A Stumble Caught in Time
The art of walking takes an enormous amount of
communication from our brain to the foot and the foot ot the
brain.
A famous neurologist once called a footstep "a
stumble caught in time". The art of walking takes an enormous amount of
communication from our brain to the foot and the foot ot the brain. It also
requires the integration of our balance mechanism into this whole process. If
this any of this fails we fall. It is that
simple.#2 Boomer Alert As we age the
communication between our brain and our feet starts to get dimmer. One reason is
that shoes have an impact on this information superhighway. If you think of the
foot as a sensory organ then a shoe in a sense is a "sensory blindfold" or a
roadblock.Currently there are research
projects underway to amp up the signals from the bottom of our feet and from the
very complex communication center, the ankle. It is very promising for
preventing seniors from falling.In one
approach subconscious signals are sent through shoe inserts to the foot and on
up to the brain in one project. The purpose is to keep seniors from falling by
simply sending more information. More information means better righting position
and better recovery from starting to fall. The translation is simple- less hip
fractures, the killer of the
elderly.But falls also involve
toppling over so another team is amping up the signals from your ankles. This
device wraps around the ankle and "talks" to the brain about your ankle's
position in relation to the ground. If you start to tip it feeds more
information up the side where the tipping is taking
place.How to do this at
home.Until these devices are perfected
there are a lot of things to do.1)
Take that sensory blind fold off or simply translated it
meansremove your shoes. This alone amps up
the signal from the foot to the
brain.2) Roll the bottom of your foot
on a foot roller. A simple foot roller can do worlds of good in reawakening
these lines of communication. And the bottom of the foot is the key to staying
upright. 3) Add the element of touch
and the communication is even richer. Research has shown that partner
reflexology can be quite beneficial with patients undergoing chemotheraphy. The
reason is simple. We all react very well to human
touch.Go to a reflexologist or find a
foot friend to trade sessions with. And there is nothing that can truly measure
a mother's touch. Family reflexology doesn't just provide a physical benefit but
can be a lasting memory.4) Rotate your
ankles. This affects all four major muscle groups coming down from the legs. It
also reawakens this communication hub we call the
ankle.Rotating the ankles moves nerve
signals and both blood and lymph fluids through the bottleneck of the ankle. It
opens up the traffic jam that occurs here and starts things flowing
again.To rotate your ankles simple
rotate your ankles first in one direction then the other. You can use your big
toe to draw a clockface in the air if you like but cover both clockwise and
counterclockwise directions.There are
a lot more ways to open up these pathways. We will cover them in upcoming blogs.
But remember the more information we get from the feet the better chance we have
to stay upright into a ripe old
age.Kevin
Kunz
Posted: Thu - October 18, 2007 at 08:34 AM