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Why sitting down destroys you | Roger Frampton | TEDxLeamingtonSpa

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    Thank you.
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    So, the other day, I was giving a talk
    to a bunch of young models
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    on having a career
    in the fashion industry.
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    And, I really wanted to tell them
    about my upcoming TED talk.
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    So I go, "Hey guys,
    has anyone here heard of TED?"
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    And in typical model fashion,
    this is the reply I get:
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    "Yeah, I've seen them both,
    and their teddy bear's hilarious."
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    (Laughter)
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    Like, what?!
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    The youth of today,
    it made me laugh so much.
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    I mean, I can't really say much.
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    When I was 15, I wanted
    to be a bodybuilder.
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    Not just any bodybuilder though,
    the number one: Arnold Schwarzenegger.
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    I actually remember day one
    on my attempt to get a body like this guy.
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    There was this local
    old school gym in East London,
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    and it looked like something
    you might see in a "Rocky" movie.
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    It was this converted garage space
    with ripped black benches,
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    rusting bar bells,
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    and these posters of ex-bodybuilding
    champions on the wall,
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    including Schwarzenegger himself
    as a goal to aspire to.
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    Now, the day I walked in there,
    I met the owner,
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    this proper Cockney guy called Dave.
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    I described to him my health and fitness
    goals in great, lengthy detail,
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    you know, just like
    an adolescent kid does:
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    "I want to get massive."
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    (Laughter)
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    But he nodded, you know,
    he really understood what I wanted.
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    He pointed to the squat rack,
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    and he says,
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    "That over there, son,
    [that's how] you get big legs.
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    And that over there,
    pull into the bench press.
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    that's how you get a big chest.
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    And these dumb bells
    - here - for big arms.
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    And that's about it.
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    Now off you go, son."
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    So off I did go, dad.
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    I mean, it was a pretty
    simple concept, really.
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    If you can get from A to B
    in eight repetitions,
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    you just add more weight.
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    Now, at this time in my life,
    I hadn't yet studied sports science,
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    so little did I know,
    but this A to B method I was using,
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    we refer to as "overload."
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    Now, the overload theory works like this:
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    If I push my body to failure,
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    meaning I no longer have the capability
    to do any more repetitions,
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    then when I'm resting, my body
    simply produces more muscle,
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    and that allows me to lift more next time.
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    I can then work around the body
    using this method on each muscle group,
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    and, Hey, presto, (Arnold voice)
    one day you have body like Arnie.
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    Well, I obviously do not have
    a body like Arnie. (Laughs)
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    In fact, I have a body
    like a fashion model.
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    That's because
    I was scouted in the street
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    and was forced to give up
    on my bodybuilding dream.
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    This is one of my first shows.
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    This is me strutting down
    the catwalk for Calvin Klein.
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    The casting director - thank you -
    was back stage before the show
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    teaching us how to walk
    in a strong posture.
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    Feet straight, belly button in,
    shoulders back and down.
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    But why in my early 20s
    was I being taught how to walk?
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    More importantly, why did walking
    this way feel so alien?
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    But yet, on the outside, to the audience,
    it looked quite powerful.
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    I mean, all they were asking me to do
    was walk like I was supposed to walk.
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    So I decided to go to a place
    where just being in strong posture
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    was common practice.
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    And I was about to meet
    the person face to face
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    that would destroy my aspiration
    of Schwarzenegger forever.
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    I was attempting an exercise
    called a "bridge":
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    an adult gymnastics class.
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    And I just couldn't get my arms straight,
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    let alone my body off the ground.
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    So the coach calls somebody over
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    who demonstrates
    this movement effortlessly.
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    She was a six-year-old girl.
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    This is actually her.
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    Her name is Grace.
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    Amazing...
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    Grace.
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    (Laughs)
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    (Laughter)
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    How sweet.
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    (Laughter)
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    But what I really began to see
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    is the principles being used
    in gymnastics class
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    were identical to the posture cues
    I'd been given back stage
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    during Fashion Week.
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    It's the language of gymnastics
    that's not based on individual muscles
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    but based on movements
    of the joints and the skeleton.
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    For example, they use shoulder
    instead of biceps, triceps;
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    hips instead of quads, hamstrings.
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    Completely the opposite to what
    the fitness industry prioritizes.
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    Fitness talks muscles before spine.
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    You see, gymnasts focus
    on how they are moving their body.
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    And they also just happen
    to have awesome posture
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    and a really strong core.
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    It's really no coincidence.
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    This is a byproduct
    of working with the body.
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    In fact, prioritization of the spine
    is a much smarter approach.
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    If you happen to damage your spinal cord,
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    you can actually lose the ability
    to move any part of your body.
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    And this is something
    we've been reminded of our whole lives.
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    "Stop slouching."
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    "Sit up straight."
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    "Engage your core!"
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    "Get your elbows off the table."
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    They all mean the same thing.
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    All your parents were saying was:
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    prioritize your spine.
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    You see, the thing is, as humans,
    we were born with full range of motion.
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    Biochemist Esther Gokhale
    spent time traveling the world
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    and researched places
    where back pain hardly exists.
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    What she noticed was people's spines
    with a flatter lumbar curvature
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    didn't suffer from back pain.
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    She referred to this as a J-shaped spine,
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    and you can see the difference
    in the images here
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    between the S-shaped spine
    taught in the Western world
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    and the J-shaped spine in people
    where back pain doesn't exist.
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    Gokhale states the J-shaped spine
    is what you see in Greek statues
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    and in young children universally.
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    What she's saying is,
    we're all born with a J-shaped spine.
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    Now, you may have noticed,
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    when young children
