Stop Stretching Tight Shoulders (Do This Instead)

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Mobility coach Alisa Zuravskaja shows us how:

Addressing the root causes

Fun fact: tight shoulders are usually a symptom of poor shoulder control, thoracic spine stiffness, weak overhead function, and reduced shoulder stability, so stretching alone doesn’t address the root causes.

So, instead, consider:

  • Shoulder CARs*: stand in a split stance beside a wall, place one hand on the wall at hip height for support, slide your other arm overhead, move it behind your body as far as possible, then return to the starting position in a slow circle. Do 3–5 controlled circles, using the wall to prevent compensation from your spine and hips, while improving shoulder mobility, joint control, and neuromuscular coordination.
  • Thread the needle: start on all fours, reach one arm underneath your body as far as possible, then rotate and sweep it upwards towards the ceiling while squeezing your shoulder blade at the top. Do 10 repetitions per side for 2–3 sets, focusing on thoracic spine rotation rather than lower-back movement, to improve upper-back mobility and scapular function.
  • Overhead mobility drill: begin in a high plank with a straight body and engaged core, push your hips up and back into a downward dog position while driving your chest towards your thighs, then return to plank. Continue for 30–60 seconds, allowing your shoulder blades to protract in plank and retract, upwardly rotate, and depress into a downward dog, to improve overhead shoulder function.
  • Prone swimmers: lie face down with your arms extended in front of you, lift your arms off the floor, sweep them in a large circle out to the sides and towards your lower back, then return them to the front while keeping them elevated throughout. Do 5–10 slow circles for 2–3 sets to strengthen your rotator cuff and upper-back muscles.
  • Bear hold isometric: start on all fours with your hands beneath your shoulders and your knees beneath your hips, lift your knees about an inch off the floor, and hold the position while keeping your back flat. Do 20–30 seconds, thrice, to develop coordinated shoulder, upper-back, and core stability.

*CARs = Controlled Articular Rotations

For more on all of this plus visual demonstrations, enjoy:

Click Here If The Embedded Video Doesn’t Load Automatically!

Want to learn more?

You might also like:

Shoulder Mobility Hack (Measurable Results In 60 Seconds)

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  • What Omega-3 Fatty Acids Really Do For Us
    What Omega-3 Fatty Acids Really Do For Us: Learn about the surprising benefits of omega-3 fatty acids, including reducing inflammation, relieving menstrual pain, preventing cognitive decline, and protecting against heart disease.

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  • Foods for Stronger Bones

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    It’s Q&A Day!

    Have a question or a request? You can always hit “reply” to any of our emails, or use the feedback widget at the bottom!

    This newsletter has been growing a lot lately, and so have the questions/requests, and we love that! In cases where we’ve already covered something, we might link to what we wrote before, but will always be happy to revisit any of our topics again in the future too—there’s always more to say!

    As ever: if the question/request can be answered briefly, we’ll do it here in our Q&A Thursday edition. If not, we’ll make a main feature of it shortly afterwards!

    So, no question/request too big or small

    Q: Foods that help build stronger bones and cut inflammation? Thank you!

    We’ve got you…

    For stronger bones / To cut inflammation

    That “stronger bones” article is about the benefits of collagen supplementation for bones, but there’s definitely more to say on the topic of stronger bones, so we’ll do a main feature on it sometime soon!

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  • Walnuts vs Pecans – Which is Healthier?

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    Our Verdict

    When comparing walnuts to pecans, we picked the walnuts.

    Why?

    It was very close, though, and an argument could be made for pecans! Walnuts are nevertheless always a very good bet, and so far in our This-or-That comparisons, the only nut to beat them so far as been almonds, and that was very close too.

    In terms of macros, walnuts have a lot more protein, while pecans have a little more fiber (for approximately the same carbs). Both are equally fatty (near enough; technically pecans have a little more) but where the walnuts stand out in the fat category is that while pecans have mostly healthy monounsaturated fats, walnuts have mostly healthy polyunsaturated fats, including including a good balance of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids. So, while we do love the extra fiber from pecans, we’re calling it for walnuts in the macros category, on account of the extra protein and the best lipids profile (not that pecans’ lipids profile is bad by any stretch; just, walnuts have it better).

