Video 7

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Video - Part 6 Mysteries of the Great Pyramid





Part 6 of the Video of the Mysteries of the Great Pyramid

Enjoy! Part 6 of the Mysteries of the Great Pyramid.



Stress the “silent killer”!

Residence at the Pyramid Retirement homes will enjoy stress reduction techniques and practises them on a daily basis.

One way is to practice meditation. You don’t need to learn any complicated positions, although it wouldn’t hurt if you also want to become a little more flexible. All you really need to do is find a comfortable spot, close your eyes, and picture something very comforting. When meditating, picture a garden of flowers or any other scenes that helps you feel good. Make sure you can really picture whatever your image is. Make it so real you can feel it, taste it, touch it, and smell it. Practicing this meditation at least once a day for ten minutes or any time you feel particularly stressed. As previously mentioned, meditating in the pyramids can greatly enhance the meditation process.

Daily Qigong exercises and Taichi forming part of the retirement living at the pyramid homes community will further relieve life stress.

The key to living in a pyramid retirement homes is to promoted a stress free environment. Coupled with the anti-aging tips, healthy nutrition and daily exercises, life in this stress free community will be long and happy.




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Part 5 Mysteries of the Pyramid Video Series




Part 5 of the Mysteries of the Great Pyramid

In this part 5 of the video series, Omar Sharif narrates on more mysteries of the Great Pyramid being studied by scholars from around the world. The natural and supernatural fascinations of the Great Pyramid holds mysteries that even University scholars of these days have difficulty explaining. The great benefits can enhance retirement living and encompass the retirement planning of baby boomers anticipating a healthy retirement lifestyle.






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Exercises to Enhance Retirement Living





YOU DON’T HAVE TO LIVE WITH PAIN!

Attached is a free article written by Dr. Jolie Bookspan titled: Fix Your Neck, Upper Back and Shoulder Pain. Retirement Living at the Pyramid Retirement Homes can be enhanced by following the stretches as recommended by Dr. Bookspan as part of the daily morning exercises. Identifying the causes and carrying out the stretches in easy exercise movements can prevent suffering from the pain without the use of drugs and chemicals. Healthy posture and consciously watching everyones’ healthy position will be encouraged at all times in the retirement community living environment. There is NO need for drugs or surgery, injury can be healed and “Old” habits can be broken.

Fix Your Own Neck, Upper Back, and Shoulder Pain

Bad Cervical (neck) Discs, Nerve Impingement, Round Shoulders, Upper Crossed Syndrome, Muscular Pain, Rotator Cuff, and “Stress” Pain

Dr. Jolie Bookspan
Director, Neck and Back Pain Sports Medicine, Philadelphia

You can fix upper body pain easily with the basics in this free article. Dr. Jolie Bookspan’s methods are so successful in treating neck pain, that clinicians at the Harvard School of Medicine named her “The St. Jude of the Joints.”
________________________________________

Don’t Worry - Neck, shoulder, and upper back pain are easy to fix. This article will show you how to easily and quickly stop the source of upper body pain. Then you no longer will get the pain and your neck, shoulder, and upper back can heal.

Neck Pain and Upper Back Pain – Why?

Neck and upper back pain is not difficult to prevent or fix. People do an astonishing number of things every day to strain, weaken, and pressure their necks. They stand, bend, sit, and let their head slouch forward all day and shoulders round, all day, every day, then compound the problem with inactivity, holding muscles tightly, and bad exercises that only round the upper back further. They may do physical therapy or exercises, but not be aware that strong muscles will not automatically give you good posture, make you stand and move properly, or make up for all the things you do the rest of the day to hurt your neck. It is no wonder why they still get pain even though they “do their exercises.” Many wind up in surgery, taking pain pills, or long term or recurring pain, not understanding why their physical therapy or exercise program, or pills, or yoga “didn’t work.” Luckily, neck pain is usually easy to understand and fix yourself.

Here is how:

1. Bad Discs

The pressure of your own body weight on your neck muscles and discs over years of poor sitting, standing, and bending habits is enough to injure your neck as badly as a single accident.