    pick things up from the ground,
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    they drop down into this perfect squat.
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    This kid, unlike myself,
    did not need a casting director,
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    nor a six-year-old amazing Grace
    to teach him this move.
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    In fact, nobody taught him.
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    And no, guys, he's not exercising.
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    This is, in fact, a pre-chair,
    resting human position.
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    But unfortunately, as a consequence
    of our current human conditioning,
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    or our culture,
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    this natural resting position
    is about to be taken away from this child.
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    He's about to be taught
    a resting position is, in fact, a chair.
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    And when he's due to start school,
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    seven hours of his day, every day,
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    he will be asked to sit
    in this - quite frankly weird
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    and unhuman - position.
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    Now, I didn't even take into account
    the amount of hours
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    this kid spends watching Peppa Pig.
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    (Laughter)
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    According to the British
    Chiropractic Association,
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    the total number of people
    off sick from work with back pain
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    increased last year by 29 percent.
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    From the survey, the reason for back pain
    was sitting too long in one position.
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    So I tried to find a survey totaling
    the number of four-year-olds
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    off sick from school with back pain.
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    But would you believe it,
    I just couldn't find one.
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    You see, we are more than well aware.
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    We are a generation
    of sitting-on-our-backside human beings.
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    But, the specific point I would like
    to bring to your attention today
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    is the fitness industry's
    ignorance of the spine,
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    to have us hooked on task completion.
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    Time, weight, and distance.
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    This is, for most people,
    measures of improvement and progress.
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    How long can you run for?
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    How fast can you run?
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    How much can you lift?
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    How many repetitions can you do?
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    How many calories can you burn?
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    This list is endless.
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    But they're flawed.
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    None of these take into account
    how you're moving,
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    or more importantly, how you once could.
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    You see, nothing can ever compare,
    or will measure up against,
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    the exquisite movement
    you had as a three-year-old.
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    A study in 2012 found
    that musculoskeletal conditions
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    were the second greatest
    cause of disability in the world,
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    affecting over 1.7 billion
    people worldwide.
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    Professor Wolfe,
    a world leader in healthcare,
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    describes suffering
    from musculoskeletal disorders
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    as being like a Ferrari without wheels.
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    If you don't have mobility and dexterity,
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    it doesn't matter how healthy
    the rest of your body is.
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    So surely the access
    to a healthy physicality
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    is working back towards
    full range of motion,
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    to understand how your body moves,
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    and to be able to function like a human.
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    Said simply, the ability to move
    like you once could
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    when you were a three year old.
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    We can and should
    start re-learning how to move
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    from the examples of children,
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    ditching these current measures
    of time, weight, and distance,
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    and spend time unravelling restrictions,
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    getting back the movement
    we actually once had.
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    All that's left
    is an aspiration of ourselves
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    in the school playground as a child,
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    able to play and move
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    without fear of injury
    and using our body's full potential.
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    And those other results we're aiming for
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    such as: slimmer physique,
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    toned muscles,
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    do come,
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    but as a byproduct of moving the body
    as it's designed to function best.
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    There's a famous Chinese proverb:
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    "You are as old as your spine."
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    In all honesty, I'll have more chance
    teaching penguins how to fly
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    than humans a better way
    to sit on a chair.
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    We're just not designed to do it.
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    Today, I'm going to leave you
    with a powerful standing posture.
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    In cultures where
    the J-shaped spine exists,
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    people's butt muscles engage
    every time they take a step.
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    It's one reason they have
    these strong butt muscles
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    that support their lower back.
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    To demonstrate how
    this standing posture works,
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    I will need a bit
    of audience participation.
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    So I need you all to be standing.
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    Sorry.
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    Please stand with your feet together
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    and facing forwards.
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    Now push the heels of the feet
    against each other -
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    not the toes but the heels.
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    Keep pushing.
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    Keep pushing.
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    Now hold.
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    Hold this tension.
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    Squeeze.
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    I want you to just notice,
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    just notice,
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    what happened to the glute muscles
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    as a consequence
    of pushing the heels together.
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    We didn't focus on these muscles,
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    we focused on a movement.
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    This is movement-first philosophy,
    which I spoke of earlier.
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    Focus on a movement;
    muscles follow suit.
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    We move efficiently.
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    The body recruits
    the right muscles for the job.
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    Standing here with your heels
    pushed together
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    is now your new stance.
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    Actually, if I can get you guys
    to hold this while I finish
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    you might just have
    to give me a standing ovation.
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    (Laughter)
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    By taking a lesson from my kid self.
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    It took me two years at the age of 30
    to finally get back my resting position.
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    No, no.
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    My resting position. (Laughs)
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    Maybe we should all take a lesson
    from our kid selves.
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    We should stop teaching kids
    how to sit on their ass,
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    we should lead by example,
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    and move like them.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why sitting down destroys you | Roger Frampton | TEDxLeamingtonSpa
Description:

Male fashion model Roger Frampton discusses how our current ways of measuring progress in fitness (weight, sets, reps, speed, distance) are flawed, and suggests an alternative measure.

Roger Frampton has been modelling for over a decade appearing in ad campaigns for Jean Paul Gaultier, Ralph Lauren & Aquascutum. With over 15 seasons of catwalks in Milan, New York, Paris & London, Roger realised the importance of posture in exercise and created ‘The Frampton Method’. ‘The Frampton Method’ is a combination of bodyweight exercises based upon gymnastics, yoga and calisthenics with a pure focus on posture and technique.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
13:20

English subtitles

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