Wednesday, March 29, 2017

http://www.womenshealthmag.com/fitness/yoga-poses-to-open-hip-flexors


8 Yoga Poses to Release the Tension in Your Hips After a Crazy-Stressful Day

Alison Feller
You wake up early every day to squeeze in a five-mile run or 45-minute spin class (you go, Glen Coco). Then, from 9 a.m. until well past 5 p.m., you’re crushing it at work—and by “crushing it,” we mean you’re busting your butt while it’s firmly planted in your desk chair, hunched over your laptop and phone simultaneously.
We’re all guilty of sitting too much, and the whole “sitting is the new smoking” thing is no joke. “Most of us spend a lot of our time sitting, which limits the range of motion of your body and makes your hips extremely tight,” says Bethany Lyons, instructor and co-founder at Lyons Den Power Yoga in New York City. “Not to mention the fact that your hips are emotional centers of your body. Combine those together and you’ve got some crazy tight hips!” (Tone up and chill out with Women's Health's Flat Belly Yoga routine!)


The key to easing up all that tension: yoga, of course. These poses will help open your hip flexors, keeping your body loose and helping you walk a little taller. Hold each pose for five full, deep breaths, Lyons recommends.




1/8 Alison Feller
The pose: Crescent Lunge
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “Crescent lunge stretches your legs, groin, and hip flexors,” says Lyons. “You’re also forced to create stability and balance, so you’re strengthening and stretching your body.”
How to do it: From downward-facing dog, step one foot forward between your hands, aligning your knee over the heel. Keeping your back leg strong, lift your upper body, sweeping your arms overhead, palms facing in. Stack your joints—your shoulders are over the hips, your front knee over the front ankle, and the back heel over the ball mound of the back foot—and draw your low ribs in toward one another.
2/8 Alison Feller
The pose: Crescent Lunge with Lift
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “This is some intense toning and stretching for the back leg,” says Lyons. “...Stretching and strengthening the muscles helps with your posture. Developing strong hip flexors will allow you to stand up straighter, appear taller, and look more confident. If your hip flexors are tight, they’re going to pull you forward when you move.”
How to do it: From crescent lunge, tuck your back toe, firm up your back leg, and hold.




The pose: Low Lunge
3/8 Alison Feller
The pose: Low Lunge
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “This pose allows you to go a little bit deeper in the stretch than you did during crescent lunge,” says Lyons. “There’s more stretching now and less strengthening. It’s basically a modification, since you don’t need to add an element of balance. Consider it an ‘easier’ pose than crescent lunge, but it’s still super effective.”
How to do it: From crescent lunge, bring both hands to the ground on either side of your front foot. Drop your back knee to the ground, and lift your torso so your upper body is upright, placing your hands on your front leg for balance.




4/8 Alison Feller
The pose: Reclined Half-Pigeon with Quad Stretch
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “You’re getting a deep hip and back leg opening, and drawing the foot in stretches the front of the thigh all the way up into the hip,” says Lyons. “You’re hitting the stretch from all angles."
How to do it: From downward-facing dog, lift the right leg up toward the ceiling, and then draw the right knee toward the right wrist, placing it on the floor while bringing the right foot as close to the left wrist as possible. Keep the hips even and square to the front of the mat. Lean forward, keeping the feet active and the hips centered. Bend the left knee, catching the left foot with your left hand and drawing it in toward the hip, stretching the front of the thigh. At the same time, reach the left knee toward the back of the room and let your head rest on your right forearm.



5/8 Alison Feller
The pose: Mermaid Series
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “Feel that stretch in your back quadriceps? You’re doing it right,” says Lyons. “This series strengthens and stretches your hip flexors and core muscles while opening the hips.”
How to do it: From half-pigeon, bring the upper body upright and bend your left knee. Catch your left foot with the left hand and draw it in toward the hips, keeping both hips squared toward the front of the mat. If possible, work the foot into the crux of the left elbow, and then take the right arm up and over to catch hands into a bind over your head.



