Morning Rachel,
Recently,
I've been reading about the impact of Tai Chi on the effects of the
menopause. Many of the women I know (my age or older) regularly talk
about the symptoms that came on during menopause (with many continuing
post-menopause) such as lack of sleep (very common), concentration, lack
of strength, hot flushes, new joint aches, tiredness etc...
Many older women I encounter go to a physio or other
medical practitioner to 'sort them out' and took various medications
during the height of menopause to help with the symptoms. It is quite
noticeable the difference in how I am.
When I was working, I was starting to really struggle to remember things and I was getting to the point where I felt I couldn't do my job properly, which improved enormously when I started attending class, even with training initially only once a week. Sleeping and hot flushes were an issue, but that noticeably improved too. I'd thought I was simply through the other side (getting older!), but given the recent conversations with other women, they are all still experiencing issues, particularly sleep, which I don't have at all. It's not the most scientific assessment granted, but was the prompt for me to look into it a little more.
Even a cursory search shows numbers articles highlighting the benefits of Tai Chi on menopause symptoms, but I like the following article (more evidence based), and indicates improvements in a group of post menopausal women in terms of sleep, quality of life and physical performance after an 8 week Tai Chi programme, 3 times per week.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9583377/
Some of the references also highlight studies showing benefits on gait, spine bone density, kidney function (to name just a few).
Another quote:
"In fact, tai-chi seems to have no end of benefits – studies have indicated that tai-chi improves both bone density and neurological function, helping to cut through brain fog and target joint aches, can shore up immune systems in menopausal women, and lower the risk of cardiovascular disease." (healthandher.com)
I shouldn't be surprised of course....
See you later.
Julia
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