• All this chronic forward bending (flexion) overstretches the muscles and long ligament down the back of your neck, which weakens the neck, and makes room for discs to push outward. It also physically pushes vertebral discs posteriorly (outward to the back).

• After years of squashing the discs in your neck with a forward head posture - by letting your head drop forward, the discs in your neck may herniate and press on nerves, sending pain down your arm.

• Tight muscles from years of poor positioning and short resting muscle length can also press on the same nerves mimicking nerve impingement pain.

• A degenerating disc is not a disease, but a simple, mechanical injury that can heal, if you just stop grinding it and physically pushing it out of place with terrible habits.

Sitting, standing, and living with your neck and head forward
can eventually push cervical (neck) discs out

2. The Forward Head

A “forward head” is the source of much neck and shoulder pain.
The neck should be on a straight vertical line. Many people let their head and neck tilt forward. This is called a “Forward Head.”

Many people are too tight in the upper chest and shoulder to stand properly.
The forward head commonly results in sore shoulder, neck, and upper back.

Such pain is easily fixed.

A forward head can eventually damage neck and upper back structures, as they bend and rub at angles they were not built for. Chronically holding neck muscles in an overstretched position weakens them. The forward head creates shortened, contracted muscles in front, and a stretched, weakened back. Cervical (neck) discs are pressured posteriorly. This creates a cycle of forward positioning that herniates discs and makes sore aching muscles, and the tightness and habits that keep you tilting forward. The result is that the average person has upper body pain from the poor positioning and at the same time, the chronic poor positioning makes them too tight to stand up straight.

Many people do most of their standing, sitting, activity, and exercise with a forward head. No wonder they have pain. Look in any fitness magazine and see all the photos of people doing exercise with their neck tilted forward and chin jutting forward. Look at how people eat. Look at how they carry backpacks and bags - hunching forward against the load instead of using muscles to hold their spine in healthy position. Then they do shoulder stands in yoga, which simultaneously overstretch the ligament, pressure discs outward, and create forces that generate bone spurs. The average person overstretches and unequally stretches their neck and upper body so much, that it is amazing they don’t hurt more.
The pain and other problems of the forward head are sometimes referred collectively as “Upper Crossed Syndrome.” Upper Crossed Syndrome is not a disease or something to live with. It is pain from slouching that is easily fixed using the methods that follow.

Muscular Pain from The Forward Head

Poor standing and sitting ergonomics are a common cause of numb shoulder, upper back pain, and headache. It makes a classic “tension” pain across the shoulders, in a diamond pattern down the middle of the upper back, in the neck, up the neck to the head, and sometimes down the arm. Forward head is a common source of headache. Yet, after mechanically pressuring their neck all day, people call it stress and do not fix the very forward posture that would give them relief and stop the injury process.

Surprising Source of Shoulder Pain

The forward head is a surprising hidden source of shoulder pain and impingement. With the head held forward, it rotates the upper shoulder forward (round shouldered) which gets in the way of normal motion when you raise your arm. The upper arm bone squashes the soft structures of the shoulder capsule against the shoulder bone (where the scapula meets the clavicle). This can cause pain, squashing (impingement) and rotator cuff injury. How often does this happen? Every time you wash and comb your hair, pull off a shirt, put away groceries, scratch your head, brush your teeth, and reach for anything - in short, a forward head can cause shoulder and upper back and neck pain many dozens of times a day. The injury adds up over time.

3. Making It Worse When Trying to Stand Straight

Many people know they should keep their head lifted up and not drooping forward, but the front of their chest is so tight, that when they try to do it, either they arch their back, or crane their neck, or both. “Craning” the neck means “pinching” it back, with the chin and face lifted. Craning the neck is surprisingly common and a big source of neck and shoulder pain. Many people crane their neck to look up, to drink water, to reach overhead areas, even to eat. Check yourself to see if you jut your chin forward or hunch your shoulders up.

Many people are so tight that they crane their neck to look up,
or to try to pull their head back enough to stand straight. Do the two stretches below to relieve this.