6/8 Alison Feller
The pose: Reclined Hero Pose
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “This is an advanced pose, so proceed with caution and move into it very gently,” says Lyons. “It’s a giant hip opener—you’ll feel it.”
How to do it: Begin in hero pose, kneeling with thighs perpendicular to the floor and your inner knees touching. Slide the feet apart to slightly wider than hips-width distance apart, and the tops of the feet flat on the floor. Exhale and lower your back toward the floor, first leaning onto the hands, then the forearms and elbows. If possible, lean all the way back so your torso is on the ground with arms overhead.





The pose: Camel Pose
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “This extension gives you the opportunity to get a full stretch through both hips at the same time,” says Lyons.
How to do it: Kneel on the floor with knees hips-width distance apart and thighs perpendicular to the floor. Press the shins and tops of the feet firmly into the floor as you lift your heart and begin to lean back, keeping the chin near the sternum. Press your hips forward so they stay over your knees, and either keep your hands at your low back for support or grab your heels, pulling forward strongly from your hips.



8/8 Alison Feller
The pose: Dancer’s Pose
Why it’ll make your hips happy: “This pose creates an extension of the spine and a push-and-pull opposition, creating stability and stretch,” says Lyons. “It’s also a time to practice your focus, drishti, and balance.” (Not to mention the fact that dancer’s pose is an Instagram fave.)
How to do it: From standing, shift your weight onto your right foot and lift your left heel toward your seat, bending the knee and grabbing the foot on the outside with your left hand. Begin to kick your left foot into your left hand to lift your leg toward the sky, reaching your right arm forward.



Say goodbye to yellow underarm stains


Say goodbye to yellow underarm stains

According to the folks at Degree, the stains occur when the aluminum in your antiperspirant or deodorant combines with the salt in your sweat. The stains are notoriously difficult to get rid of with normal washing in the laundry machine.

Using three shirts, we tested out a quick, easy and cheap trick to remove the yellow armpit stains, and look at the results!

Cheap & easy way to remove yellow sweat stains from your clothes

Here’s what you need:

3% hydrogen peroxide
Dish soap
Baking soda
Toothbrush
How to remove yellow sweat stains from your clothes

After applying the ingredients directly to the shirt, use an old toothbrush to work them in for a minute, and then let the shirt sit for at least an hour before putting it in the washing machine.

We didn’t use any precise measurements, but we do recommend doing a pre-test on a small area.

How to remove yellow sweat stains from your clothes

This solution worked like magic on both white and colored shirts, and we also hear that OxiClean does the trick as well.


To prevent the stains in the first place, Degree says it helps to wear loose clothing, make sure your antiperspirant deodorant is dry before you get dressed and don’t use too much product.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

boost productivity

In need of a productivity boost? You don't (necessarily) need more coffee. What you do need is a new frame of mind. If you can train your brain to work harder, you'll be more diligent and get more done. Whether your sluggish moments come at work or around the house, here are five strategies sure to defeat laziness.

Narrate Your Life

If your biggest problem is staying focused, try mental modeling. It's a technical term for a really simple concept: Turn your day into a story. An article on The Science of Us paraphrases Charles Duhigg, author of Smarter Faster Better: The Secrets of Being Productive in Life and Business, to suggest that people who narrate their days to themselves are better able to keep focused:
"Those who keep it together under pressure are storytellers, essentially. They narrate their own lives to themselves — things that have just happened, things that are about to happen. They daydream about the day ahead and review the hours that have already passed. In doing this, scientists argue, they learn how to best direct their attention and are 'better at choosing where to focus and what to ignore.'"

Airplane Days

You know how being on an airplane forces you to stay off the grid for a little while? And how, if you're traveling alone, you have to stay radio silent with family members or coworkers about what everyone's working on? Every once in a while (or whenever you get behind) schedule an airplane day for yourself, like entrepreneur Bryan Guido Hassin says he does on Quora: Turn off your phone, close your email, silence desktop notifications and GSD–get shit done.

Empty Your Mind

If you need to clear your mind, try this: Tear a piece of paper out of your notebook and write down everything that's on your brain at the moment. Any ideas you have or pressing items on your mental to-do-list, write them all down on paper. It doesn't need to be organized, it just needs to be marked down. From The Positivity Blog:
"When you don’t occupy your mind with having to remember every little thing – like how much milk to get – you become less stressed and it becomes easier to think clearly."

