Agility exercises (Credit: Canva)
Movement give rise to blood circulation and oxygenation creates a flow and this flow moves away stagnated feeling of depressions, disappointments, hurts, pain and bring about creativity, joy, happiness, confidence, conviction, productivity. That is the way your mind gets refreshed and recreated, what we call recreation through these exercises.
In today’s fast-paced world, maintaining both mental agility and physical fitness is crucial for overall well-being. Fortunately, there are exercises that can help you achieve both. Here are a few options to consider:
Yoga: This ancient holistic practice combines both physical postures, breathing exercises, and meditation to enhance flexibility, strength, and balance. Regular practice improves focus, memory, and cognitive function while reducing stress.
Tai Chi: This martial art is known for its slow, deliberate movements and deep breathing. It improves physical strength, flexibility, and balance while enhancing mental agility through concentration, coordination, and mindfulness.
Dance: Dancing is a fun way to stay fit and improve mental agility. It requires coordination, rhythm, and memory, keeping your brain sharp. Various styles offer different physical and cognitive benefits.
Brain Training Games: Engage in games like Sudoku, crossword puzzles, and chess to significantly boost mental agility. These activities challenge your brain, improve problem-solving skills, and enhance memory.
Brisk Walking: This aerobic exercise stimulates blood flow, boosting oxygenation to the brain and promoting mental clarity. Aim for at least 30 minutes of brisk walking per session, three to four times a week, to improve cardiovascular health, strengthen muscles, and enhance cognitive function.
Incorporating these exercises into your daily routine can lead to significant improvements in both mental and physical health. Whether you prefer the tranquility of yoga or the intensity of brisk walking, there’s something for everyone to enjoy and benefit from.
Remember to start slowly, listen to your body, and combine exercise with a balanced diet and sufficient sleep for optimal results. Exercises create a sense of rhythm, rhythm creates a sense of harmony and harmony makes your disturbed mind feel sound again.
The cacophony becomes classical music, mind is at rest, mind is in Ananda. To reiterate when breath and movement work in synchrony , acromony is alleviated.
So stay fit, stay healthy and happy!
(Credit-Canva)
The balance our body gives us is something that most of us take for granted. Doing exercises that build core strength and help you gain better balance. However, once you start focusing on exercises and yoga poses that allow you to gain better control over your body, a lot of your clumsy attributes like tripping, being unable to catch yourself when you fall and dropping things constantly will improve.
One such yoga pose that can help you improve your balance and focus, is Vrikshasana. As you may know, there are different types of yoga, while some help you strengthen your body with rapid movements and endurance, others are more movement based, focused on the flow and connection between poses. These consist of many different asanas that focus on different aspects of your health and body.
According to the International Journal of Yoga 2016 study, while most of us focus on backward and forward movement, sideways balance involves hip and ankle muscles too. It's been found that sideways changes are controlled by hip muscles, while forward and backward changes are controlled by ankle muscles. Virkshasana aims to strengthen our ankles and take pressure of your feet with the help of your hip muscles. Here is how it benefits our health.
Tree Pose makes you stand on one leg, which really challenges your balance. Your brain and muscles work together to keep you steady, strengthening this important skill for everyday activities and preventing falls. It helps your body learn to control its center of gravity.
To stay standing tall in Tree Pose, your standing leg muscles have to work hard to support your weight. Holding the pose builds strength in your thighs, calves, and ankles, making them more stable and resilient for walking, standing, and other movements.
When you reach your arms overhead in Tree Pose, it creates a nice stretch along your sides and back. The way you position your lifted leg can also create a stretch in your hips and inner thighs, improving flexibility in these key areas of your body.
By engaging different muscle groups and requiring focus, Tree Pose helps to wake up your entire system. The combination of stretch, strength, and balance work can leave you feeling more energized and connected to your body after practicing the pose.
Although not the main focus, staying balanced on one leg in Tree Pose requires your core muscles – those in your abdomen and back – to work to keep you upright and prevent wobbling. This helps to strengthen your core for better posture and stability.
Credits: Canva
Body Mass Index or BMI is a calculation that is used to understand the relationship between your height and weight. It is very commonly used in healthcare settings and also in gyms or weight training centers. It helps fitness coaches and healthcare professionals to categorize people as underweight, normal weight, overweight, or obese. The goal of BMI is to get a rough estimate of body fat, which can then highlight potential risks for chronic health problems.
