Timekeeping: Tell Me Why I Don't Like Mondays
Bob Geldof is hardly alone in being less than enthused about the start of the week, and the mystery as to why we don't like it has been equally universal.
We can point to psychological factors that might make it less appealing, than a Friday certainly, but there's a corresponding physicality to it that has, seemingly, made less sense. An off-ness to it that makes catching your tram on Monday morning feel more like you’re struggling to make your connection through Frankfurt.
Baby steps: Bringing the abstract of a distant goal into everyday reality.
Behaviour goals are the means to the end, an action, over which you have direct control every day - things you can choose to do. Or not. This step further imposes a degree of honesty likely missing from an ‘aim for the stars’ fantasy. If reality was absent from the goal-setting process, here is where it makes it's boringly necessary appearance.
Aesthetic vs Athletic: Form will always follows function, but not vice versa.
In just the same way that different training methodologies will help or hinder us in achieving a particular goal, so will our point of focus.
Give Me Strength: The fountain of youth.
It's not a game-changer. As the precursor to all other qualities - power, speed, endurance and skill, strength is the game. Despite this, it's pursuit has been denied to half of us. If they train, men, will sooner or later try to pick up something heavy. Being men, it's likely to be sooner, and heavier, than it should be. Women, conversely, are lead away from this and those that do cross the divide - usually through high-level sports coaching - have been the exception.
Movement Literacy: The alphabet with which your body speaks.
If mobility is restricted, this sensory capability is dulled, affecting the quality of information passed back up the chain. Every joint beyond that point in the chain then operates on only part of the story - best guesses and rumour over the full facts.
Breathe Easy: When you're doing something 20,000 times a day, you want to do it right.
As with our quality of movement - for whatever reason, whether through injury, posture or habit, even with fundamental flaws in our patterns, the body will find a way around things - a compensation. For breathing it is no different, and our posture and daily habits can also be feeding subtle breathing pattern disorders.
New horizons: The practice of goal setting
The most inspiring speech from someone else will never outweigh your own whispered argument in defence of your goal.
Comfortably Dumb - part 2: Cold Comfort for Change.
If this degree of discomfort presents an insurmountable barrier, how do you think that type of self-limiting thinking will play out in your everyday life? Your brain is a learning machine, and this becomes a practised and ingrained behaviour - catastrophising anything that doesn’t fall inside your neatly drawn parameters.
Comfortably Dumb - part 1: The misery of eternal comfort
Comfort and convenience cocoon us but this is a reverse chrysalis, transforming us from butterfly to caterpillar. Instead of stepping outside your comfort zone - the mantra of all personal development - it's become far more likely you'll leave it only on a stretcher.
Walk the Line: Keeping your balance
Good balance and core strength go hand in hand, and any focus on quality of movement must also be 'balanced' - they can hardly be separated. Insurance from a fall becomes nothing short of life-saving as we age, but our skills here, or lack of them, extend well beyond these more obvious associations, to better posture, and less pain.