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To improve balance and prevent falls in your senior years, tai-chi or dance your way

To improve balance and prevent falls in your senior years, tai-chi or dance your way

Mint3 days ago
While watching a young twenty-something fitness instructor balance on one foot while tying the shoelaces of the other, I remarked that such feats were a generational thing. 'Nope," he said. 'That's a balance thing." Saying which, the class that followed was all about finding balance amidst stumbles and grumbles.
Falls can kill, not just dramatic plunges but also seemingly minor slips – particularly among older adults. A friend recently texted that he lost his 90-year-old father to a fall at home. Another's 89-year-old mother-in-law required stitches after a fall and never fully recovered. The incidence of falls in people over 65 is around 28 percent.
Dr Shobha N, neurologist and stroke physician at Manipal Hospital in Bengaluru, cites several causes of falls in older adults: impaired vision or hearing, decreased muscle mass, diminished foot sensation, slowed reflexes and altered gait. Underlying conditions like diabetes, cardiac issues, postural hypotension and incontinence all increase fall risk. Some medications and vitamin deficiencies contribute too. Environmental hazards—slippery floors, poor lighting, loose rugs—are added risks.
While some falls are inevitable, many are preventable with improved balance. Fitness experts advise that training should begin early rather than post 50. Saurabh Bothra, yoga instructor and co-founder of Habuild, an online wellness platform, stresses that balance training is a preventive tool, not a late-life remedy. 'Like most aspects of health, you can't suddenly 'catch up' later," he says. 'Incorporating balance exercises alongside cardio and strength training from your early decades ensures that your body and brain remain resilient as you age."
The adage 'use it or lose it" applies here. In her book, Better Balance for Life, published in 2018, Carol Clements writes: 'Balance is a skill. It gets better with practice and deteriorates without it." The book includes a 10-week stability programme, recommending everyday tasks like standing on one foot while brushing teeth or walking an imaginary tightrope while on the phone.
Dance is another effective way to train balance. Jayachandra Pallazhy, founder and artistic director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts, says balance and agility are the by-products of dancing. 'All forms of dancing engage the pectoral muscles, which support posture and help improve balance," he notes. Dancing combines auditory (music), visual (movement), and kinesthetic (body awareness) inputs, which engages multiple brain regions simultaneously. 'When you move you connect it with your breath, almost like painting or sculpting with your breath. With dance you understand the alignment of your body and it propels itself." In addition, dancing enhances mental and physical coordination.
Mind-body disciplines such as yoga and tai chi similarly strengthen balance. In tai chi, intentional meditative movement activates the brain while training the body. A controlled trial found that a therapeutic tai ji quan programme was more effective than stretching or multimodal exercises in reducing serious falls in older adults. Zi, a 70-year-old tai chi instructor in Philadelphia, teaches a senior class in a public park each morning. 'Holding on to our dan tien—the body's energy centre—is key," she says. One recommended pose is the Golden Rooster Stands: lift one knee while raising the same-side arm and hold for a few seconds before switching sides.
Yoga, too, offers asanas that improve balance. 'Balance is fundamentally a neurological process," says Bothra. 'It also reflects leg strength and coordination, essential for preventing falls." Poses such as Vrikshasana (Tree Pose), Garudasana (Eagle), Ardha Chandrasana (Half Moon), and Tadasana (Mountain) are safe for older practitioners if done near a wall or with support. Bengaluru-based Shubha Rao, 70, has practised yoga since her thirties. 'I continue to do balance asanas and teach other seniors in my apartment building. It helps with stability and confidence," she says.
Yet, even with preventive steps, falling is at times inevitable for anyone. This is where learning how to fall becomes crucial. Skateboarders, for instance, practise falling almost as much as riding. 'The first thing you teach yourself is how to fall safely," says Bobby, 29, a skateboarder practising since he was 10-years-old. In judo, knowing how to land without injury is essential. The Dutch Judo Federation launched ZekerBewegen (feeling safe in movement) in 2015, a fall-prevention programme for seniors. It teaches techniques for falling safely while seated and standing by tucking the chin to minimize injury to head and spine and rolling to distribute impact. 'When we teach swimming to prevent drowning," asks Rao, 'why can't we teach falling to prevent injury?"
Dr Shobha N suggests some simple screening tools to assess the risk of falls.
Tug Test: In this screening tool, a patient is asked to get up from a chair and walk at a normal pace for 3 meters, turn around, walk and sit back in the chair. If this takes more than 13.5 seconds then, the person is at a risk of fall.
Gait Speed: If the gait speed is less than 0.8m/s, then the person is at a risk.
TIPS TO IMPROVE YOUR BALANCE
2. Vision and hearing should be corrected with glasses or hearing aids.
3. Just 20 minutes of daily exercise can enhance muscle mass and joint flexibility. Stair climbing and strength training help slow osteoporosis.
4. Staying hydrated and getting sufficient sleep reduce the risk of tumbles.
5. Vitamin D and B12 supplementation may aid balance, while avoiding alcohol and sedatives is crucial. Managing blood pressure, adjusting anti-epileptic medications and correcting electrolyte imbalances all support fall prevention.
6. Practical measures—such as walking slowly, keeping hands free for support, and using canes or walkers when needed—can make a significant difference. If a fall occurs, it's vital to stay calm and rise slowly with support.
7. Ultimately, addressing both internal and external risk factors—and learning how to fall safely—can prevent serious head, neck and spinal injuries that often compromise an older adult's independence.
Jayanthi Madhukar is a Bengaluru-based writer.
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To improve balance and prevent falls in your senior years, tai-chi or dance your way
To improve balance and prevent falls in your senior years, tai-chi or dance your way