    In the vitamins category, walnuts have more of vitamins B2, B6, B9, and C, while pecans offer more of vitamins A, B1, B3, B5, E, K, and choline. The margins aren’t huge and walnuts are also excellent for all the vitamins that pecans narrowly beat them on, but still, the vitamins category is a win for pecans.

    When it comes to minerals, walnuts take back the crown; walnuts offer more calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, and selenium, while pecans have a little more manganese and zinc. Once again, the margins aren’t huge and pecans are also excellent for all the minerals that walnuts narrowly beat them on, but still, the minerals category is a win for walnuts.

    In short: enjoy both of these nuts for their healthy fats, vitamins, minerals, protein, and fiber, but if you’re going to pick one, walnuts come out on top.

    Want to learn more?

    You might like to read:

    Why You Should Diversify Your Nuts!

    Take care!

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  • Fitness Walking and Bodyweight Exercises – by Frank S. Ring

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    A lot of exercise manuals assume that the reader has a “basic” body (nothing Olympian, but nothing damaged either). As we get older, increasingly few of us fall into the “but nothing damaged either” category!

    Here’s where Ring brings to bear his decades of experience as a coach and educator, and also his personal recovery from a serious back injury.

    The book covers direct, actionable exercise advice (with all manner of detail), and also offers mental health tips he’s learned along the way.

    Ring, like us, is a big fan of keeping things simple, so he focusses on “the core four” of bodyweight exercises:

    1. Pushups
    2. Squats
    3. Lunges
    4. Planks

    These four exercises get a whole chapter devoted to them, though! Because there are ways to make each exercise easier or harder, or have different benefits. For example, adjustments include:

    • Body angle
    • Points of contact
    • Speed
    • Pausing
    • Range of motion

    This, in effect, makes a few square meters of floor (and perhaps a chair or bench) your fully-equipped gym.

    As for walking? Ring enjoys and extols the health benefits, and/but also uses his walks a lot for assorted mental exercises, and recommends we try them too.

    A fine book for anyone who wants to gain and/or maintain good health, but doesn’t pressingly want to join a gym or start pumping iron!

    Pick up “Fitness Walking and Bodyweight Exercises: Supercharge Your Fitness, Build Body Strength, and Live Longer” on Amazon today!

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  • Cranberries vs Fig – Which is Healthier?

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    Our Verdict

    When comparing cranberries to fig, we picked the fig.

    Why?

    In terms of macros, cranberries have slightly more fiber, while figs have more carbs and slightly more protein. Since the fiber and protein differences are small, and the carbs difference is subjective in value terms (i.e. do you, with your lifestyle, need more carbs or fewer?), we’ll call this first round a tie.

    However…

    In the category of vitamins, cranberries have more of vitamins C and E, while figs have more of vitamins A, B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B7, and B9, winning easily.

    Looking at minerals, cranberries have more manganese, while figs have more calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, selenium, and zinc, again winning easily.

    In other considerations, cranberries have some special properties that amount to a mixed bag of pros and cons (see details in the “learn more” below), so that could swing it one way or another depending on your personal health risks, so in the interests of fairness, we’ll call this round a tie.

    Adding up the sections makes for a clear overall win for figs, but by all means do enjoy either or both (unless cranberries are contraindicated for you personally), since as very good general rule of thumb, diversity is best!

    Want to learn more?

    You might like:

    Health Benefits Of Cranberries (But: You’d Better Watch Out) ← cranberries’ bonus properties (including: famously very good at decreasing UTI risk) come with some warnings, including that they may increase the risk of kidney stones if you are prone to such, and also that cranberries have anti-clotting effects, which are great for heart health but can be a risk of you’re on blood thinners or have a bleeding disorder.

    Enjoy!

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  • GLP-1 Drugs: Safe For Pregnancy Or Not?

    10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.

    …and other items from this week’s health news:

    Beyond “Ozempic babies”

    Briefly heralded as a potential boon to fertility (and advised against because of potential risks), GLP-1 receptor agonists have been re-examined in the context of pregnancy.

