●Back Pain and Major League Baseball Management
New York Mets manager Bobby Valentine's story of how an epidural injection allowed him to get back to work in no time.
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| Company profile |
| Aman Life started as a sewing factory and has been engaged in development, manufacturing and marketing of various kinds of clothing products for over 40 years. Our product line includes the BackAlleve series back support belt, which has sold over 150,000 units since its release in the Japanese market. Our product line also includes a knee supporter of unique structure, an easy-to-wear shape-up corset, and more. It is our dedicated mission to do our best to support people striving for secure, healthy and comfortable lives. |
| Working hours and holidays |
| Our working hours are 9am to 5pm GMT+09:00. Our holidays in 2007: Feb 12, Mar 21, Apr 30, May 3 and 4, July 16, Sep 17, Sep 24, Oct 8, Nov 23, Dec 24, and Dec 28 to Jan 5, 2008. |
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New York Mets manager Bobby Valentine's story of how an epidural injection allowed him to get back to work in no time.
Nowadays information can travel at the speed of light, thus promoting greater intercultural exchange between the East and the West. Although modern Western medicine is recognized worldwide as being both safe and effective (although not always inexpensive), just recently has Eastern medical and spiritual wisdom begun to permeate into Western popular culture.
Take slow, relaxing Chinese Tai Chi, for example. 30 years ago hardly anyone had heard of this ancient healing art, but now you can see everywhere; in health magazines, on TV, and of course, on the Internet.
Although some people are fascinated simply by the fluidity of movement and mysticism of Tai Chi, I was more curious about about just how effective Tai Chi is for curing lower back pain due to a herniated disc, spinal stenosis, scoliosis, strained back and the like.
Although medical doctors seem to be having a difficult quantifying the exact results of practicing Tai Chi, you'd be hard pressed to find a doctor who says it can't hurt to give Tai Chi a try.
Some basic information on Tai Chi can be found here.
One last note: You may have noticed that sometimes "Tai Chi" is spelled "Taiji Quan." Neither is "more correct" than the other, however "Taiji Quan" is the official word used in Greater China and taught in school. "Tai" is pronounced like "necktie" and "ji" as in "jeep." "Quan" starts with a "ch" sound and rhymes with "spawn." Nobody said genuine Chinese pronunciation was easy!
Good afternoon from sunny Shiga Prefecture.
Just a short notice that as of today we'll be changing our size chart to match our Japanese site's size chart.
Here's how it works: the "Small" size has ceased to exist, and all the other sizes have been bumped up one size (ex: what was a "Medium" is now a "Large")
I don't expect this will cause any confusion as the actual measurements on all size charts have not changed. And yes, the prices are the same too.
If you have any questions, feel free to send me an email and I'll be happy to clarify the situation.
Thanks and happy shopping!
Low-risk shopping is where it's at!
BackAlleve is now available with a one month money-back guarantee.
Here's how it works:
Buy it, try it out for 30 days, and if you don't feel that there has been a change in your lower back pain condition, just send it back for a full refund. (minus shipping and handling, sorry!)
For details, click here!
As always, feel free to ask us any question you may have. Thanks!
The human body is only capable of sustaining a seated posture for 30 minutes at a time before it negatively affects your back health.
How long have you been sitting down?
The new BackAlleve site is finally up and running!
Our old site athttp://amanlife.net/world/ will no longer be updated and will be phased out pretty soon, so please bookmark our new page here athttp://amanlife.net/backalleve/.
We've upgraded to Movable Type 3.3 and plan on adding a lot of new things to the site in the future.
A happy holidays to everyone and remmber that BackAlleve makes a great gift for your family and loved ones ailing from back pain.
Until we meet again!
In a word, yes!
BackAlleve is designed to be worn all day long, however some people prefer to wear it only at work, or when on the road, etc. Basically, it comes down to your personal preference.
For those of you who are have heard that "wearing a back brace all day long can weaken your back and abdominal muscles" and are worried about complications, fear not. BackAlleve is unlike most lower back support belts in that it does not forcefully constrict your natural movement and thus does not result in degeneration of lower back and abdominal muscles.
BackAlleve is designed to prevent lower back pain, not to constrict your movement or prevent your natural range of motion.
So, you can safely wear BackAlleve all day long. Our company president prefers to use it only when sitting at his desk, commuting to and from work, and playing golf. But this is just his personal preference.
Some people that have problems getting out of bed in the morning even wear BackAlleve to bed at night, although these are fairly severe cases. We generally suggest that you take BackAlleve off before climbing into your warm bed, purely for hygienic reasons.