Mint

time3 days ago

  • Mint

To improve balance and prevent falls in your senior years, tai-chi or dance your way

While watching a young twenty-something fitness instructor balance on one foot while tying the shoelaces of the other, I remarked that such feats were a generational thing. 'Nope," he said. 'That's a balance thing." Saying which, the class that followed was all about finding balance amidst stumbles and grumbles. Falls can kill, not just dramatic plunges but also seemingly minor slips – particularly among older adults. A friend recently texted that he lost his 90-year-old father to a fall at home. Another's 89-year-old mother-in-law required stitches after a fall and never fully recovered. The incidence of falls in people over 65 is around 28 percent. Dr Shobha N, neurologist and stroke physician at Manipal Hospital in Bengaluru, cites several causes of falls in older adults: impaired vision or hearing, decreased muscle mass, diminished foot sensation, slowed reflexes and altered gait. Underlying conditions like diabetes, cardiac issues, postural hypotension and incontinence all increase fall risk. Some medications and vitamin deficiencies contribute too. Environmental hazards—slippery floors, poor lighting, loose rugs—are added risks. While some falls are inevitable, many are preventable with improved balance. Fitness experts advise that training should begin early rather than post 50. Saurabh Bothra, yoga instructor and co-founder of Habuild, an online wellness platform, stresses that balance training is a preventive tool, not a late-life remedy. 'Like most aspects of health, you can't suddenly 'catch up' later," he says. 'Incorporating balance exercises alongside cardio and strength training from your early decades ensures that your body and brain remain resilient as you age." The adage 'use it or lose it" applies here. In her book, Better Balance for Life, published in 2018, Carol Clements writes: 'Balance is a skill. It gets better with practice and deteriorates without it." The book includes a 10-week stability programme, recommending everyday tasks like standing on one foot while brushing teeth or walking an imaginary tightrope while on the phone. Dance is another effective way to train balance. Jayachandra Pallazhy, founder and artistic director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts, says balance and agility are the by-products of dancing. 'All forms of dancing engage the pectoral muscles, which support posture and help improve balance," he notes. Dancing combines auditory (music), visual (movement), and kinesthetic (body awareness) inputs, which engages multiple brain regions simultaneously. 'When you move you connect it with your breath, almost like painting or sculpting with your breath. With dance you understand the alignment of your body and it propels itself." In addition, dancing enhances mental and physical coordination. Mind-body disciplines such as yoga and tai chi similarly strengthen balance. In tai chi, intentional meditative movement activates the brain while training the body. A controlled trial found that a therapeutic tai ji quan programme was more effective than stretching or multimodal exercises in reducing serious falls in older adults. Zi, a 70-year-old tai chi instructor in Philadelphia, teaches a senior class in a public park each morning. 'Holding on to our dan tien—the body's energy centre—is key," she says. One recommended pose is the Golden Rooster Stands: lift one knee while raising the same-side arm and hold for a few seconds before switching sides. Yoga, too, offers asanas that improve balance. 'Balance is fundamentally a neurological process," says Bothra. 'It also reflects leg strength and coordination, essential for preventing falls." Poses such as Vrikshasana (Tree Pose), Garudasana (Eagle), Ardha Chandrasana (Half Moon), and Tadasana (Mountain) are safe for older practitioners if done near a wall or with support. Bengaluru-based Shubha Rao, 70, has practised yoga since her thirties. 'I continue to do balance asanas and teach other seniors in my apartment building. It helps with stability and confidence," she says. Yet, even with preventive steps, falling is at times inevitable for anyone. This is where learning how to fall becomes crucial. Skateboarders, for instance, practise falling almost as much as riding. 'The first thing you teach yourself is how to fall safely," says Bobby, 29, a skateboarder practising since he was 10-years-old. In judo, knowing how to land without injury is essential. The Dutch Judo Federation launched ZekerBewegen (feeling safe in movement) in 2015, a fall-prevention programme for seniors. It teaches techniques for falling safely while seated and standing by tucking the chin to minimize injury to head and spine and rolling to distribute impact. 'When we teach swimming to prevent drowning," asks Rao, 'why can't we teach falling to prevent injury?" Dr Shobha N suggests some simple screening tools to assess the risk of falls. Tug Test: In this screening tool, a patient is asked to get up from a chair and walk at a normal pace for 3 meters, turn around, walk and sit back in the chair. If this takes more than 13.5 seconds then, the person is at a risk of fall. Gait Speed: If the gait speed is less than 0.8m/s, then the person is at a risk. TIPS TO IMPROVE YOUR BALANCE 2. Vision and hearing should be corrected with glasses or hearing aids. 3. Just 20 minutes of daily exercise can enhance muscle mass and joint flexibility. Stair climbing and strength training help slow osteoporosis. 4. Staying hydrated and getting sufficient sleep reduce the risk of tumbles. 5. Vitamin D and B12 supplementation may aid balance, while avoiding alcohol and sedatives is crucial. Managing blood pressure, adjusting anti-epileptic medications and correcting electrolyte imbalances all support fall prevention. 6. Practical measures—such as walking slowly, keeping hands free for support, and using canes or walkers when needed—can make a significant difference. If a fall occurs, it's vital to stay calm and rise slowly with support. 7. Ultimately, addressing both internal and external risk factors—and learning how to fall safely—can prevent serious head, neck and spinal injuries that often compromise an older adult's independence. Jayanthi Madhukar is a Bengaluru-based writer.

