A few years
ago, while reading results of my medical general check-up, my GP told me by the
time I reached forty problems with health would not afflict me, but if I looked
after myself well, I would stay healthy until I turned fifty. Then it would all
go downhill anyway, since only a tiny fraction of population aged over 50 can
boast about excellent health.
I can drop
in on a dentist once a year to have my teeth checked preventively or at worst
have one of them mended. I visit ophthalmologist at least once in two years to
have my eyesight inspected. I get a medical check-up at least once in three
years and wait for a spot-on comment that I have my car thoroughly serviced at
least once year, so why do I care more about a depreciating tin. The last time
I was on a sick leave was in October 2013, after a food poisoning, since then
not a single cold caught. I am doing fine, so what’s the point in seeing doctor
“just in case”, as some of my peers, who just like me have medical care packages
paid by their employers, do.
This might
be the thing of the past… Before each warm long weekend doctors advise people
who lead sedentary lifestyle not to overstretch themselves. I heard those
warnings also before the late-May Corpus-Christi weekend, but did not take them
to heart. April and May were stressful, I sat long in the office to meet
deadlines and once I saw the back of the dreadful streak, I wanted to make the
most of days off. Swimming, cycling, garden and house works in abundance have
put a pleasant strain on my muscles. On Monday following the weekend I barely
got up from bed, being stricken by a pain down my lumbar spine. I thought the
strain, just muscle soreness, would ease off after a day or two. It did not.
With varying intensity the aches kept me company for four weeks; being a
nuisance at work, at home, during business trips and private travels… I carried
on, though there were days I could not remain sitting for more than half an
hour; a limitation bearable in the office, yet uncomfortable during conferences
or workshops when I could not stand up whenever I wanted.
Having
returned from holidays I finally signed up to see my GP at Medicover; on the
next day I had my spine X-rayed as prescribed. With the results and a relevant
referral I marched to a physiotherapist. It turned out my spine, though not in
pristine condition, is not ruined, yet if I do not want it to cause me further
pains, I should take up regular exercise and change my habits. The former will
not help if I do not pursue the latter.
The very
sitting, inevitable if you work in an office, is not a natural position for a
human spine, therefore it is crucial to minimise negative effects of sitting
long hours. Firstly, do not sit on the tailbone (the Formula-1 driver
position). There are two bones around the middle of your buttocks which should
absorb the burden of your body as you sit. Secondly, your spine should be
vertical as you sit. To allow for this, you should have a chair with properly
shaped armrest, monitor ahead of your eyes (not lower, otherwise you will
hunch), keyboard and mouse close to you (so that you don’t have to reach out
for them and hunch).
Everyday
habits also need to be changed not to strain the lumbar spine excessively. If
you want to lift something heavy, bend your legs and let your thighs take the
strain. Generally, I am switching from squatting and bowing down towards
sit-ups and kneeling. I have quite strong legs (riding a bike a lot as a child)
and they should take the strain off my spine, yet have to be careful about the
knee joints. In other words time to live normally, but without encouraging the
pain to keep me company. Unfortunately, over the coming weeks long (> 25
kilometres) bike trips have to be given up. Though I have chosen the bike in size
corresponding to my height (XL; 180 – 195 cm), longer cycling takes its toll on
my still sore spine, therefore I will most likely enjoy longer rides in late
August at the earliest… Today I cycled to Zalesie Górne and back (total
distance of around 20 kilometres, one snap on my fb profile) with a short break at my destination and felt
I could do with a little bit longer trips, yet my spine calls for a break after
some 45 minutes (or 10 kilometres) of recreational cycling…
Oddly
enough, Wisła resort today had few visitors, despite conducive weather.
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