. Posture and Pain Chapter 1. Posture Is More Than Sitting Up Straight Chapter 2. Your Posture and Breathing Are Connected Part II. Move With Ease Chapter 3. Head, Neck, and Eyes Chapter 4. Hands and Wrists Chapter 5. Shoulders and Upper Back Chapter 6. Low Back Chapter 7. Hips Chapter 8. Legs and Feet Chapter 9. Core Part III. Alleviate and Integrate Chapter 10. Shake It Off Chapter 11. Calm It Down Chapter 12. Ease Pain With Practice Alison Wesley believes in making movement accessible, creative, enjoyable, and functional. She started her company, Movement at Work, in 2008 as a way to help people incorporate movement where and when they work. Wesley coordinates and assists teacher trainings in the Franklin Method, an evidence-based approach to movement education. She is the coauthor, with Eric Franklin, of Understanding the Pelvis: A Functional Approach to Yoga (published by Human Kinetics). She shares ongoing yoga and movement classes virtually through her online studio and with organizations such as the City of Portland, Guide Dogs for the Blind, eBay, Kaiser Permanente, Oregon School of Massage, and Schnitzer Properties. She also coleads in-person, hands-on cadaver dissection intensives as well as online experiential anatomy courses through EmbodyU. When she’s not diving into movement, anatomy, or philosophy, you can find Wesley writing and producing work like her film, The Mural, and her solo musical albums; singing with her choir, Nocturne; salsa dancing; learning Spanish slowly; spending precious time with her one-of-a-kind husband and stepchildren; or training the family’s two wildly spoiled German shepherds.
Specifications
- Title
- Ebook
Variants (1)
- Ebook — 19.95 USD — Out of stock
AI Readiness
Good foundation, but some important product data is still missing.