But while BMI is easy to calculate and useful as a general guideline, it doesn’t tell the full story of a person’s health.
The formula for BMI differs slightly depending on the measurement system you use.
Metric: BMI = weight (kg) ÷ height (m²)
Imperial: BMI = (weight in pounds ÷ height in inches²) × 703
For example, someone who weighs 180 pounds and is 5 feet 6 inches tall (66 inches) would have a BMI of:
(180 ÷ 66²) × 703 = 29.0
That would place them in the "overweight" category.
BMI is also divided into these categories that then determine where the person falls under the spectrum from underweight to obesity:
Generally, the higher your BMI, the greater your risk of health conditions such as heart disease, type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, sleep apnea, fatty liver, and even certain cancers.
While BMI is not a diagnostic test, it can be a helpful screening tool. It is used to track trends in population, raise awareness of weight-related risks, and to initiate conversations between patients and healthcare providers.
However, BMI often leaves out the muscle mass, bone structure, or fat distribution. One of the most common example is when an athlete with high muscle mass is classified as "overweight" despite having a low body fat.
This is why, there are other ways to measure too, including:
Excess belly fat is a stronger risk factor than fat stored elsewhere.
Men: waist > 40 inches
Women: waist > 35 inches
Tools like InBody or SECA scales provide a breakdown of fat mass, muscle, and water weight—offering more detail than BMI.
This scan is the gold standard for measuring body fat, bone density, and fat distribution—but it’s expensive and not widely available.
Lab tests like fasting glucose, cholesterol levels, and inflammation markers help assess overall health more accurately than BMI alone.
BMI could also vary depending on your ethnicity. More South Asians are risk for diabetes and heart disease at lower BMIs. For them, "overweight" may begin at 23 and "obese" at 25. African Americans may have higher muscle mass and lower visceral fat, which can cause BMI to overestimate health risks. Hispanic and Indigenous populations may carry more risk at lower BMIs due to genetic factors.
While it is important to care about your BMI, however, it should not be the only way to measure your health. You must also consider waist size, body composition, fitness level, blood test results, and ethnic background.
Credits: Instagram
Kareena Kapoor Khan, and whatever she does, is always making headlines. Even at the age of 44, she is an epitome of fitness. Out of her duties, she ensures to devote time to fitness, through various workout forms, including yoga.
Her Yoga instructor, Anushka Parwani, revealed in a recent interview with ETimes that Kareena in fact was her first ever student. She had always focused on fitness over weight loss.
Anushka Parwani is a celebrity trainer, who has trained Alia Bhatt and Deepika Padukone. In the interview, she shared insights from Kareena's routine and how her dedication to yoga keeps her fit!
What has helped Kareena is how she has been able to understand her body and its need and thus she compliments those needs with yoga. Her instructor also revealed that Kareena never desired to lose weight, but to maintain her overall fitness, including adjusting her waist size.
"Kareena is the most aware of her body. I know this because I have been with her...she was my first-ever student, not just the first actor I worked with. There is so much to learn form her because she is so aware. She has always loved yoga, and she understands her body as well. So, we know when to push a little and alter the workout or when to do variations and just do breathwork. Right now, we are very balanced. It is also about pausing. With experience and age comes pausing; she knows when to pause," shared her instructor.
Her instructor also revealed that the actor does a lot of mixes of animal flows, and strength, as well as cardiovascular-based workouts.
However, reveals her instructor, her true best friend to fitness has been yoga. This is also because Yoga offers a sustainable and holistic solution. It also combines fat-burning, muscle toning, and core strengthening benefits. Furthermore, yoga also helps one calm there mind.
Here are 6 yoga asanas that can help you stay fit and keep your waistline in check like Kareena Kapoor khan.
Here's for you to try out:
Benefits: Strengthens legs, stretches the spine and waist, improves digestion.
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Benefits: Tones abs, improves balance, strengthens core and hip flexors.
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Benefits: Improves spinal flexibility, aids digestion, massages internal organs.
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Benefits: Strengthens thighs and glutes, improves balanceand detoxification.
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Benefits: Strengthens back muscles, opens chest, relieves stress.
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Benefits: Strengthens arms, core, and legs; improves balance.
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