I Am Polestar

Wellness in the Workplace: 5 Simple Steps

5 Simple Practices to Bring Wellness into the Workplace 1. Take Breaks and Move!
  • Set an alarm to incorporate movement every hour.
  • Bring your own lunch and eat in the office as a group – then utilize your lunch break for an hour long walk – this will increase your daily steps and you will return to work refreshed and in good spirits.
  • Periodic Breaks will help you work longer and be more productive throughout the day.   Try cycles of (50 minutes work / 15 minute break) or (20 Minutes of work / 5 minute break).
  • Challenge:  Experiment with work to break ratios and find your sweet spot. 
2. Hydrate
  • Adults should be drinking 10 to 15 cups of Water Per day.
  • BYOB – Bring your own Bottle and take ownership of your hydration and health! Stop wasting cups and help the environment (it will make you fee good!).
  • Water is still the #1 substance for Detoxification – helping your body flush out toxins.
  • Adding Citrus Fruit Slices to your water can help your digestive system and add a hint of flavor making hydration that much more delicious!  (Most Fruit-juice drinks are Loaded with Extra Sugar).
  • Challenge: Note how often you are drinking and adjust accordingly to meet daily requirements – Knowledge is power!
3.  Bring the Outdoors In
  • Host a DIY Terrarium Team Building experience (we did!) and create a terrarium for your desk.
  • Plants help reduce stress and create a feeling of well-being.
  • The green guys also improve air quality – Reducing carbon Dioxide and certain pollutants, such as benzene and Nitrogen dioxide levels.
  • Not into green? Bring in and display your favorite rocks or gemstones from your travels!
  • Challenge: Find one natural thing that inspires you and bring it into your workspace.
Woman holding arms back4. Love What You Do
  • Find something about your work that you love. Consider bringing your favorite things into the work place (pictures of your family or pets, sports memorabilia, memories of fun times).
  • Work can be a significant cause of stress – Consider career counseling or a career change, it could add years to your life!
  • Read one of our Blog posts about becoming a Pilates Instructor.  Many people in the Polestar community have made career changes and love their new lifestyle in the health and wellness field.
  • Hey Joe! – Know that person you’ve walked by 20 times in the hallway? Learn their name and introduce yourself.
  • Challenge: Say Good-morning to someone everyday before you walk into the office!
5. Try a Standing Desk – Prepare for Optimal Alignment in Seating 
  • Feeling tired? Standing increases your level of alertness and can give you a boost of energy.  It requires alignment of the spine and opens your entire torso encouraging diaphragmatic breathing.
  • Sitting for long period of time can cause back pain.  Taking standing breaks will help, also try raising your computer screen to be directly in-front of your gaze.  We lifted out monitors and felt instant neck relief
  • Standing burns more calories than sitting!  If you stand one hour per day you will start to burn more calories.  Multiply that over 6 months or one year and you could end up burning 1000’s of extra calories.
  • Challenge: Take a pause in your work to notice how you sit – Do you lean to one side more than another?  Try to sit evenly between the sits bones – this will set the foundation for your spine to thrive!
The Polestar Essentials The Essentials are Polestar’s interpretation of Joseph Pilates’ 9 original tenants of the Pilates Method of Health and Wellness.  They include: Movement, Mindfulness, Relaxation, Recreation, Sleep, Hygiene, Work, Nature and Nutrition.  Tune in for weekly updates and Essential tips in the Polestar Life Weekly.

The Breath as a Tool

The Breath As A Tool –  Katrina Hawley, NCPT, Polestar Educator I was once at a Polestar Pilates Educator meeting in which we were working hard to create content for the Internet to communicate to the world, “Why Pilates?” And “Why Polestar?”  The answers I found to these questions were easy.  Why Pilates? Because Pilates keeps every person doing what they want to do!  Whether that is hiking mountains or pulling weeds, running marathons or playing on the floor with grandchildren. Now Why Polestar?  That’s an easy one.  Polestar Pilates allows me to be creative within a system of principles.  Rather than teaching me a series of exercises that become a rote script for a beginner, intermediate and advanced Pilates class, Polestar provided a structure within which I could be creative. This meant that I could use the same tools to teach an 85 year old grandfather as well as a ten year old boy.  I wasn’t taught a recipe of exercises but a systematic approach and theory.  The amateur chaos theory mathematician in me was stoked! The Polestar Pilates system is based on six principles (Polestar Principles of Movement) that are designed to guide the critical thinking of a Polestar Pilates Practitioner. In this post I want to describe the first one. The Breath Principle Now, we don’t specifically choreograph when one should inhale and exhale.  We study the anatomy and physiology of the breath and we also learn the “biokinematics” and the “arthrokinematics” of breath.  All of this information within the principle allows us to decide how to best use breath as a tool for movement facilitation. When we study the breath principle we choose to ask the question how can I use the breath to create the best movement.  Will an inhale help facilitate healthy movement, or is an exhale better?  Or we might ask, how can I use this breath to challenge the mover in front of me to create greater integration of movement. The Polestar Principles encourage client-centered inquisitiveness – Can our understanding of the breath shed light on any other physiological questions?  How might I use breath to improve posture? Create more flexibility or space in a joint?  Create axial length or facilitate thoracic mobility? Why do I love Polestar Pilates?  Because Polestar gave me a plethora of information and then said, “okay kid, take this and run with it!  Have a ball, and most importantly help people move”. Experiential: The breath is a system and tool we can learn to control (and teach our students to control as well).  Try “Box Breathing” for stress reduction, grounding and activating the parasympathetic nervous system. • This breath practice can be done anywhere!  Wherever you are, sit or stand in a way that you feel grounded (weight distributed evenly between the feet or sits bones) and lengthen the spine as if your head was being pulled up by a thread. • “Box Breathing” consists of the same number of counts during your inhale as your exhale with an added pause at the peak of the inhale and valley of the exhale. Try It!: A. Inhale Four Counts (1,2,3,4) – (Pause Four Counts – 1,2,3,4)  B. Exhale Four Counts (1,2,3,4)- (Pause four counts 1,2,3,4) C. Try Repeating this Cycle 4 times.   • This rhythmic breathing practice can help activate your parasympathetic nervous system (the one that makes you feel calm).  Experiment to find the number of counts that works for you – it should be easy, steady and grounding.  Breathe On! Katrina Hawley PMA-CPT, Polestar Educator and Affiliate is the owner of The Pilates Studio Hadley providing expert instruction in private and small group sessions as well as group mat and apparatus classes.The Pilates Studio creates goal-based programs that empower clients to increase strength and flexibility as well as improve posture, coordination, and balance.  Join Katrina for the Fall Comprehensive teacher Training in Hadley, MA.  The Polestar Principles of Movement: Breath, Axial Elongation & Core Control, Spine-Articulation, Organization of the Head, Neck and Shoulders, Alignment and Weight Bearing of the Extremities and Movement Integration.  Start the The Teacher Training Journey and Learn more about Polestar Principles Online Course Here:  Principles Online!