Emotional strength as important as physical strength for men: Yoga expert Saurabh Bothra shares 7 healthy habits
Emotional strength as important as physical strength for men: Yoga expert Saurabh Bothra shares 7 healthy habits

Hindustan Times

time27-07-2025

  • Hindustan Times

Emotional strength as important as physical strength for men: Yoga expert Saurabh Bothra shares 7 healthy habits

Men often grow up being reminded to 'toughen up' whenever emotions surface. But expressing emotions needs to be normalized, and emotional strength must be as prioritized as physical strength, says yoga expert Saurabh Bothra. With rising burnout and the constant pressure of comparison, even men are turning to mind-body practices like yoga, breathwork, and therapy, not for trends, but for tangible results like better focus, clarity and sleep. The expert suggests healthy habits to build emotional strength in men, to avoid stress, anxiety and depression. A man with emotional strength may have better focus, clarity and healthier relationships.(Freepik) Why emotional strength can't be optional anymore Are you someone who locks yourself up in the 'never cry, handle problems alone, always appear in control' box associated with men? Silence can kill, says Bothra, pointing out statistics that in India, the male suicide rate stands at 14.2 per 100,000. "Unchecked distress bleeds into relationships and the workplace. Irritability, withdrawal, and reckless coping behaviours strain marriages, derail careers, and model unhealthy habits for the next generation. Emotional fitness flips that script," Bothra tells Health Shots. Habits to build emotional strength The goal of building these emotional strength habits is to develop the ability to notice, name, and regulate feelings without getting hijacked by them. The following practices cover body, mind, and community, and none require dramatic lifestyle overhauls, says Bothra. 1. Breath‑led movement Spend ten minutes each morning in slow, deliberate motion. A gentle Surya Namaskar or sun salutation sequence blends stretching with diaphragmatic breathing, down‑regulates the nervous system, and lubricates joints before the day's demands hit. No fancy gear, studio, or chanting required. 2. Name the emotion to tame it Keep a pocket notebook or phone note where you jot a one‑word check‑in three times daily — angry, restless, content, overwhelmed. Labeling converts vague discomfort into a manageable data point. Over weeks, patterns emerge, showing who or what reliably pushes buttons. That awareness is half the battle won. 3. Keep taking micro-breaks Treat the brain like a muscle that needs rest between sets. Schedule two five‑minute breaks in the workday to step outside, stretch, or practise box breathing (inhale‑hold‑exhale‑hold, four counts each). Short, regular resets beat one long vacation that never arrives. 4. Brotherhood, not bravado Statistics say 40 percent of Indian men still never discuss mental health. Break the stalemate by inviting a friend for coffee and opening with a simple 'I've been feeling weird lately, you ever get that?' Vulnerability given is often vulnerability returned. If circles of trust are scarce, structured men's groups — both in‑person and online — provide guided sharing without judgment. 5. Take professional help Therapy is not a last resort. It is coaching for the mind. A few sessions can teach evidence‑based techniques like cognitive reframing or acceptance and commitment strategies. Pairing this with movement‑oriented disciplines such as yoga, martial arts, or even mindful running produces a feedback loop: body calms mind, and an organised mind directs the body with purpose. 6. Learn to laugh and smile more Seek moments that genuinely make you laugh - be it a funny video, playful banter, or nostalgic memories. Smiling and laughing release endorphins, lower stress and remind you that joy too, is a skill worth practising. 7. Make habits stick Emotional fitness is about being more in control. It's the difference between reacting on impulse and responding with intention. That kind of resilience doesn't come from suppressing emotion or pushing through blindly. It comes from knowing what's happening inside you and learning how to work with it. Practices like conscious breathwork and simple asanas help build that internal awareness. You begin to notice what sets you off, what grounds you, and how to return to balance without needing to escape. Over time, this becomes less of a routine and more of a mindset. For any man who wants to show up fully for his work, his people, and himself, that mindset changes everything.