But as BackAlleve is easily washable in the washing machine, it's pretty much up to you how often you wear BackAlleve for maximum lower back support.
I found out yesterday that my grandmother has spinal stenosis.
My mother dutily informed me as we were driving out to my grandmother's house in Boston. The holidays were right around the corner and we still had to discuss who was going to buy gifts for whom.My family has picking names out of a hat and doing Christmas "secret-Santa" style for a few years.
My grandmother is 89 years old, a Greek-American. She is a very proud woman, and her talents include Greek and Italian cooking, sewing, and singing. For as long as I can remember, she has always harmonized, in a great big voice, on the last two notes of "Happy Birthday" when we sing it at family parties.
Her vision has been steadily deteriorating over the past few years. We bought her a fairly expensive projector machine that magnifies documents to five or ten times so she can read the fine print on her bank statements and bills. Even with her eyesight as it is, my grandmother's handwriting is still impeccable. In fact, it's orders of magnitude better than mine.
I was really worried when I heard about her spinal stenosis. Since I'd already done a fair amount of research on the internet regarding spinal stenosis, I knew that it is commonly associated with old age and often occurs naturally. The spinal column contracts resulting in pressure on the nerves, which causes pain. People with spinal stenosis are often characterized by a "hunchback" look, because bending over causes less stress to the spine than standing up straight. For a more technical description, check this out.
To date, here is no guaranteed cure short of surgery. And surgery isn't something she necessarily wants to forgo at 89 years old, unless it's absolutely necessary.
So, I mentally prepared myself for a bent-over, hunchbacked version of my grandmother as I rang her doorbell. As the door swung open, however, I was shocked to see that she looked no different than the last time I saw her. She greeted me with a warm smile and led my mother and me into the house. It was amazing, as if her back problem was a myth.
I watched her perplexed as she walked down stairs into the basement to get some onions to cook us a meal. Of course I offered to go downstairs in her stead, but she waved me away. She didn't seem any different than three years before she had been diagnosed with stenosis of the spine.
I thought spinal stenosis means you can't walk or standup straight, but apparently I was wrong. There are many different levels of spinal degeneration, ranging from what my grandmother is experiencing to people who can no longer perform basic daily tasks due to extreme back pain.
My grandmother has always been an active woman, and still is. I think this combined with pride is what keeps her going in spite of the back pain she must be experiencing. Although it would seem that there's no cure for spinal stenosis now, I plan on doing everything I can to make my grandmother's life even if just a little more comfortable.

I always thought a corset was something that overweight women used to wear in the 1800s to make themselves look trim.
Lack of exercise is a societal problem, consummating in the increased levels of obesity inAmerica,Europe, and most of the Western world. I've spent half of the last ten years traveling back and forth betweenEast Asiaand theUnited States, and I can't help but make comparisons between our two distinctly different ways of living.
While naturally there are countless differences in customs, religion, politics, and every facet of life, one of the differences that stands out the most is the national health standard.
Every time I go abroad to eitherJapanorChina, I'm simply shocked at just how thin everyone is. It's as if obesity hasn't been invented here... yet.
After several years of living inWestern Japanand making frequent trips to MainlandChina, I've had the pleasure of sitting down for dinner at the private households of many, many friendly acquaintances. Seated at the dinner table, I asked them one by one the secret to their waistlines. More often than not, they'd just make a puzzled face and reply something like, "Eating healthy and exercising frequently."
And of course that's the answer. Ever since nutritional is a science pioneered mainly by Western scientists and dietitians, it would seem that we've forgotten the simple truth that a well-balanced meal and regular exercise are the obvious "secrets" to health and longevity. Eating well-balanced meals is still common sense in the East.
As for working out, many people receive their daily exercise by simply riding a bicycle ten minutes to the train station on the way to work, and ten minutes on the way home. The majority of Americans would naturally opt for a two minute car ride, and probably feel embarrassed at the very thought of riding a bicycle out of the driveway to a train station. How many of us haven't even ridden a bicycle since junior high?
Before I began frequenting the Orient, I thought exaggerated gasoline prices were the major cause for all the bicycles. I also erroneously believed that low family incomes were the cause of low obesity levels. As these can be, undeniably, some of the factors involved in certain cases, I believe that national health consciousness is also heavily involved in the health gap between the East than the West.
As modern science and technology have flowed from the West to the East over the past 150 years, perhaps it would be in our best interest to re-learn a few health fundamentals from the Orient.
