The Philippine Star

ARE YOU WOFH (WORKING OUT FROM HOME)? READ THIS FIRST

‘The trend now is a work-from-home injury,’ says physiother­apist Kevin Choy. ‘Injury rates have gone up because of all the free HIIT workouts that have been popping up on social media.’

- Therese Jamora-garceau

Since gyms are closed, quarantine has resulted in people working out at home to offset the sedentarin­ess and snacking that typically accompanie­s WFH (working from home) and binge watching. But beware: those HIIT (high-intensity interval training) workouts on YouTube could be more harmful than helpful if you do them incorrectl­y… or too much.

“The trend now is a work-from-home injury — a lot of neck, shoulder, lower back, and hip injuries — for older people, it’s frozen shoulder,” observes Kevin Choy, physiother­apist and cofounder of online self-care platform New Human. “Actually injury rates have gone up because of all the free HIIT class workouts that have been popping up on social media. People are doing two classes a day — every day — since they don’t have anything else to do, or they don’t have much to do at home. So people are getting injured just because of the stress that they’re giving their bodies.”

Choy, who studied physiother­apy at the University of Santo Tomas and La Salle Dasmariñas’ Health Sciences Institute, used to give corporate talks on how to take a more proactive approach to physical health: how stretching and movement are more important than simply trying to lose weight or bodybuildi­ng by lifting weights. “So it’s a lot of self-care that we wanted to promote.”

A job offer brought Choy to Hong Kong, where he is now based, and runs a healthcare clinic called Momentum with cofounder Dr. Kieran Rogers. New Human is the online offshoot of Momentum, where they consult with clients about their physical and mental concerns via Zoom and develop tailor-made, holistic programs designed towards returning them to optimum health. Often Choy finds himself acting not just as a physiother­apist but also as a psychologi­st to his clients.

“I try to help them manage their sleep, their nutrition and their diet, get some sun, some air, move more often,” says the New Human creative director and instructor. “A lot of the time I deal with people who are just overly conscious and paranoid about their posture at home. So I try to tell them, actually, your best posture is your next one. The more you move, the more beneficial it is to the body. You actually have an Apple Watch or activity tracker in your brain that tells you to move.”

Choy shared more tips for physical and mental self-care: • Listen to your body and what it’s

trying to tell you. “Once you start feeling a little bit of discomfort, all of a sudden you’ll notice that you’re starting to massage yourself, but just stand up and stretch. That alone is a good tip, because as complex and dynamic creatures, we are really meant to move.” • Be more cautious about the workouts

that you’re doing. “Just be more mindful about who the instructor is, maybe do a little bit of research. A lot of the gyms in Manila now are offering free classes, so if you know the instructor­s already, that’s good.”

• Don’t binge on working out. “Just because you’re at home, you’re not invincible. It’s like alcohol: if you haven’t been drinking a lot and then all of a sudden you binge drink, you don’t have the same tolerance as before. A lot of desk jockeys, during the week they’re super-busy at their desk, and then during the weekend they think, ‘I’m going to make up for the lack of activity I had during the week.’ And that’s when the injury happens. Stress is stress — that’s how the body recognizes it. So if you go 70 percent on Monday, maybe your Tuesday could be 50 percent or Wednesday could be 30 percent, where you’re just doing some nice, active recovery, and then you can start going back up.” • Limit your screen time. “I have drill exercises where I get people to close their eyes with their hands and just really block off the light for two minutes.” • Breath work is very important. “When you have the right kind of breathing, you calm down your nervous system, and when you do that, it’s like having CBD oil or prepping your body to sleep. So if you’re in a high-stress situation, your nervous system is just always firing and ramping up, whereas the breath work can actually help put you back into equilibriu­m, helping manage stress.”

• Practice stillness. “This practice is literally not doing anything at all, maybe just staring out over the horizon, going to the garden and literally just standing, not doing anything. A lot of times people now are trying to be productive, but it’s okay to not be productive once in a while and not stress about it too much. It is in stillness where you can review what’s happening, be mindful, plan things far ahead or just check in with yourself and assess ‘How am I doing? Am I okay? Do I need to talk to someone or should I tweet this in order to benefit myself?’

• Eat a balanced diet, and try fasting. “Fasting boosts your immunity, because it gives your digestive system a break in order for other systems to be able to work a lot better. With intermitte­nt fasting or fasting itself you have a window for gut healing, and everything starts with the gut.

“It’s also being mindful of, ‘Am I really hungry? Do I really need to feed myself, or is it an emotional attachment to food? Am I just hungry because I’m stressed, so I need something that will make me happy?’ Don’t consume too much. Don’t eat too late, or have a good separation between sleep and your last meal, like two or three hours.”

• Choose healthy snacks, like peanuts and vegetable sticks. Cut off the refined sugar and processed carbohydra­tes.

Through New Human, Choy hopes to make people realize the importance of self-care in order to preserve their health. “It’s quite hard because in the Philippine­s, it’s very orthopedic surgeon- and doctor-driven,” he notes. “If you go to a surgeon or a doctor, more often it’s ‘We recommend surgery,’ but have you taken a therapy or rehabilita­tion approach before thinking that a scalpel is going to fix you?”

He envisions a “new human” to be someone in tune with their body and very proactive about their physical, mental, even social well being. “Rather than always saying, ‘My body’s like this and I have to accept it because I’m getting old,’ this is such a good way to age gracefully. I want people to understand that it’s how we age that really matters. And there is something that you can do about it.”

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For more informatio­n or to get a holistic healthcare program designed exclusivel­y for you, visit https://www. life in momentum. com/ new-human.

Follow the author on Ins tag ram@ theres eja mora gar ce au, Facebook (Therese Jamora-Garceau), and Twitter @tjgarceau.

 ??  ?? Kevin Choy, physiother­apist and New Human creative director and instructor: “I want people to understand that it’s how we age that really matters. And there is something that you can do about it.”
Kevin Choy, physiother­apist and New Human creative director and instructor: “I want people to understand that it’s how we age that really matters. And there is something that you can do about it.”
 ??  ?? Holistic approach to health: Through online platform New Human, Choy guides clients on how to achieve their physical, mental, and even social well-being goals.
Holistic approach to health: Through online platform New Human, Choy guides clients on how to achieve their physical, mental, and even social well-being goals.
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