Take a look at the amazing story of 38 year old Kuen Tang, and her amazing accomplishment of conquering the Great Wall of China.
The Link Between Stress and Heart Disease
Stress can negatively affect many aspects of your physical and emotional health including your heart. In recent years, more attention has been paid to reducing stress to help prevent heart disease. The following from Forbes Magazine discusses two new studies that have uncovered more information about the connection between stress and heart disease. Read the article to learn more and check out our post, How Stress is Affecting Your Health, for solutions to reduce stress.
Forbes: The Link Between Stress And Heart Disease May Lie In The Brain
Inspired
“I’m never changing who I am.”
Imagine Dragons, It’s Time
Monitoring Your Mood
In our previous post, Blue Monday and Beyond – Tips to Beat the Winter Blues we discussed how some research suggests that up to 15% of people in Ontario experience the “winter blues” and 2-3% of the population suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD).
If you are suffering from depression, anxiety, SAD or simply the “winter blues” being aware of your feelings, thoughts, emotions and overall mood can help you to understand and cope. The following printable “Mood Diary” will help you to track when you are feeling a certain emotion, the intensity of it, the situational aspects and the effectiveness of your coping mechanisms. Doing so will give you and your healthcare professionals a better understanding of the problem.
For more helpful tools visit our Printable Resources Page.
Inspired
Inspired
Inspired
“The most difficult thing is the decision to act, the rest is merely tenacity.”
Amelia Earhart
Flexible Work Arrangements: No Longer Working “9 to 5”
Julie Entwistle, MBA, BHSc (OT), BSc (Health / Gerontology)
Co-written by Occupational Therapy student Carolyn Rocca
I have several commutes. If I bring my laptop home, one commute is to my dining room table. If I leave my laptop at the office, I have a seven-minute drive (eight in traffic) before I am sitting at my desk. If I am required to be in Toronto for 8:30am, my commute starts at 6:00am for a drive that in “good traffic” would only take me 50 minutes.
With more and more people living away from work so they can afford more sizable housing, more property, or even perhaps a desire or need to stay close to extended family and child care, Flexible Work Schedules are becoming more valued, and dare I say, necessary.
Flexible work schedules are arrangements that allow employees the opportunity to better juggle their family and personal responsibilities that typically conflict with the traditional Monday-to-Friday, 9-to-5 work week. These arrangements can take several forms, including: working a set number of hours with flexible and agreed upon start and end times, working longer days in exchange for a day off, or requesting time off for personal reasons and offering to make it up by working longer hours on another day.
According to Statistics Canada, in 2014 69% of couple families with at least one child were dual-earner families, representing quite an increase from 36% in 1976. As the number of dual-earner families continues to rise, the option of flexible work schedules will become increasingly enticing for such families who struggle to get their kids on the school bus in time for their lengthy commute. In 2012, an estimated 36% of Canadian employees with caregiving responsibilities had flexible hours, and this value will likely continue to rise. As they say, times have changed, and this seems to be a change for the better.
Canada’s 2012 General Social Survey reports that having a flexible schedule that allows employees to choose when their work day starts and ends was associated with slightly greater satisfaction. In fact, 79% of employees with a flexible work schedule reported that they were satisfied or very satisfied with their work–life balance, compared to 73% of those whose schedule was not flexible.
More specifically, studies that have explored the benefits of flexible work schedules for employees suggest that they improve overall work-life balance, reduce workplace stress and health-related symptoms, and increase job satisfaction and organizational commitment, ultimately maintaining their connection to the labor market. These advantages go both ways, as these arrangements benefit employers by enhancing recruitment and retention, reducing absenteeism, and increasing productivity, naturally leading to reduced costs.
So what does this shift towards flexible work options mean for you if you have a disability, and me as an occupational therapist? If you need to return to work following injury or illness, an occupational therapist is well-equipped to help you and your employer devise workplace accommodations to gradually resume your full-time duties, and flexible hours makes this transition more feasible and likely to be successful. For example, if sitting for long periods is challenging, but sitting is a necessary part of your job, then we don’t want your “sitting clock” to be “ticking” while you are stuck in traffic. If flexible work hours can get you at your desk faster, allowing you more time to work and less time to aggravate your symptoms in the car, then a supportive employer should see the benefit of that – for you and them. Also, if as part of your recovery you continue to require medical oversight or treatment by other providers, a flexible work schedule will allow you the freedom to maintain your treatment schedule, while still gradually resuming job duties.
If flexible work hours can benefit both employer and employee, both within and outside of a rehabilitation process, then I say “just ask for it”….and work with your employer to develop a program and schedule that works for both of you.
Laughter Therapy
Weekly Mind Bender
How can a pocket be empty but still have something in it?
The pocket has a hole in it.