Try This To See What Stretches You Need to Fix Upper Back Pain and Poor Positioning

1. Stand near a wall, with your back to it, but not touching the wall.

2. Back up until something touches. Did your behind touch first, as in the first figure in the drawing below? You may stand “booty out,” flexed at the hip.

3. Did your upper back touch first (second figure in the drawing below)? You may stand slouched backward.

Now try to stand with your heels, hips, upper back, and the back of your head against a wall. Bring the back of your head against the wall without raising or dropping your chin, or arching your back. If you can’t keep your heels, hips, upper back, and the back of your head comfortably against the wall, or if you have to crane your neck, you are too tight to stand up straight. Pain results from the resulting bad positioning and slouching your tightness creates all day, every day. This is common. Here is what to do about it:

Two Easy Stretches

Tight pectoral (chest and front of shoulder) muscles rotate your arms inward. To see if you do this, put your arms at your sides, look in the mirror and note direction of your thumbs. Do they face inward – toward each other? To restore this muscle group to functional resting length do these two stretches:

1. “Pec” Stretch (For pectoral muscles in front of your chest)

• Face a wall. Lift one hand up, elbow bent out to the side, as if “in a stickup.”

• Turn away from the wall, using the wall to gently brace your elbow back as you turn away.

• Feel the stretch in the front of your chest.

• Keep head and back posture in line. Don’t let your back arch or your chin jut forward. Don’t push so hard that your shoulder (or anywhere else) hurts.

• Hold just a few seconds, then switch arms.

• Drop your arms and look at your thumbs again. Thumbs should face forward now.

• Try the wall stand again. It should be easy to stand straight now.

2. Next, stretch the top of your shoulder (Trapezius stretch)

- Stand against the wall, with your back and the back of your head against the wall, gently.

- Put one hand behind you, as if in an opposite pocket.

- Breathe in, then while breathing out, slide your other hand down the side of your body toward your knee.

- Tilt your head downward to that same side, gently, but keep it as much against the wall as you comfortably can.

- Don’t round or hunch forward, or drop or raise your chin.

- Feel a nice stretch along your entire side.

- Hold a second or two then breathe in and out and switch sides.

- Try the wall stand again and note that it is now easier to stand straight.

Do these two stretches many times a day to keep upper body posture healthy so your upper back and neck don’t hurt, and so you can stand properly without the forward rounding that injures and brings on pain. Use the wall stand as a test to check if you are straight. If not, do the two stretches above (pectoral and trapezius), then check yourself with the wall test again.

Exercises to Strengthen and Retrain Muscles

When you stop bending wrong and injuring your back dozens of times each day, it can begin healing with good exercises.
Neck pain exercises are misunderstood. People often injure their neck all day then hope to fix it with a few exercises. They don’t understand when this does not work. They lie on the floor to do exercises, then stand up and walk away with no use of the positioning or strength they just practiced. It is like eating butter and sugar all day, then doing 10 minutes of exercises and wondering why it doesn’t “work.” The key is what you do all day. Try these exercises slowly. See how you feel the next day, then increase. Use these exercises to retrain how to stand, sit and move all day.

- Upper Back Extension

Most people stretch their back by forward rounding but never strengthen the back and neck muscles that hold the back and neck upright. Upper back extension is an important exercise to strengthen at the same time that you practice moving your back in the other direction. Lie face down on the floor, hands and arms off the floor. Gently lift upper body without hands. Don’t force. Don’t crane your neck, keep it straight, just lift using upper body muscles.

- The “Double Chin” Exercise

A commonly prescribed exercise for the forward head is “the double chin exercise.” It is often misused and misunderstood. In “the double chin,” you pull your chin in - straight back without lifting or dropping your chin. Many people told to do it “10 times every hour.” Then they go back to their “real life” and walk around all day with their head forward, wondering why their neck still hurts. Or they force their head back, causing more pain. Don’t do that.

- Instead, understand that “the double chin” exercise is not something you “do 10 times” then stop. It is something you do once and then use it to relearn proper head position then keep it there.

- Keep chin in, not stiffly or so tightly that it hurts, but easily so that your ear is above your shoulder, not forward of it.

- Make sure to pull your head and chin back, not just arch your low back.

