Office Yoga: Would you try these stretches at work?

After a full on week at work do you, like me, find yourself stretching your neck and shoulders and twisting your torso in an attempt to restore your body to its less hunched and scrunched up state?  I'm sure I'm not the only one and recently it's been in the press that office workers must exercise for an hour a day to counter death risk. While we all know we're going to go at some point - as my mum says, that's the one certainty we have - there is much advice on how we should live better, more enriched lives. Everywhere.

This post isn't a "you should do this kind of post", because I'm sure we've all read lots like that and quite frankly, for many of us we agree with it, nod along and then life gets in the way again. That's what makes me think it's about the little changes we make that can have lasting impacts.

And on that hour a day of exercise thing, I'm currently feeling quite smug as my new walking commute takes me about that. I wrote how I'd upped my step count from an average of 2,000 steps a day to the recommended 10,000 when I started my new job.

Now, it's a couple of weeks later and I'm still walking to work every day. I've not braved the bike yet, but I will now the weather is cooling a bit. Although they've forecast temperatures of 30 degrees again next week, but I'm not complaining!  And even though it's a relatively new change to my routine, I think if my walking commute were to stop completely I'd miss it. And that's in four weeks.

What else is noticeable is that quite often I'm walking more than 10,000 steps a day and on Tuesday this week, I hit my all time high of over 16,000 steps. And even better my legs didn't ache. How amazing is that?  I've found that I'm also a little disappointed if my step counter doesn't hit five digits in a day - yes I know I need to get out more...

It really does show that we adapt quickly.  

But anyway, back to the yoga. Even with my hour of exercise a day, I still feel the need to unscrunch myself at the end of the week. So when the team at Furniture at Work shared their #OfficeYoga infographic it really made me think, why wait until the end of the week, or even until the end of the day?

I know my crunch points are my shoulders and lower back, my workspace along with the other office desks are set up so they're optimised for the people that use them. I strongly believe there's no point being uncomfortable at your desk, because we spend a good part of our day there. And repeatedly sitting out of alignment will have an impact on our body.

I know that cat stretches are good for my back, and thinking about doing one (or more) while seated on my chair is entirely do-able. I mean it's not the sort of thing you need full gym kit for is it? And having tried it at work this week, it's not something that makes you look a right lemon in the middle of the office either. I think the male constituent of the office might have thought me a little strange, but I also think they probably didn't even notice!

The other stretch that really works for me is the Spinal Twists. Twisting my torso from side to side helps me restore the space between my vertebrae - or that's how I imagine it anyway. I know I sit taller and my posture is better afterwards. And little and often, isn't that what we're told?

Would you do yoga moves in the office? Which ones, either from those below or others you've adapted work for you?

This is a collaborative post with Furniture at Work, but all views and opinions are my own.

Post Comment Love & our Summer Photo Collage, 9-11 September 2016

Hello and welcome back to Post Comment Love. Thank you for the pictures you've sent through, it's been great to see summer through your eyes, but more of that in a minute. 

My week has been upside down with nights out on Monday and Tuesday, which once again threw my routine. Monday was an unusual night out and I went all daredevil, well for me anyway. I'm not usually one for rides and slides but when I was offered the chance to ride the slide on the tallest sculpture in the UK, I found myself saying yes.

As I arrived at the Olympic Park realisation of how high it was. 176 metres I discovered shortly afterwards. Well there was only one photo I could share with you this week wasn't there? It's looking down onto the slide - that metal pipe - through a gap in the floor on the viewing platform above. I'll be sharing more about my experience soon, so look out for that.

The #PoCoLo Summer Photo Collage

Thank you for sharing your pictures, Morgan and I have enjoyed looking at the fun you got up to this summer. And yes, I know choosing one photo was hard, I struggled too!

There was some camping, a wedding (congrats!), days at the beach and at the pool, a walk in the countryside, vegetables and hedges and of course there was ice cream. Quite a busy summer all round, I'd say. I'll leave you to work out who did what.

With thanks to: (top row left to right) Karen from Two Tiny Hands and Sophie from Mama Mei(middle row) Jayne from Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs and Alana from Burnished Chaos(bottom row) Rosie from Eco-Gites of Lenault, Stephanie (me!) and Morgan from…

With thanks to: (top row left to right) Karen from Two Tiny Hands and Sophie from Mama Mei
(middle row) Jayne from Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs and Alana from Burnished Chaos
(bottom row) Rosie from Eco-Gites of Lenault, Stephanie (me!) and Morgan from Morgan's Mileu

Next week we've got a fab #BloggersShowcase for you, and don't forget to get in touch if you'd like to be featured - we'd love to share more about you and your blog.

A cloistered garden

The first week we were in France the weather was gorgeous and one of the warmer days coincided with the day we celebrated our ninth wedding anniversary. A day after the actual date, but a cycle-free day so lunch with some bubbles was our plan. One bottle of bubbly down we hatched a plan to have a mini picnic in the pretty garden we'd walked through to get into town.

So with provisions we settled ourselves on one of the benches in what can be best described as a cloistered hedge, with this as our view for the next few hours. 

A cloistered view of Blois

Captivating isn't it?  

Through an archway of hedges

And tranquil too. And here it's easy to see what I mean about cloisters, isn't it?

Arches everywhere

The garden itself was quite formal with oblong beds full of lavender and irises, which were sadly past their best. Not by long, a week or so perhaps. But it was easy to imagine how they'd transform the place. Even as they were dying back though they had a certain charm.

The irises were just past their best

We had the garden to ourselves for much of the afternoon, which was amazing but every so often people would hurry down these stairs, across the garden and down into the lower garden using it as a very pretty cut through to the centre of town. I think it'd be a cut through I'd use regularly too.

Stairs to make a grand entrance

Just imagine the kind of entrances you could make with stairs as grand as these.  Hopefully, most of them upright too!

I decided to see where these people were heading so I followed their path through the upper part of the garden and enjoyed the glimpse of the lower garden. From the top of another set of stairs, I could see the drama of the diagonal hedges alternated with planting.

Looking down to the lower level

As I returned to the cloistered hedge I did find a couple of irises hanging on, not many though.

I did find some iris in flower though

It was wonderfully cool to sit under the cloistered canopy, and the view up was none too shabby either.  

The tree canopy was fantastic and the shade was welcome too

There were more flowers in the lower garden; foxgloves, dahlias, cosmos and more lavender, as well as a pink mystery plant.  

The foxgloves were a welcome sight
a mystery plant, but pretty
A cosmos with some support
The white flower *almost* looked out of place
a flower unfurling

And nestled among all the flowers were vistas to stunning French architecture, and of course the hedges! 

And ah what a view
hollyhocks on the way
Time to move on and we left through the lower part of the garden
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