    In this most recent study of 10,781 women, 232 pregnancies occurred within six months of starting treatment. Being on contraception reduced the risk of pregnancy by 40%, which is also the approximate percentage of pregnancies overall that were unplanned (though doubtlessly it is not a perfect overlap).

    In terms of safety: animal studies show risks like fetal growth restriction, while limited human data (including a 2024 study of 938 pregnancies) found no higher risk of major birth defects compared with insulin (bearing in mind, GLP-1 RAs were initially most widely prescribed for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, before truly taking off as weight loss drugs).

    Read in full: Are GLP-1 drugs safe for women planning pregnancy?

    Related: What are “Ozempic babies”? Can the drug really increase your chance of pregnancy?

    When the temperature goes up, so does sugar consumption

    It’s not about food! No, not even about ice creams (mostly, anyway).

    Rather, hot weather especially drives consumption of chilled, sugary drinks, which in turn raises risks of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and certain cancers.

    This most recent research analyzed food purchase data from 60,000 US households between 2004–2019 to measure added sugar intake in relation to weather conditions over time.

    What they found: added sugar intake rises as temperatures increase, especially between 12–30℃ (54–86℉). After that, sugar intake still continues to rise with temperature rises, but the rise becomes less sharp. Outdoor workers were most affected, and higher-income groups were less affected, possibly due to access to air-conditioned environments.

    Read in full: Climate change is fueling unhealthy sugar consumption in the US

    Related: 4 surprising ways climate change is hurting your lungs

    Fast food making a fast exit?

    In recent years, one-third of US adults ate fast food on any given day. Which sounds like a lot, and it is, but 11.7% of daily calories came from fast food, which is a reduction from the 14.1% of the previous decade.

    But, this wasn’t the same across of the population as whole, because intake fell most sharply in younger adults (19.0% in 2013–14 to 15.2% in 2021–23), whereas there was negligible change in the numbers for older age brackets.

    And when it comes to body types, there were differences, but perhaps not so big as many might imagine: adults in the “obesity” category of BMI consumed 13.7% of daily calories from fast food, compared with 10.8% in the “overweight” category and 9.8% in the “normal” category.

    Now, BMI’s a woeful system and it’s likely that BMI’s many flaws will have confounded that data somewhat, but the overall picture is not unreasonable (and the age-related data was unaffected by this).

    Read in full: Fast food’s grip on American diets weakens as younger adults cut back

    Related: How Likely Is It That Ultra-Processed Foods (UPFs) Will Kill You?

    Take care!

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  • Beating Toxic Positivity

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    How To Get Your Brain On A More Positive Track (Without Toxic Positivity)

    There have been many studies done regards optimism and health, and they generally come to the same conclusion: optimism is simply good for the health.

    Here’s an example we’ve mentioned before, but it’s a good introduction to today’s main feature. It’s a longitudinal study, and it followed 121,700 women (what a sample size!) for eight years. It controlled for all kinds of other lifestyle factors (especially smoking, drinking, diet, and exercise habits, as well as pre-existing medical conditions), so this wasn’t a case of “people who are healthy are more optimistic as results. And, in the researchers’ own words…

    ❝We found strong and statistically significant associations of increasing levels of optimism with decreasing risks of mortality, including mortality due each major cause of death, such as cancer, heart disease, stroke, respiratory disease, and infection. Importantly, findings were maintained after close control for potential confounding factors, including sociodemographic characteristics and depression❞

    Read: Optimism and Cause-Specific Mortality: A Prospective Cohort Study

    And yet, toxic positivity can cause as many problems as it tries to fix.

    What is toxic positivity?

    • Toxic positivity is the well-meaning friend who says “I’m sure it’ll be ok” when you know full well it definitely will not.
    • Toxic positivity is the allegorical frog-in-a-pan saying that the temperature rises due to climate change are gradual, so they’re nothing to worry about
    • Toxic positivity is thinking that “good vibes” will outperform chemotherapy

    Sometimes, a dose of realism is needed. So, can we do that and maintain a positive attitude?

    The answer is: somewhat, yes! But first, a quick check-in:

    ❝I’m not a pessimist; I’m a realist!❞

    ~ every pessimist ever

    To believe self-reports, the world is divided between optimists and realists. But how does your outlook measure up, really?

