Movement is a medicine for creating change in
a person's physical, emotional, and mental states.
~ Carol Welch
a person's physical, emotional, and mental states.
~ Carol Welch
My online friend Merely Me asked me how I exercise from a wheelchair. I thought about it for awhile, then wrote a response. She added it to responses from two upright MSers here. I can talk only about exercise from a chair.
Being in a chair full time means there is limited movement. What does movement have to do with MS? The National MS Society (NMSS) reminds us that MS steals movement from us all. I have secondary progressive MS, and as a result I have been progressively losing my ability to move. How can I slow that loss?
Here is what NMSS has to say about exercise. A wheelchair adds another factor, but for some it seems hardly a handicap.
Be sure to check Merely Me's article -- MS Community and Exercising -- where she talks about more than wheelchair exercising.
Being in a chair full time means there is limited movement. What does movement have to do with MS? The National MS Society (NMSS) reminds us that MS steals movement from us all. I have secondary progressive MS, and as a result I have been progressively losing my ability to move. How can I slow that loss?
Here is what NMSS has to say about exercise. A wheelchair adds another factor, but for some it seems hardly a handicap.
Be sure to check Merely Me's article -- MS Community and Exercising -- where she talks about more than wheelchair exercising.
technorati tags: , DowntheMSPath, disability, disaboom, health, ms, wheeler, wheelchair, multiplesclerosis, mstreatment, qualityoflife, positiveattitude, independence, attitude, joyoflife, MSAwareness, wheelchairexercising,
1 comment:
You wrote such an excellent response! I want to thank you again for your contribution. You are a very skilled writer Vicki.
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