Please Don't Be Seated


If you are like many modern-day workers, odds are you can spend up to nine hours on your butt! It turns out that many experts regard sitting as the new smoking for the ill effects it can have on health and longevity. “Prolonged sitting is associated with 34 chronic diseases and conditions, including obesity, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, back pain and depression,” explains James A. Levine, MD, PhD, and endocrinologist at the Mayo Clinic. Our bodies aren't meant to sit as much as most of us do nowadays. “As humans have evolved from being agriculturists to being office-based; we’ve lost 10 hours of walking a day,” says Levine. And all that sitting adds up.
After just a few hours in your chair, changes occur in your cells, slowing your metabolism, stiffening arteries and increasing insulin resistance. What's more, people who sat 10 hours or more a day were 31 per cent more likely to die during a five-year period compared with their peers who sat less than six hours a day, according to a study of more than 71,000 men and women in Denmark. Even if you exercise 30 to 60 minutes a day, you’re not in the clear. “Doing something good for one hour a day isn’t enough to negate the bad things you do the rest of the day,” says Levine.
Too much sitting acts almost like a sleeping pill on your body, but without the restorative effects of slumber.
But the news isn’t all bad. Within 90 seconds of standing, you experience positive changes, from a mood boost to better blood sugar control
As you age, your telomeres (part of your chromosomes) usually shorten. But when Swedish researchers encouraged groups of seniors to be more active, they found that telomeres actually grew longer in those who cut back their sitting time by around two hours a day during a small six-month study. If you’re ready to stand up for yourself— and a longer, healthier life—we can help. Your first step is to work on cutting your daily sitting time by two hours, slowly working up to four hours a day. We’ve rounded up some great ways to help you win top honours—every day.
Let’s not tiptoe around it.
What do you learn when you make a living standing up? “You need to take care of your feet,” says Valerie Valente, who runs a bed-and breakfast, where she spends up to 14 hours a day on the go. Some ideas: Get pedicures, put your feet up and walk around barefoot at night. Here are more inside tips from the people who stand and deliver:
Drink lots of water. Muscle fatigue may lead to cramping. Wendy Yoder, a hair stylist who’s upright eight to 14 hours daily, prevents nighttime leg cramps by drinking eight 10-ounce glasses of water throughout the day.
Roll your feet over a tennis ball. This form of self-massage helped Maria Ebert, a teacher who spends six to nine hours on her feet every day, when she was feeling a sensation of pins and needles on the bottoms of her feet.
Take a stroll. Take a lunchtime jaunt around the block to get her blood flowing and get invigorated for the afternoon.
Stand on a mat. Graphic designer and educator Gayle Hendricks logs up to seven hours a day at a standing desk, and her must-have item is an antifatigue mat. “My feet used to feel really tired by the end of the day, like I had just walked a half marathon,” she said.
Stash a stool. If you’re standing still, place one foot on a low stool, suggests Deb Baer, a massage therapist who stands seven or more hours a day. She finds this strategy takes pressure off her lower back.