How and Why to Move More, While Sitting.
Sitting still all day can harm your health, even if you exercise. Try active sitting with an unstable chair or a wobble board to keep your muscles engaged. It’s an easy way to boost movement, impro...
“Hunchback”: A Silent Epidemic and Posture as Prevention
Avoiding or improving a hunched back simply requires that we adopt a new spinal posture. But, because postural muscles are fundamentally different than normal muscles, changing one’s habitual spina...
Running Is One More Thing Where Less Is More: Is there such a thing as too much running?
Exercise is well known for its health benefits, but recent research suggests that when it comes to running, less may be more. Studies show that light jogging—just a few hours per week at a slow pac...
The obesity epidemic has surged over the past 50 years, with over 40% of Americans now classified as obese. This rise is linked to the increased consumption of ultra-processed foods, sugary drinks,...
Golf, tracing back to ancient Rome, gained popularity in 15th century Scotland. Today, 40 million Americans play golf, continually aiming to improve their game. A key aspect of golf mastery is core...
Step Counting Is Better than Minutes for Measuring Exercise
Recent research published in JAMA suggests that counting steps may be a more effective way to measure physical activity than tracking exercise minutes. This shift could make it easier for people to...
A Brief History of Active Sitting
Humans have been sitting for millions of years, initially favoring squatting over sitting due to its practical benefits. With the advent of agriculture, chairs evolved from simple stools to more el...
Kids, ADHD, and the Science of Sitting
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is an immense and growing problem for school age children, diminishing their ability to thrive in educational settings that often demand sustained at...
Better Balance For Better Health: an easy test predicts longer life
Balance is essential for health and wellbeing, so it’s concerning to learn that our balance begins to deteriorate precipitously after the age of 60. We humans are the preeminent bipedal species. Ou...
It’s Legit to Fidget: Not only is fidgeting natural, it’s essential for good health
Fidgeting, a natural and essential part of human movement, plays a crucial role in maintaining good health by helping to offload excess calories and promoting energy homeostasis.
We recently got an email from Doug, an enthusiastic active sitting convert that read in part: “… the seat disappears”. We’ve heard this phrase before from other customers who are pleasantly surpr...
Active Sitting: From the Hysterical to the Practical
Active sitting, mechanically assisted Sitting, and beyond I was reminded of a delightful video clip recently by a morning eNewsLetter (The Hustle). If you haven’t seen The Hawaii Chair in action, y...
More on the Perils of Passive Sitting
A research paper published last month is the definitive summary of the many harms that sedentary behavior causes. Published in the prestigious journal Physiological Reviews by Pinto and co-workers,...
Breaks From Sitting: Now we know how often and how long
We all sit far more than is good for us.1 And by now the physiology of sitting and the epidemiology of its aftermath have been pretty well worked out: We sit for more than 8 hours every day, and ...
Passive Sitting Is Associated With Dementia
Passively sitting supported by “ergonomic” chairs has been associated with a host of health problems: poor posture, weakened core, metabolic syndrome, and even some forms of cancer. It’s a worriso...
How to Add 3,000 Steps to Your Day Without Getting Up From Your (Active) Chair
Every physician knows that exercise is the best medicine. If doctors could write a prescription for exercise every patient would get one before he left the office. Hypocrites understood this wel...
Mediation is perhaps the quintessentially internal pursuit: the mind turned inward, examining itself. So, it’s perhaps surprising that almost every meditation tradition pays close attention to th...
New Research Shows Back Pain Isn’t Helped by Opioid Drugs. What’s a Doctor to Do?
A recent paper published in the premier medical journal The Lancet1 underscored again just how poorly low back pain is understood. In their paper Opioid analgesia for acute low back pain and neck...
Real-Time Feedback from Automated Sensors Improves Health
Real-time feedback is how humans learn. Babies babble, listen to themselves, and then modify their babbling to match the babbling of their parents, eventually becoming fluent speakers of whatever ...
The Gravity Paradox: How Evolution Redirects Gravity to Hold Us Up
Gravity holding us up? Sounds silly. We can all feel gravity pulling us down, and we all have experience with falling down. Every physics book shows this vector, a representation on the page of ...
How We Move Changes Our Very Bones
“It’s not so much what you know as it is who you know”. Often quoted in life and in business, this truism sometimes turns up in surprising contexts. Take human evolution. As a puny species with...
Could Simply Changing Your Chair Add Years to Your Life?
The profound difference between sitting and ‘active resting’ Note: Although I’m an academic researcher, because I too suffered from back pain for quite some time, so I’m hardly a disinterested ...
Ergonomics and Its Discontents
Although the word ergonomics joined the English language less than 100 years ago, the idea of ergonomics goes back over 2,000 years. Hippocrates himself weighed in on how a surgeon should set up h...
A paper recently published in the prestigious journal Nature Medicine will revolutionize our approach to exercise. Here’s the executive summary: if health is your goal, then visits to the gym aren...