Free Back Pain & Exercise Course







Welcome

If you have siatica and back problems, there's a selection of resources here to help you learn what you can do about it.

Our approach is flexible. We say "whatever works" for you is the right thing for you.

Yes everybody is different, but most of the time a combination of the right back exercises, right diet and changing your habitual movement patterns will give excellent results with stopping your sciatica and back pain.

Really there's no "rocket science here" - a good diet and moderate exercise are two of the keys to a long healthy life and a healthy back

Here are 3 suggestions to help you improve your sciatica & back pain:

#1. Register for the Back Health & Exercise course

#2. Buy the Better Back System

This summaries everything we know that works and includes exercises, diet guidance and videos.

It includes a set of unique exercises stretches to loosen and strengthen your back, especially the core muscles that support it.

The exercises are simple, safe and easy to do at home in less than 10 minutes a day and you have a better than 97% chance of success.

You'll be surprised at how much difference you can make to your back with just a few minutes of the right type of exercise every day and the right diet.

Find out more about the Better Back System.

#3. Start eating properly if you're not already!

Just give your body the nutrition it needs to function and very often it will heal itself.

Because many of the foods we eat are highly processed and have low nutritional value, we suggest you try a natural food supplement to make sure your body gets all the nutrients it needs.

Body Balance from LifeForce is one of the best supplements we've tried. Google it and you can often find a free 30 day trial on offer.

Boku Super Food is another good supplement (and is offered at a special, introductory price from time to time).

Good luck with your back!

Walk To Lose Weight and Stop Back Pain

March 17th, 2008

One of the exercises we recommend for helping with back pain and sciatica is walking - good old, plain and simple walking. It may even seem too obvious - life wasn’t meant to be that straightforward right?

Well actually Yes, sometimes it is.

The bonus is if you do enough walking you can also lose a useful amount of weight and improve your overall fitness, as well as helping your back.

There is a great story below about a woman who was overweight big time and had back problems. Eventually she started walking, only a short distance at first, but gradually increasing and after a period not only did she lose a huge amount of weight, but her back problems went away too.

Reality Check
If you’re an average person in an OECD country such as the US, Canada, UK, Australia, Germany, France etc you are not exercising enough.

The modern sedentary lifestyle is bad for you and bad for your back.

At the end of the day it’s your choice what you do with your time. If you invest in the effort of exercise you will most likely get similar benefits to the woman in the story.

Remember:
In the long run regular, moderate exercise of the right type and a good diet and are two of the keys to a long healthy life and a healthy back.

There are also specific back exercises you can do to help your back and stop sciatica.

A story about losing weight and losing back pain through walking
Claire Elliot is from Sutton Coldfield, in the West Midlands of the UK.

Claire, a mum-of-two, was overweight and suffering crippling back pain, then 18 months ago she started walking and has now shed eight stone - hiking her way back to health.

She was a size 28 at her biggest and is now a size 14, dropping from 21st 6lb to 13st 6lb in the process. She achieved her transformation after joining a slimming club and taking long daily walks.

“I have never been as slim as this - and my body has changed beyond all recognition,” she says happily.

For Claire weight problems started in childhood.and she was a size 22 by the time of her wedding, in August 1997.

Then when she later got pregnant with her first child James, she used it as an excuse to eat what she liked. Everyone assured me the weight would fall off afterwards, but it didn’t and I went up to a size 28.”

Three years later, Claire was thrilled to be pregnant again, but by now the weight was affecting her mood. “Last time, I’d been proud of my baby bump - but this time I felt massive,” she recalls.

“Even though I was miserable, I reassured myself that I was still healthy. I’d never suffered high blood pressure or fluid retention.”

Then over the next three years, although she managed to shed about three stone, she was in too much pain to exercise and was bothered by sever sciatica and back pain.

Eventually she determined to do something, and joined WeightWatchers at which time she was 17st 8lb.

Immediately, Claire started a healthy eating plan and took up walking. “Every morning I’d set off in loose jogging bottoms and baggy tops. Initially, I could barely make it to the end of the road, but I improved quickly.

“I went from half a mile, to one, then two, until I was walking five miles a day and I dropped from a size 20 so by the summer I was a size 14.”

Claire realised there were other benefits, too. Her back pain vanished and the regular exercise boosted her mood - enabling her to reduce her prescription medication for depression.

Claire is now down to 13st 6lb and still walks every day. She says “My legs are half the size they used to be, my bum has just disappeared, my arms are thinner and even my cheekbones are showing”.

So the moral of this story is walking is great - remember there are also specific back exercises you can do to help stop back pain.

Healthy Back Nutrition - Superfoods

February 3rd, 2008

One of the points we make regularly is that poor nutrition is often a contributor to back pain and sciatica.

This doesn’t necessarily sound logical when you first hear it because siatica and back pain are “mechanical” problems, so what does nutrition have to do with them?

The answer is that much of the food in the western world is nutritionally poor. It’s over processed, full of chemical additives, probably several months old, likely treated for long term storage and so on.

The US is clearly the worst in this situation, because the regulations are heavily biased towards profitability for the food suppliers, not health for the consumer.

Many foods and/or their treatments used in the US are actually illegal in European countries.

Going back to sciatica and back pain, if your body is deprived of vital nutrients and vitamins (in a form it can assimilate) for long enough, it starts to malfunction - just like a machine fed the wrong fuel and lubicants would break down too.

Because your spine is such a complex, important and sensitive organ, it is likely nutritional problems will show up there. Also, if you do get a back injury, its going to be difficult to heal.

The solution is remarkably simple:
(a) short term take a food supplement
(b) longer term - start to eat fresh, natural foods.

However, it’s actually time consuming and often difficult to buy fresh, natural and healthy foods, so many people carry on taking a supplement as insurance and because it works for them (it costs less per month than one coffee a day).

Here is a link to a great article on food supplements - a so called superfood - http://www.naturalnews.com/022566.html

Importantly, there is a link in the article to a special offer on Boku Super Food. Get to their online store by clicking this link

It’s a time limited offer organised by Natural News whom I trust. With their offer you can get a 30 day supply for $20 which I think is a great bargain (usually $50).

In 30 days you should notice a difference in both your overall health and your back. I reckon it’s absolutely worth $20 to find out if it helps you.

I have no financial interest in this offer and get no commission from your purchase.

Good luck.