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Sitting is the New Smoking
#1

Sitting is the New Smoking

Something I always warn my clients about who have desk jobs. I ask them if they know the side-effects of smoking (they generally ALL do) - then follow-up with the side-effects of prolonged sitting on a regular basis. When I tell them it leads to premature death, diabetes and cancer - the look is priceless.

Get of your fucking asses RooshV FORUM!

Quote:Quote:

- CBN News - Lorie Johnson

Get Off Your Duff! Sitting Is the 'New Smoking'

Could too much time in your chair be killing you? Studies show sitting more than six hours a day puts you on a potentially deadly track, even if you exercise!

That's pretty bad when you consider Americans sit about nine hours a day on average.

When we sit, especially for long periods of time, our bodies tend to shut down, which can lead to an early death.

Dr. James Levine, a Mayo Clinic endocrinologist, is a leading researcher on the health hazards of sitting too much.

The 'New Smoking'

"The trick, the trick, the trick," he said, is to have it firmly fixed in our minds, "that sitting is the new smoking. That sitting is literally bad for you."

For 15 years, Dr. Levine has studied the grim consequences of spending too much time on our duff.

For starters, obese people sit on average two-and-a-half hours more every day than thinner people. Sitting for long periods of time could actually make bottoms bigger because sitting down puts a large amount of force on the body tissues that make fat cells. It causes them to produce up to 50 percent more.

But that's just the tip of the iceberg.

"People who sit for a prolonged period of time throughout the day are predisposed to developing diabetes, and those people who have diabetes, their diabetes gets worse," Levine warned.

Add to that increased blood pressure and more, including emotional problems.

"People who sit more are more prone to cancers, breast cancer, prostate cancer, colon, I mean, multiple cancers," Levine explained.

"In addition, they're more prone to depression, to feeling blue," he said. "Even people who have mental illness, their illness is actually worse."

Walk While Working

As a potential solution, Dr. Levine worked with companies to improve employee health. He also teamed-up with Steelcase, the office furniture company, to develop the Walkstation, a desk with a treadmill built right into it.

The Walkstation allows users to stroll at a very slow pace all day for optimum health. In fact, the Walkstation doesn't even go any faster than two miles per hour.

Corporations nationwide have been clamoring to jump on the Walkstation bandwagon. But at about $3,500 each, although they are considered the gold standard of treadmill desks, not everyone can afford one.

Fortunately, there are cheaper alternatives. Jill Weisenberger, a nutritionist and author who has a home office, spent less than $500 for something similar.

"I was sitting for hours and hours and hours, sometimes for 10 or so hours," she recalled. "And I just know all that sitting is bad for you."

Weisenberger realized she had a problem when she began writing her nutrition book, Diabetes Weight Loss: Week by Week: A Safe, Effective Method for Losing Weight and Improving Your Health.

As a health expert herself, she became concerned about the repercussions of sitting all day even though she exercised every morning.

Weisenberger purchased the TrekDesk online for about $479. The TrekDesk is a wide, tall, adjustable desk that fits virtually any existing treadmill. She simply put it over the treadmill she already owned.

"Ever since I got the desk I don't complain about back pain and I'm much more comfortable" she smiled.

Weisenberger keeps her pace at just 1.4 miles an hour so she can concentrate on her work. The slow pace means she doesn't ever get sweaty or out-of-breath.

"I could be on it for three to seven hours, and so I almost always walk about 30-some miles a week," she said.

Stand Up Operation

Although a treadmill desk is the preferred method of beating the "sitting all day blues," it's not always practical. The next best thing is a standing desk. It's also cheaper than a treadmill desk.

CBN's Dorothy Schulte produces promotions for "The 700 Club." She figured out an inexpensive way to avoid sitting down all day by designing her own standup desk.

As a result, she said she feels so much better.

"I noticed a lot of the back pain went away," she said. "I was a lot less tired at the end of the day."

For just $35, she simply attached two wooden blocks to the bottom of her regular desk, raising it about 10 inches. She also replaced her chair with a bar stool.

"I don't stand the whole day, constantly," she explained. "I'll probably go back and forth 30, 45 minutes at a time."

Off Your Duff

If you can't walk or stand at your desk, don't worry. There are still lots of things you can do to minimize the health hazards of a desk job.

For example, offset the effects of sitting by taking the stairs at your work place, instead of the elevator.

Levine recommends using a portable stair-stepper periodically throughout the day.

"Slide it under the desk," he advised. "When the phone goes, you pull it out, and start stepping away."

Another idea to break up the long hours sitting is to set an alarm as a reminder to take a lap or two around your work area. It's a practice that might not seem like much, but Levine said short, sporadic movement really adds up.

