Movement

I’ve found through a bit of research that it’s important to keep moving if you have Parkinsons disease. So I wobble and shake my way along to the shops or to the pharmacy and back. Trying to get my slow steps in. I have looked at my movement counter but although I’m almost always getting a couple of thousand of steps in every day my heart rate barely registers!

What to do? Then someone from my surgery suggested a Parkinsons group that does table tennis (ping pong). I’d played this on the dining table at home as a young teenager and thought I’d have a go. My worker from the surgery came down to introduce me to the group a week ago. I needed that support because I find it hard to integrate with new people because of anxiety.

So..  I went, and found that I can hit a ping pong ball across a net! I was getting my feet tangled a bit and sort of felt rather static. But I could do it. I went back this week and I’m happy I can progress. I’m going to keep going. It’s only a fortnightly thing, but I hope it will be good for me. I ache in places I didn’t know I have though!

5 thoughts on “Movement

      1. My philosophy is that using our body reminds it that we are alive and useful. I don’t have Parkinson’s but I have arthritis all over the place. I think our brains and our bodies inform each other. When a person stops moving the brain starts to think, on the organic level, “Well, I guess it’s over.” So much good stuff happens to our brains — chemically — with exercise. It loves it. All the happiness hormones start charging up there. All the better if the exercise is fun! ❤️

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