The Forgotten Art Of Squatting: An Antidote For Damage Done To Our Bodies From Sitting?
The
invention of the chair was really a total game changer in regards to how
our bodies function and which parts of the body we are using on a
regular basis. The chair took all of that pressure off of our rears and
backs, and relieved some of our weight for us. Of course, we always had
the option to sit on the ground or perhaps in a tree, but the chair
became such a fundamental piece of furniture in our lives that it
absolutely changed how our bodies function.
By now, most of us are aware of just how detrimental it can be to our bodies to sit for a prolonged period of time, in fact, some researchers are even going as far as to say that sitting is the new smoking
in terms of the potential damage it can cause to our bodies. With so
many of us, myself included,
working desk jobs on computers this really
is important information to be aware of. Sitting is wreaking havoc on
our bodies. Luckily, as the awareness grows towards this important
health issue, we are seeing many new designs for standing desks, or
things like core chairs
that are aimed to utilize the muscles in our body and effectively
relieve the issues that too much sitting can cause. But is there a much
simpler option that humans have forgotten?
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How The Forgotten Art Of Squatting Can Help You
Squatting
is essentially a position of the body that humans have used for
thousands of years, and in many cultures is still being used today. If
you practice yoga, you might know this position as a Malasana,
which is essentially a deep squat. A yoga instructor once said that a
guru told them that “the problem with the west is that they don’t
squat.” This is so true, if you aren’t someone who practices yoga or –
does squats during a workout, when are you really going to squat? If we
feel like taking a rest, we’re definitely choosing the chair or the big
comfy couch before squatting down. We eat in chairs, sit in our cars and
on the train, sit on the toilet – essentially, we are often only not
sitting when we are walking from one chair to the next. In fact, many of
us probably couldn’t even squat down to the ground if we tried, not
without some serious stretching first at least.
Our lack of squatting has bio-mechanical
and physiological implications, but perhaps it is inhibiting us from
the grounding force that this posture provides as well. The lack of
squatting is actually only really an issue for the westernized
civilizations as there are many cultures around the world that are
squatting down any chance they get, to eat, to pray, to use the toilet –
yes, squatting toilets are the norm in Asia, and actually make way more
sense. Squatting, in more undeveloped nations is also the most common
way for women to give birth, and again when you really think about it,
it also makes much more sense than lying on your back in a hospital bed.
In these “less advanced” cultures, the
rich and middle class are not squatting either, as it is generally seen
as something that the poor do as it is uncomfortable and actually causes
the body to work. Have you ever heard the expression, “If you don’t use
it, you lose it”? Well, this can be said in regards to squatting
because if you were to give it a try now, you may find it very
difficult, especially for a prolonged period of time. But, our bodies
are amazing organisms and they can always transform.
According
to author and osteopath, Philip Beach, “The game started with
squatting,” Beach is known for pioneering the idea of “archetypal
postures.” These positions—which, in addition to a deep passive squat
with the feet flat on the floor, include sitting cross-legged and
kneeling on one’s knees and heels—are not just good for us, but
according to beach they are “deeply embedded into the way our bodies
are built.”
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“You really don’t understand human
bodies until you realize how important these postures are,” Beach, who
is based in Wellington, New Zealand, tells me. “Here in New Zealand,
it’s cold and wet and muddy. Without modern trousers, I wouldn’t want to
put my backside in the cold wet mud, so [in absence of a chair] I
would spend a lot of time squatting. The same thing with going to the
toilet. The whole way your physiology is built is around these
postures.”
Why Is Squatting Good For Us?
According
to Dr. Bahram Jam, founder of Advanced Physical Therapy Education
Institute in Ontario, Canada, “Every joint in our body has synovial
fluid in it. This is the oil in our body that provides nutrition to the
cartilage,” Jam says. “Two things are required to produce that fluid:
movement and compression. So if a joint doesn’t go through its full
range—if the hips and knees never go past 90 degrees—the body says ‘I’m
not being used’ and starts to degenerate and stops the production of
synovial fluid.”
A healthy musculoskeletal system is much
more important for our health than just helping us to feel limber,
strong and flexible, a study
published in 2014 from the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology
found that those participants who had a difficult time getting up off
the floor without support of hands, elbows or leg remarkably resulted in
having a three-year-year shorter life expectancy than those who got up
with ease.
So, Why Did We Stop Squatting?
It seems that in the West, we stopped
squatting around the same time as the modern seated toilet came into our
existence. It might not seem like this alone would be a cause for such a
drastic change to our physiology, but as Jam says, “The reason
squatting is so uncomfortable because we don’t do it,” Jam says. “But if
you go to the restroom once or twice a day for a bowel movement and
five times a day for bladder function, that’s five or six times a day
you’ve squatted.”
As we sit in our office chairs, staring
at our computers in our office attire, for men slacks and dress shirts
and often for women pencil skirts and dresses – can you even imagine
trying to squat or sit cross-legged? Both of which would be much better
for our health than sitting in chairs. It’s interesting how we seem to
think we’ve come so far, and that we are much more civilised and
advanced, but really we aren’t doing ourselves any favors with this
arrogant attitude.
“It’s considered primitive and of low
social status to squat somewhere,” says Jam. “When we think of squatting
we think of a peasant in India, or an African village tribesman, or an
unhygienic city floor. We think we’ve evolved past that—but really we’ve
devolved away from it.”
Time To Start Squatting?
If you
can, practice squatting down a few times a day. If you can’t, start by
stretching your body and getting down as low as you can, if you are very
rigid, it may take time, but doing some light stretching or yoga daily
can assist you with this process. It is very good for our health!
Especially if you are sitting on a chair all day at your place of
employment, you might want to consider setting a reminder on your phone
to remind you to get up and squat down at least a few times a day.
All the best!
All the best!
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