If you’re someone who battles chronic pain day after day then exercise is probably the last thing on your mind. But, for people with arthritis, daily exercise is essential and can even be life changing. Research shows that just 30 minutes of moderate exercise per day has many benefits including:
- Maintain range of motion in joints
- Avoid stiffness
- Improves circulation
- Strengthens the structures that surround and protect your joints
- Better pain management
- Stronger bones – protection against osteoporosis
- Helps prevent injury
- Helps maintain a healthy weight
- Improves balance and coordination
- Reduces stress
- Improves sleep
- Increases energy
- Better breathing
- Improves self-esteem and confidence
RA and exercise is a sore subject
Most Rheumatologists and health care providers will recommend arthritis patients stay physically active. In fact, The American College of Rheumatology reports that physically active individuals are healthier, happier and live longer than those who are inactive and unfit. This is especially true for people with arthritis. Yet, arthritis is one of the most common reasons people give for not exercising or participating in recreational activities.
So what exercises are helpful and safe?
Always start by consulting your doctor. Ask about limitations and restrictions. Regardless of the level of disease activity you have, it’s always important to protect your joint from anything that causes stress or pain. Ask your doctor for guidance in choosing a level of exercise that you will benefit from – therapeutic/ rehabilitative, recreational or competitive. Fitness is not one-size-fits-all. Find your unique fit formula, one that will protect and strengthen your body and not cause harm.
Once you have the green light, ease into your fitness routine but aim to work up to 30 minutes of moderate exercise per day if you’re able. Finding that 30 minutes is a challenge, and when you’re new to fitness it’s inconvenient and uncomfortable. But so is living with arthritis.
If you believe you can find relief through physical activity and you want to exercise more than any reason that’s stopping you, then you are already winning. You are making a decision to control the disease so that it does not control you.
Follow your unique fitness formula and you’ll become stronger, healthier and happier each and every day.
Tips for making exercise doable
Start slowly
Feeling overwhelmed?
I know exactly how you feel. Four years ago when I was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis I was overwhelmed with information. Dr. Google provided lots of good advice but none of it could take the pain away or give me the energy I needed to go about my day. I spent many months lying on the couch motionless and in pain. It was important to me to be an active participant in my care and I was fortunate to be in the care of some very good doctors who helped me to develop a plan to become well. Managing RA is a lifetime commitment that, for me, includes medication, nutrition and fitness. What worked for me is not the answer for everyone. But I hope that by creating awareness I will inspire others to seek out their unique wellness plan.
Beachbody fitness programs are the tool that I used to get started with fitness.
The programs are very different from other exercise dvds because they offer a complete wellness system that includes a nutritional guide, free personal coaching and an online community of support to help you reach your goals. Many of their programs offer low impact, low intensity workouts that are suited for people with exercise limitations. You exercise at your own pace, in the privacy of your own home and most workouts take only 30 minutes to complete. If you would like to learn more about Beachbody’s fitness programs or how I can help you as a coach please fill out the form below.
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