    While like most free online tests, this is offered “as-is” with the usual caveats about not being a clinical diagnostic tool, this one actually has a fair amount of scientific weight behind it:

    ❝Empirical testing has indicated the validity of the Optimism Pessimism Instrument as published in the scientific journal Current Psychology: Research and Reviews.

    The IDRlabs Optimism/Pessimism Test (IDR-OPT) was developed by IDRlabs. The IDR-OPT is based on the Optimism/Pessimism Instrument (OPI) developed by Dr. William Dember, Dr. Stephanie Martin, Dr. Mary Hummer, Dr. Steven Howe, and Dr. Richard Melton, at the University of Cincinnati.❞

    Take This Short (1–2 mins) Test

    How did you score? And what could you do to improve on that score?

    First, it’s said that with a big enough “why”, one can overcome any “how”. So…

    An attitude of gratitude

    We know, we know, it’s very Oprah Winfrey. But also, it works. Take the time, ideally daily, to quickly list 3–5 things for which you feel grateful. Great or small, it can be anything from your spouse to your cup of coffee, provided you feel fortunate to have it.

    How this works: our brains easily get stuck in loops, so it can help to nudge them into a more positive loop.

    What about when we are treated unfairly? Are we supposed to be grateful?

    Sometimes, our less positive emotions are necessary, to protect us and/or those around us, and to provide a motivational force. We can still maintain a positive attitude by noting the bad thing and some good, but watch out! Notice the difference:

    • “How dare they take our healthcare away, but at least I’m not sick right now” (lasting impression: no action required)
    • “At least I’m not sick right now, but how dare they take our healthcare away!” (lasting impression: action required)

    It’s a well-known idea in neurolinguistic programming, that “but” negates whatever goes before it (think of “I’m sorry but”, or “I’m not racist but”, etc), so use it consciously and wisely, or else simply use “and” instead.

    Cognitive reframing: problem, or opportunity?

    Most problems can be opportunities, even if the problems themselves genuinely suck and are not intrinsically positive. A way of leveraging this can be replacing “I have to…” with “I get to…”.

    This not only can reframe problems as opportunities, but also calls back to the gratitude idea.

    • Instead of “I have to get my mammogram / prostate exam” (not generally considered fun activities), “I get to have the peace of mind of being free from cancer / I get to have the forewarning that will keep me safe”.
    • Instead of “I have to go to work”, “I get to go to work” (many wish they were in your shoes!)
    • Instead of “I have to rest”, “I get to rest”

    When things are truly not great

    Whether due to internal or external factors, whether you can control something or not, sometimes things are truly not great. The trick here is that in most contexts, one can replace negative talk, with verbally positive talk, no matter how dripping with scathing irony. You’ll still get to express the idea you wanted, but your brain will feel more positive and you’ll be in a positive loop rather than a negative one.

    This, by the way, is the inverse of talking to a dog with a tone of voice that is completely the opposite of the meaning of the words. Whereas the dog will interpret the tone only, your brain will interpret the words only.

    • You just spilled your drink over yourself at a social function? “Aren’t I the very model of grace and charm?”
    • You made a costly mistake in your business dealings? “I am such a genius”
    • You just got a diagnosis of a terrible disease? “Well, this is fabulous”

    None of these things involve burying your head in the sand, in the manner of toxic positivity. You’ll still learn from your business mistake and correct it as best you can, or take appropriate action regards the disease, for example.

    You’ll just feel better while you do it, and not get caught into a negative spiral that ruins your day, or even your next few months.

    Sympathetic/Somatic Therapy:

    Lastly, an easy one, leveraging the body’s tendency to get in sync with things around us:

    For when you do just need a mood change, have an uplifting playlist available at the touch of a button. It’s hard to be consumed with counterproductive feelings to the tune of “Walking on Sunshine”!

    Bonus tip: consider having the playlist start with something that is lyrically negative while musically upbeat. That way, your brain won’t resist it as antithetical to your mood, and by the second track, you’ll already be on your way to a better mood.

    Don’t Forget…

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