Wednesday, December 28, 2022

The "Hidden Survival Muscle" In Your Body





Hip flexors is the longest muscle in the body and the only muscle that connects the upper body and lower body, also known as the psoas (pronounced so-az).

Your psoas...

…stabilize your trunk and spine during movement and sitting

…allow you to bend your hips and legs towards your chest

…support your internal organs

…is connected to your diaphragm which allows you to walk and breathe.

In other words, your psoas has a direct influence on your fight or flight response!

If the psoas get tight and weak, it can be a real pain but working certain muscles and doing the certain exercise combinations provide easy fixes.

So... If you experience...

low back pain
hip pain
stiffness
pain while walking or moving
trouble sleeping
shortness of breath



You need to start undoing some of the damage done to your body and start helping the body to naturally heal itself.

Here are the best strategies to Go from “Sore” to “Supple”.

To your better health,

Erma





Shinto is polytheistic, involving the veneration of many deities known as kami,[60] or sometimes as jingi.[61] In Japanese, no distinction is made here between singular and plural, and hence the term kami refers both to individual kami and the collective group of kami.[62] Although lacking a direct English translation,[63] the term kami has sometimes been rendered as "god" or "spirit".[64] The historian of religion Joseph Kitagawa deemed these English translations "quite unsatisfactory and misleading",[65] and various scholars urge against translating kami into English.[66] In Japanese, it is often said that there are eight million kami, a term which connotes an infinite number,[67] and Shinto practitioners believe that they are present everywhere.[4] They are not regarded as omnipotent, omniscient, or necessarily immortal.[68] The term kami is "conceptually fluid",[69] being "vague and imprecise".[70] In Japanese it is often applied to the power of phenomena that inspire a sense of wonder and awe in the beholder.[71] Kitagawa referred to this as "the kami nature", stating that he thought it "somewhat analogous" to the Western ideas of the numinous and the sacred.[65] Kami are seen to inhabit both the living and the dead, organic and inorganic matter, and natural disasters like earthquakes, droughts, and plagues;[3] their presence is seen in natural forces such as the wind, rain, fire, and sunshine.[72] Accordingly, Nelson commented that Shinto regards "the actual phenomena of the world itself" as being "divine".[73] This perspective has been characterised as being animistic.[74] In Japan, kami have been venerated since prehistory.[4] During the Yayoi period they were regarded as being formless and invisible,[75] later coming to be depicted anthropomorphically under Buddhist influence.[76] Now, statues of the kami are known as shinzo.[77] Kami are usually associated with a specific place, often a prominent landscape feature such as a waterfall, mountain, large rock, or distinctive tree.[78] Physical objects or places in which the kami are believed to have a presence are termed shintai;[79] objects inhabited by the kami that are placed in the shrine are known as go-shintai.[80] Objects commonly chosen for this purpose include mirrors, swords, stones, beads, and inscribed tablets.[81] These go-shintai are concealed from the view of visitors,[82] and may be hidden inside boxes so that even the priests do not know what they look like.[79] Kami are deemed capable of both benevolent and destructive















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