- Stand with your back against a wall often during the day, to see if the back of your head touches, as it will when you are standing in a healthy position. If not, first do the two easy stretches (described above).

What To Do Every Day To Prevent Neck Pain. To restore proper muscle length to allow healthy posture:

• First thing in the morning, don’t sit on the bed. Instead of sitting and rounding your back first thing, turn over and lie face down. Prop gently on elbows, but not so high that it strains. It should feel good and help you straighten out first thing. Get out of bed without sitting.

• Don’t droop your head forward when sitting and standing. Remember that posture is a voluntary muscular exercise.

• Pec (pectoral muscle) stretch - described above.

• Trapezius stretch- described above.

• Wall Stand - described above.

• Lie on your back on the floor (diagnostic for tightness and repositioning). Can you lie on your back without needing a pillow under your head? If not, your forward head has become dangerously tight. Do the exercises above to relive it.

More Things To Do Every Day to Prevent Forward Rounding from Ruining Your Neck

• Sit without rounding your shoulders and upper back.
• Count how many times you let your head tilt or hang forward each day. Imagine the injury to your neck by doing that many times each day.
• Raise your computer monitor up. Don’t just tilt it, use a low shelf or phone books to raise it higher so you don’t bend your neck down to work.
• Move your television up higher. Stop curling down and forward to watch.
• Move your desk and car seats closer in. Then sit back, not forward.
• It is not important “to keep feet on floor” or keep “flat thighs” - parallel to the ground. That is often repeated as advice to prevent pain, but it does not change injurious mechanics. Focus on the main issue, not the trivia.
• Move your computer keyboard off the “below desk” tray. Keep it on the desk.
• Use your muscles, not joints to hold you up. It’s free exercise.
• Do upper back extension exercise (described above). It will feel good.
• When you pull your chin in to fix your posture, don’t do it by arching your back. The postural change needs to come from your upper body, not by creating another strain on another body part.
• Don’t think you have to live your life “on eggshells” constantly holding yourself rigidly straight. Restricting your movement to limit pain is not how to live, isn’t healthy, and isn’t fun. Get more active. Learn the principles and apply them, instead of memorizing “rules” and buying expensive ergonomic chairs and beds.

Stretch your upper back “the other way” to counter rounding. When you look upward or reach up for all your daily activities, don’t do it by craning your neck and arching your back. Instead, stretch your upper body back, which is a great stretch that you need anyway.

Don’t Exercise in Ways that Damage Your Neck, Shoulder, and Upper Back

Many people hurt from excessive forward bending all day over their desk, steering wheel, work, and TV. The last thing they need is more upper back and shoulder rounding. Yet, that is usually the first thing they do to exercise or stretch. Many exercises, ironically even those commonly (but mistakenly) prescribed for back and neck pain, often involve more forward bending - toe touches, knee to chest, crunches, and shoulder stands like “the plow” and “The Frog” (lying backward, raising legs over head so that all weight is on your upper back and neck). It is important to strengthen the muscles that pull your upper back and neck the other way. These are called Extension Exercises (described above).

It is common to see people pulling their arm across their body in front to stretch. Most people already are good at rounding their shoulders. They don’t need more stretch in back of their shoulder. Round shoulders are part of the problem in the first place. Don’t add to your round shoulders with more stretching in back. Instead, stretch the front, as taught earlier in this article.

Most people already hold their neck in a forward-stretched position, which is a bad posture called a forward head. They don’t need to stretch it more forward. Although it is common to stretch by pushing the neck forward, it adds to existing problems. Adding body weight to this stretch can degenerate the discs in your neck and gradually push them outward to the back (herniate). The pressure on the back of the neck bones from your body weight also can eventually make the bone protect itself by growing a bone spur.

The Point of Neck and Back Exercises

Strengthening and stretching are crucial, but alone will not change posture or lifting habits, and so cannot “cure” back pain or posture problems. Many contribute to the original problem of over rounding and bad posture. Neck and upper back exercises are supposed to be used to retrain you how you hold your body all the time. Doing exercises for pain is not like getting a shot of penicillin or going to confession. It does not “fix” bad habits the rest of the time. For example, lying down for pelvic tilts, then standing up and letting your back flop into any old bad posture, not keeping the proper tilt. Back exercise is supposed to retrain your thinking and habits *all the time* not just during the hour of worship. Strengthening has no effect on posture if you don’t apply the strength the rest of the day to control joint angles for all activities. When you bend over things during the day, don’t droop your head forward.