"People get as much or potentially more benefit from being up and walking a little bit every hour than going to the gym three times a week," he said.

Instead of emailing a co-worker, walk over to them. Choose the printer that's far from your desk, and park far away from your building.

"I'd say the number one item, and we've deployed this in over 60 corporations in the United States, is walk-and-talk meetings," Levine said.

Also, walk at lunchtime. A good way to measure how you're doing is to wear a pedometer, which keeps track of how many steps you're taking. A good goal is 10,000 a day.

The Bottom Line

The office isn't the only danger zone. When you get home, avoid being a couch potato.

Studies show each hour sitting in front of the television means an 11 percent higher death risk.

So the bottom line is, there are lots of ways to get off your bottom! That way you can keep your desk job and your good health.

If you're not growing, you're dying.
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#2

Sitting is the New Smoking

Is movement mandatory for this or is laying in a bed just as good as not sitting. I know sitting is very bad for your spine but I think the worst thing of sitting is te fact that you're bent over and pressing down on your organs a lot. When you lay down you can avoid that.
Since i'm jobless and work/write/study/read from home it's easy to stay in bed much longer and work from there.

Just thinking out loud here.

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#3

Sitting is the New Smoking

Wow interesting.

Seems like you could mitigate it somewhat with 5-15 bodyweight squats every once in a while, and of course getting up and walking as much as poss.

We do work in ridiculous environments. I feel so much better when Im outside, in nature, and being social. Our work was like that for hundreds of thousands of years until the "progress" of civilisation...
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#4

Sitting is the New Smoking

I recommend 8 Steps to a Pain-Free Back if you want to learn how to sit (and stand, lie etc.) properly.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yYJ4hEYudE
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#5

Sitting is the New Smoking

More evidence that supports this notion:

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/17/magazi...ing-t.html
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#6

Sitting is the New Smoking

Where's the research?

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#7

Sitting is the New Smoking

Quote: (11-12-2012 11:06 AM)Samseau Wrote:  

Where's the research?

Research?? Where that's comin from we don't need "research". Wtf mate
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#8

Sitting is the New Smoking

You're right. I am now standing as I type this

Contributor at Return of Kings.  I got banned from twatter, which is run by little bitches and weaklings. You can follow me on Gab.

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#9

Sitting is the New Smoking

I got a standing desk setup at work recently. it has adjustable height, so with a higher chair I can sit at it also. I like it, but have to admit that standing all day is hard on the feet, so I probably stand half of the day and sit the other half.
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#10

Sitting is the New Smoking

http://iamnotaprogrammer.com/Ikea-Standi...llars.html

im off to IKEA
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#11

Sitting is the New Smoking

Quote: (11-12-2012 08:08 AM)Neil Skywalker Wrote:  

Is movement mandatory for this or is laying in a bed just as good as not sitting.

Both are just as bad as each other. Laying in bed regularly has negative effects on your gastrointestinal/vascular/respiratory system and causes atrophy of muscles to name a few.

Even standing still for 8 hours a day will give you back pain. Bottom-line is we need regular movement throughout our day. Alternating between standing and sitting is a great start. It's just a matter of integrating it into our routine. We are literally not designed to be static.

If you're not growing, you're dying.
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#12

Sitting is the New Smoking

Quote: (11-12-2012 04:13 PM)calihunter Wrote:  

http://iamnotaprogrammer.com/Ikea-Standi...llars.html

im off to IKEA


That ones good but this site has a few more too:

http://lifehacker.com/5934906/standing-d...ikea-guide

Quote: (08-18-2016 12:05 PM)dicknixon72 Wrote:  
...and nothing quite surprises me anymore. If I looked out my showroom window and saw a fully-nude woman force-fucking an alligator with a strap-on while snorting xanex on the roof of her rental car with her three children locked inside with the windows rolled up, I wouldn't be entirely amazed.
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#13

Sitting is the New Smoking

I drive a lot.
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#14

Sitting is the New Smoking

Here's a great article about staying fit while working at a desk:
"Reinventing the Office: How to Lose Fat and Increase Productivity at Work." The real downfall of this is the furniture needed - doesn't really lend itself to the traveling lifestyle, which is the reason I started an online business in the first place.

I also think that if you work sitting down you should be working out twice a day or make sure that your off-hours are full of physical activity. I'd like to work 5 hours a day and spend the majority of the rest of my time on physical hobbies as well as work out on a regular basis.

What about more active mobile business ideas? I'm a freelance writer and sometimes web designer, but it'd sure be nice to find a business niche where you could move around more and yet still be location independent. Seems a near impossibility though...Any ideas?

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