Yoga expert Saurabh Bothra shares 7 habits for men to build emotional strength, says silence can kill
Yoga expert Saurabh Bothra shares 7 habits for men to build emotional strength, says silence can kill

Hindustan Times

time27-07-2025

  • Hindustan Times

Yoga expert Saurabh Bothra shares 7 habits for men to build emotional strength, says silence can kill

Men often grow up being reminded to 'toughen up' whenever emotions surface. But expressing emotions needs to be normalized, and emotional strength must be as prioritized as physical strength, says yoga expert Saurabh Bothra. With rising burnout and the constant pressure of comparison, even men are turning to mind-body practices like yoga, breathwork, and therapy, not for trends, but for tangible results like better focus, clarity and sleep. The expert suggests healthy habits to build emotional strength in men, to avoid stress, anxiety and depression. A man with emotional strength may have better focus, clarity and healthier relationships.(Freepik) Why emotional strength can't be optional anymore Are you someone who locks yourself up in the 'never cry, handle problems alone, always appear in control' box associated with men? Silence can kill, says Bothra, pointing out statistics that in India, the male suicide rate stands at 14.2 per 100,000. "Unchecked distress bleeds into relationships and the workplace. Irritability, withdrawal, and reckless coping behaviours strain marriages, derail careers, and model unhealthy habits for the next generation. Emotional fitness flips that script," Bothra tells Health Shots. Habits to build emotional strength The goal of building these emotional strength habits is to develop the ability to notice, name, and regulate feelings without getting hijacked by them. The following practices cover body, mind, and community, and none require dramatic lifestyle overhauls, says Bothra. 1. Breath‑led movement Spend ten minutes each morning in slow, deliberate motion. A gentle Surya Namaskar or sun salutation sequence blends stretching with diaphragmatic breathing, down‑regulates the nervous system, and lubricates joints before the day's demands hit. No fancy gear, studio, or chanting required. 2. Name the emotion to tame it Keep a pocket notebook or phone note where you jot a one‑word check‑in three times daily — angry, restless, content, overwhelmed. Labeling converts vague discomfort into a manageable data point. Over weeks, patterns emerge, showing who or what reliably pushes buttons. That awareness is half the battle won. 3. Keep taking micro-breaks Treat the brain like a muscle that needs rest between sets. Schedule two five‑minute breaks in the workday to step outside, stretch, or practise box breathing (inhale‑hold‑exhale‑hold, four counts each). Short, regular resets beat one long vacation that never arrives. 4. Brotherhood, not bravado Statistics say 40 percent of Indian men still never discuss mental health. Break the stalemate by inviting a friend for coffee and opening with a simple 'I've been feeling weird lately, you ever get that?' Vulnerability given is often vulnerability returned. If circles of trust are scarce, structured men's groups — both in‑person and online — provide guided sharing without judgment. 5. Take professional help Therapy is not a last resort. It is coaching for the mind. A few sessions can teach evidence‑based techniques like cognitive reframing or acceptance and commitment strategies. Pairing this with movement‑oriented disciplines such as yoga, martial arts, or even mindful running produces a feedback loop: body calms mind, and an organised mind directs the body with purpose. 6. Learn to laugh and smile more Seek moments that genuinely make you laugh - be it a funny video, playful banter, or nostalgic memories. Smiling and laughing release endorphins, lower stress and remind you that joy too, is a skill worth practising. 7. Make habits stick Emotional fitness is about being more in control. It's the difference between reacting on impulse and responding with intention. That kind of resilience doesn't come from suppressing emotion or pushing through blindly. It comes from knowing what's happening inside you and learning how to work with it. Practices like conscious breathwork and simple asanas help build that internal awareness. You begin to notice what sets you off, what grounds you, and how to return to balance without needing to escape. Over time, this becomes less of a routine and more of a mindset. For any man who wants to show up fully for his work, his people, and himself, that mindset changes everything.

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