Quiet Hour

On her blog, Gretchen Rubin, author of "The Happiness Project," recommends a series of mental exercises from writer and author of Wake Up and Live, Dorothea Brande. They're designed to challenge your creativity and mental flexibility, but I happen to think the first exercise is also a great way to keep focused in the early morning or at the start of a new week:
"Spend an hour each day without saying anything except in answer to direct questions, in the midst of the usual group, without creating the impression that you’re sulking or ill. Be as ordinary as possible. But do not volunteer remarks or try to draw out information."

Touch it Once

An author on Byrdie mentions a productivity strategy they picked up from The Chalkboard Mag's editorial director, Suzanne Hall: When you open an email or get a text notification or receive an event invite, "touch it once," which means deal with it right then and there. Respond, reply or RSVP and get it off your brain for good. So now you can deal with more important things.

Friday, March 10, 2017


Super Actionable Gratitude Exercises You Can Do Today
How to enjoy the scientifically proven benefits of gratitude
by Kate Frachon
When you are constantly working towards your goals and striving to get ahead, it can feel like there’s never enough. Not enough time, not enough success, not enough attention.
There is so much to feel stressed and dissatisfied about, and those emotions actually often serve us well. Wanting to change the quality of your life from bad to good is a powerful motivator!
But so many of us aren’t living lives that are bad. In fact, our lives our pretty good. Yes, there are setbacks and missed targets, but there’s often just as much (if not more) progress and goals achieved.
Feeling dissatisfied can sometimes motivate us, but it often holds us back. If all you ever think about is what isn’t working and what you’re not getting, it’s easy to want to give up.
By now, you’ve probably heard that gratitude is good for you.
But if you are struggling to find ways to make gratitude a part of your life — or if you’re just not sure why you should — then read on to find out how to start enjoying the scientifically proven benefits of gratitude in your life every single day.
Why gratitude is good for you and your goals
According to the UC Berkeley Greater Good Science Center, consistent gratitude practice results in:
·         Stronger immune systems and lower blood pressure
·         Higher levels of positive emotions
·         More joy, optimism, and happiness
·         Acting with more generosity and compassion
·         Feeling less lonely and isolated
Gratitude doesn’t mean complacency. I know if you’re reading this blog that you are someone who wants more and who has goals to work hard and change your life for the better. However, it is possible to stay hungry and be grateful.
In fact, gratitude can actually help you move forward on your goals and feel happier and healthier while you get there. When you feel like you are supported, successful, lucky, and on the right track, you can go so much farther than if you feel discouraged and unlucky.
Plus there’s this: when you are positive and thankful, it radiates to the people around you. The more people who love to work with you, the more successful you will become as you draw in like-minded happy, motivated people.
Gratitude is the shift in mindset from struggle to success
So yes, it is good to be grateful. Now how do you do it consistently?
Every article out there will tell you to keep a daily gratitude journal, of course. But if you aren’t practiced at finding the things you’re grateful for and writing about them every day, that can be a hard habit to develop. And failing at writing your gratitude list will obviously have the reverse effect that it’s supposed to!
So in this post, I wanted to share some of our favorite really actionable, useful strategies for developing a daily or weekly gratitude habit that you can do anytime and that will help you seriously feel the benefits of gratitude.
Write your reverse bucket list
Everyone knows what a bucket list is: it’s all the things you want to do before you “kick the bucket”. But a reverse bucket way is an amazing tool to help you feel amazingly grateful right now.
Instead of looking ahead at all the great things you want to do, take a look back at the things that you’ve already achieved. Don’t just reminisce — make a list, write it all down. Create a concrete reference that you can look back on and add to.
Looking at your successes is good for your confidence. If you’re feeling unsure of yourself, looking at the many amazing things you’ve already done can help remind your brain that actually you have a long track record of success. If you did it before, you can do it again.
It also helps to put failure into perspective. As you’re walking out the door after a bad presentation, it can feel like the only thing that matters in the world is how badly you just messed up.
So what kinds of things can you put on a reverse bucket list?
Anything really! Write anything that you are proud of or that you consider an amazing moment in your life. Maybe it’s launching your website, or maybe it’s giving birth. Maybe it’s the friend you’ve had since second grade, or maybe it’s an amazing trip you took overseas.
When you can see how far you’ve come and how much you already have under your belt to be grateful for and proud of, it becomes easier to identify the things you can be grateful every day and to make gratitude a regular practice.
