Practicing calm, slowly
There is a writer’s joke that goes like this: I didn’t have time to write it short, so I wrote it long. Writing is a process of refining what you want to say, and cutting out the excess. This often takes many revisions.
In the same way, exercising quickly is far less demanding than if you do it slowly. Counter intuitive? Possibly.
To slow down is lose momentum. And it can take a while to find a slower rhythm. Meditative practitioners know that it takes time for the mind to calm down. You can’t meditate quickly. Studies have shown that meditators tend to be calmer.
Slowed down exercises allows the organism time to differentiate new and more graceful patterns of movement. Our brains map a personal area around the body known as peripersonal space. When we exercise, we stimulate proprioceptors which are nerve cells that measure stretch and body position, and so we create new neural pathways. Regular practice of these exercises, or any meditative practice, changes the brain over time.
The rest of this sequence is on YouTube.
Particularly for us older adults (your writer is 60) balance and flexibility matter. The law of biological atrophy is unrelenting. In other words, use it or lose it. The body is more than transport to get your head to meetings. This sequence of eighteen slow movements has been my daily practice for the past twelve years. Am I just lucky I don’t suffer the aches and pains of others my age, or does this practice have something to do with it?
An investment of twenty minutes a day can be rewarding.

