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Today after 1  hour on Theracycle my blood pressure was 116/62.   I take 
med for borderline high bp and my gp wants to add a calcium  blocker because 
my  bp was 162/68 in his office  Monday.  Waiting 40 minutes in office is 
very stressful, with PD I can't take it, also have big frustration with 
voice.  My  point is Theracycle enables me to benefit from exercise I 
otherwise wouldn't be able to do.

It is so important and probably the best medicine available with no harmful 
side effects.

-----Original Message----- 
From: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2013 2:51 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: exercises to strengthen fine motor skills

I have discovered the secret of acquiring exercise impetus. I of course, as
a long time
member of this and other PD lists have known about the theoretical
benefits  of improved movement with regular exercising. I tried (half 
baked)) to
exercise and couldn't get it done with any regularity. I considered
something like a Theracycle and decided that it was probably faux 
exercising
because I wouldn't be using my own muscles. Then  in  November 2011, my 
whole
perspective changed. I had a heart attack . Among the  strong 
recommendations
by my Cardiac Specialist was to enroll in a Cardiac  Rehabilitation program
at the hospital, which of course I did. It included one  hour of exercising
3x per week with various arm and leg machines and a series of  meetings with
a dietician. It has now been about a year and a half and it has by  force
changed my life. I continue to exercise at the facility with really no 
change
in my program except now I pay for it myself rather than Medicare paying,
and while I am supervised I am not monitored as I was for the first three
months. Due partially to the exercise but mainly  due to dietary changes, I
lost 40 pounds. No more chocolate donuts, no more meat 5 times/wk (now
chicken  and salmon and vegetables and fruit coming out of my ears). Salt in
moderation  and always counting daily carbs, fat (only certain fats healthy 
to
eat) sugar,  calories and on and on. But now I was and am exercising because
it's my life  that is at stake not (just) my movement. I say 'just' with
tongue in cheek  because it isn't 'just' when I can't turn over in bed or 
get
out of a chair or  teeter on one leg trying to put my pants on or super 
worst
afraid that if I  lose my balance in the shower and fall or slip it will be
a disaster. The irony  is that because this stupid PD is progressive (I'm
in my 14th year), it's hard  to know in all cases whether a treatment or 
pill
or procedure is working as  effectively as you would like because the
progression varies from  person-to-person, from symptom-to-symptom in each 
of us.
But the point of  my having nothing better to do than kid around on the
list for the moment is  that if you need incentive to exercise for PD, try a
heart attack. It should  work every time.

Paul H. Lauer


In a message dated 3/16/2013 02:00:38 Eastern Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:

Thanks,  Rick.

About flipping pages: I recently got a Kindle paperwhite--the one  that is
just an e-reader, not a fancy tablet, and is good for reading in  the dark.
It's great---easy-on-the-eyes screen, adjustable type fonts and  sizes, and
no pages to flip! I hadn't realized what an effort that was  until I didn't
have to do it. Of course, that means less exercise for my  paws. Maybe I'll
get a deck of cards and practice shuffling and  dealing.

Hope you got your walk in. I like walking my local supermarket  when it's
not too crowded. A grocery cart is a dandy walking  aid.

Kathleen.

On 14 March 2013 15:15, Rick McGirr  <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Exercise. I try to  remember that if I don't move it, it ain't gonna move.
> If
> I  don't work it, it ain't gonna work. It's either in gear or in the
shop.
> So
> acting on that, it is a cold but sunny day in  Buffalo, and I really
think I
> should put on some layers and go for a  walk. If I get cold, I'll walk the
> mall.
>
> Kathleen, I  don't know if it would be called physical or occupational,
but
>  I
> sometimes sit at the piano, usually when no one's around, (I'm my  own
worst
> critic) and play scales and exercises, most often using a  metronome. This
> helps keep the fingers in shape and helps to keep a  separate sense of
> identity in each finger. I would say also that this  aids in typing, and I
> guess it would generally benefit my fine  motor.
>
> I do have a hard time flipping pages in books, mags,  and papers.
>
> Oh yeah, the walk.
>
>  Rick
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Parkinson's  Information Exchange Network
> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On  Behalf Of Kathleen Cochran
> Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2013 9:28  AM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: exercises to  strengthen fine motor skills
>
> Does anyone use occupational  therapy to help with fine motor skills?
Anyone
> find it  effective?
>
> Kathleen
>
> On Monday, March 11, 2013,  Rayilyn Brown wrote:
>
> > even though we get worse no matter  what, the message seems still to be
> > "use it or lose it".  I  would think using computer would help.  I do
> > several  crosswords  on line daily.
> >
> >
> >  http://www.livestrong.com/article/93795-exercises-strengthen-fine-moto
>  > r-skills/
> >
> > Ray
> > Rayilyn  Brown
> > Past Director AZNPF
> > Arizona Chapter National  Parkinson Foundation
> >
> >  ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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