Make a list of everyone who has changed you for the better
Nobody gets to the top without any help. We all have people who we are grateful to, either for opportunities that they have given us or for life lessons they helped us learn.
·         Who has changed you for the better?
·         Who gave you a chance?
·         Who helped you do something big?
Write down their names and how they helped you. Think big and small, personally and professionally.
Research has shown that even just thinking about the people you are grateful for increases your happiness; expressing it increases your happiness even more.
If you really want to reap some positive psychology benefits, tell the people on your list how grateful you are for them! Turn your gratitude notes into an email or card, and send it. Studies have shown that sending even just one note expressing your thanks can increase your overall happiness for a month!
And if you want extra extra credit and it is possible, try spending more time with the people on your list. After all, if they changed you for the better before, they are probably going to keep being good for you! Plus, if you tell them that it’s because they inspire you or you like to learn from them, what an amazing compliment to pay someone. Feeling and showing gratitude does wonders for strengthening relationships, even with people you don’t see very often.
Reframe a problem or past experience
People who are focused on learning something from their failures tend to take away much more value than people who simply walk away.
If you are facing a problem, try journaling about it by answering these questions:
·         Is there anything good about this situation? What is going well/okay?
·         What lessons am I learning?
·         What opportunities can/will come out of this?
If you look at your problem from this angle, you may find that things are going better than you feel like they are, or you might discover that even through the struggles you are still gaining benefits.
There are things to be grateful for even in the hard stuff. 🙂
This can also be a valuable exercise for looking back on a project or an interaction that still haunts you. Sometimes it can be hard to let go of something that felt like a disaster; it sometimes feels good to wallow in how bad it feels to fail.
But it feels even better to be grateful for lessons learned and to move on from the struggle. Look back on a failure and see if there is a way to reframe it in your mind.
Not only will this help you let go of past failures, but it will help you learn to be more open and grateful during future failures (because unfortunately, there are always future failures to be had). The better you can handle failure and see the opportunities it brings, the more effectively and healthily you will deal with it so you can go on to bigger and better things sooner.
Transform an ungrateful thought
Don’t feel bad if you don’t feel grateful all the time. It’s nearly impossible! Don’t beat yourself up if you find yourself feeling stressed or unhappy sometimes throughout the day — it does not mean that you are failing at being grateful.
Instead, simply acknowledge your ungrateful feelings as they come. Then, try this exercise.
Once a day, notice your ungrateful thought and then write it down. What stressed you out or made you mad today? Write it down — be honest and express your feelings.
Then, turn it into something you are grateful for. Look at it, stare at it, and force yourself to find something to be grateful for in there.
For example:
·         Version 1. My boss changed her plans at the last minute and left a huge project for me to do all on my own with no help. I was so stressed trying to get everything done, and it wasn’t fair because this was her work to do originally.
·         Version 2. I was able to get the project done, even on short notice. I am proud of my ability to rise to the occasion under pressure.
This doesn’t fix your problem, of course, but it does change your perspective. Feeling empowered by the positives that you can take away from a negative can also improve your ability to actually solve the problem later.
If you need to talk to your boss about your workload, seeing yourself as a put-upon victim does not put you in the right mindframe for a successful conversation. However, if you see yourself as a superstar who can do anything that gets thrown at you, then you are in a much more powerful and productive position going into that conversation about what you need from your boss.
You are more likely to win when you feel like a winner.
Get good at gratitude
We are so excited to be working on a new gratitude journal here at Ink & Volt. It is going to incorporate some of these exercises and so much more to help you start enjoying the scientific benefits of gratitude like greater health, happiness, and success.
What do you do to feel gratitude every day? Have you tried any of these exercises? Tell us about your experiences on our Facebook page!
Sign Up For Our Updates
Get powerful career advice and smart suggestions to improve your life. Join over 25,000 superstars who read our 1-2x monthly newsletter. No spam, pinky swear.
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
Thanks for signing up for Spark Updates!
Share This Post
·          
·          
ink+volt
·         account
·         About
·         Contact
·         Returns
·         Terms
·         Privacy
·         Instagram
·         Twitter
·         Facebook

v