Remember not to crane your neck when doing other stretches. Most people round their back and neck all day. It only adds to the problem to do exercises like this too. Even sillier, by doing the stretch by rounding your neck and back, you lose the stretch on your leg, which was the whole point of doing the stretch in the first place.

Discs Can Heal

Disc injury is not a life sentence. Disc degeneration or slippage (herniation) can heal - if you let it, no differently than a sprained ankle. Stop damaging your discs with bad bending, standing, and sitting habits and the discs can heal. It takes years to herniate a disc, and only days to weeks to heal it by stopping bad habits.

Muscles Can Heal

When you over-tighten muscles with hunching and bad habits, they can remain too shortened to let you stand properly. Or they stay tightened in “knots” or spasm. This changes their muscle chemistry. When you slouch, you keep muscles overly stretched, which weakens and strains them. Stop straining your muscles and they can heal.
People Let Their Bodies Slump to Wherever They Slump

• Instead of holding body weight up on muscles, they let all weight rest on the joints and discs of their neck.
• Using muscles would burn calories, strengthen, and be a free workout. But instead they grind their neck away.
• Sitting flexed imposes a large stress on the discs of the neck.
• Many simple mechanical factors ruin the back, hundreds of times a day, through ordinary daily bad habits, yet, when many people go to the doctor, the diagnosis is often written off as stress.

Pain When Your X-Ray is Normal

You may be in great pain from simple damaging mechanics. Your X-rays and scans are normal. You may be told nothing is wrong, or to give up favorite activities. Your pain persists from bad postural habits. This is no mystery. Change the bad habits to change the pain.

When Pain Is Not From What’s On Your X-Ray

Other times, the scans show some minor problem like arthritis, herniated disc, or degenerating structures. Just like car tires that are mid-life, but perfectly good, some wear may show on exam – but this is unrelated to performance or pain. Pain is falsely ascribed to the arthritis or to the disc. Patients feel doomed, and are often told to give up activities. Pain (even the herniation itself) may mostly result from poor mechanics. This is no mystery. Change the bad habits to change the pain.

Sometimes, the scans show some major problem, and major surgery is performed to correct it. When the original problem was from the bad positioning, often pain persists or returns because you never corrected the mechanics that caused it. The defect itself may return from uncorrected mechanics. Surgery can be avoided. Fix the source of the problem and the results of the problem can heal, usually without surgery.

What To Do When You Hurt

• Lie face down first thing in the morning in bed instead of sitting.
• Do the two stretches and the upper back extension exercises, described above.
• Don’t “tighten” muscles to move them (phone on ear can be made to be OK if not hunched).
• Check what you are doing to injure structures and fix it- forward head, round shoulders, poor shock absorption when moving.

Don’t Complain That It’s Work

• It’s free exercise.
• It’s like learning any other new skill.
• It will fix your neck pain, free.
• In the old days, we called it discipline





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Additional Qigong Information



qigong31.jpg




This is an excerpt taken from Shui Yin Lo Quantum Qigong Group:

The physical mechanism of energy healing is hypothesized as follows:

Stable Water clusters line themselves up in a much more orderly fashion along meridians in qigong masters than those in ordinary people. The water clusters form an electric field and when qigong masters think about emitting qi, the stable water clusters in their meridians shake and electro magnetic waves are emitted. The healing water clusters travel through empty space and affect the water clusters of the patient. Once the water clusters are aligned, qi flows and the body heals.

Shui Yin Lo Quantum Qigong



Qi is the life energy present in everybody and provides nutrition to the blood. When we feel weak, the body has built up blockages in the body’s meridians/channels, which impedes the flow of blood and Qi. Practicing Qigong helps to clear blockages. This Qigong practice keeps harmony of the Qi in the organs, improves blood circulation, enhances our immune system and delays aging.




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