AQUARIUM AT HOME HAS HEALTH BENEFITS
Having
an aquarium does qualify as a lovely hobby, but what about its health benefits?
“Definitely soothing,” says Mohana Narayanan, Counsellor. “Energy-healing
enthusiasts believe having this water body in the right position energises that
direction.” After years of displaying fish in a tank in the living room, she
and her college-going daughter believe you can train pet fish to sense human
presence! “Especially flowerhorn and goldfish,” they say. “Use the aquarium to
teach kids to be responsible for fellow beings, to cope with loss,” says
Mohana. “My daughter cried buckets when we lost our first goldfish.” The
daughter nods. Don’t people buy ornamental fish as a decoration? Like those
pictures in Harry Potter books? It looks like fish refuse to be mere mobiles
adding colour to rooms, and have gone on to prove themselves as stress-busters
and health-enhancers. Numerous studies show that watching aquarium fish going
about their business can reduce anxiety and bring down your blood pressure.
Fish win. That’s probably why doctors, dentists and school principals earmark
prominent space for aquariums in their waiting rooms. Visitors have to wait
long, go through a dozen tests!
Aquariums
with colourful inhabitants keep hyperactive kids engaged. Kids are curious,
watch fish moving around, feel calmed, and stay away from mischief which, in
turn, relaxes the adults around. Purdue University's Dr. Nancy Edwards and Dr.
Alan Beck monitored Alzheimer's patients' appetite as they watched aquarium
fish at meal times. In the aquarium area, patients stayed at the dinner table
longer and ate 21 per cent to 27 per cent more food. Besides nutritional
benefits, a decrease in physically aggressive behaviour was noticed among the
patients. “I set up a fish tank for grandma when she had a stroke,” says
Narendra. “She would wheel herself out every day to watch her fish “friends”,
and was soon talking about them enthusiastically. “I’m sure they helped her
stay positive.”Can’t deny an organic fish installation can give your room a
different décor. One store used a stretch-tank as a room divider to stunning
effect. Kids came just to watch the fish move across the room. A fish display
is a constantly changing, living piece of art and brings vibrancy to rooms. The
lighting creates atmosphere, and in the living room, will be the focal point,
not the television!With the kind of accessories you get, setting up a tank is
fun! The aquascape is yours to design, so bring out the artist in you! You can
buy all sorts of plant life, rocks, figurines — stuff for your fish to discover
and hide in. Remember though: you want to see the fish, so don't overcrowd your
aquarium.
Get
your kids involved — in choosing/feeding the fish, in decorating/cleaning the
tank. Help them learn pet care. Get them to research about aquariums. They
could also learn names, write on fish habits, where they are found in the wild.
The routine of feeding and maintaining fish is a lesson in discipline.Make
money from your hobby! Become an expert, start a website, charge for advice!
Give speeches in schools on “maintaining aquariums.” Breed fish (try with
freshwater ones) commercially. You can also sell aquatic plants and rocks. Sums
up T. D. Babu, marine bio-technologist, “It’s scientifically proven that gazing
at fish will reduce stress and blood pressure in adults and hyperactivity in
children. It’s a good way to meditate. Hospitals, institutions and corporates
should replace the television in their lounges with ornamental fish. Technology
has made maintenance of aquariums very simple. So, go for freshwater ornamental
fish, and choose co-existing species (guppies, catfish, goldfish, angels,
freshwater sharks and mollies) rather than single fish such as arrowana which
are predators.”
*
One who keeps an aquarium is an aquarist.* If maintaining a fish tank is too
much stress, pay a professional and reap the benefits.* Gazing at fish controls
muscle tension and pulse rate in elderly subjects.* In the 2004 Purdue study,
patients demonstrated a 12 per cent reduction in self-reported pre-treatment
anxiety.* In a 1985 study of dental patients, contemplation of an aquarium
produced significant increase in relaxation in comparison to a control groupAquarium, hobby, pet fish, facts about fish
Prof. John Kurakar
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