Showing posts with label Sport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sport. Show all posts

Monday, 4 January 2016

Is your fitness slacking too? I've got a confession to make.

Is your fitness slacking too? I've got a confession to make.


So I went for a New Year’s Day surf and was hugely disappointed in my own ability to surf and manage in the tricky conditions. You see I've been a full time surfer for around 15 years and have prided myself for being able to go out in pretty much anything the sea around the UK can whip up. Not now though, I struggled and just about survived after a late and slightly boozy night (NYE) with a very early trip to the beach and I left the water after only 30 minutes instead of the usual 2-3 or more hours.

You see we've had baby Nina, now 5 months old, and I'm using this as an excuse for the state of my fitness. It is just an excuse of course, I've had plenty more opportunities to workout than I've actually used and now I've paid the price with what I would say is the worst level of fitness since I was in my mid-teens. A pretty bad example of a PT for certain.

I have used quite a lot of my free time to treat my own physical issues with the Biomechanics Coaching process and massage therapy methods. I do feel so much better now in myself and in my workouts than I have after suffering a chronic low back pain issue for 20 years and having none of the other professionals or methods have any similar level of effect.

So now I've made a good start to correcting my asymmetries, dysfunctions and weakness’ I can build my fitness again to an excellent level with less of the recurring injuries and limitations. Despite this I see no reason to allow my fitness to drop to such a degree. There are many ways to skirt around the issues I had with correctly targeted exercises as I would do with my own PT clients.

So my confession, I let myself slip, didn’t take my own medicine, was a hypocrite at worst and a fraud at best. I’ve got slower, weaker, fatter and everything in between. Over the festive season I hit the booze, the sugar and refined junk and did very little exercise. I’m kind of ok with allowing myself to do that in a no holds barred way for a while but now I’m over it. So I am now like many others at this time of year, for the first time in my adult life I’m going to have to make an effort. Before it was just what I did, how I was, my lifestyle revolved around sport, exercise and eating very well so it was no effort just to maintain a high level of fitness.

I hope I have learnt from this time and experience, I certainly don’t enjoy having such a limiting level of fitness and allowing my health to suffer like this. It takes a situation such as this for the level of importance for a change to be realized and take hold. Out if the two things we know to be most valuable in making such lifestyle changes; importance for, and confidence to be able to, I know that I have both now in high levels so it’s going to happen for me. As a PT I’m excited to find out where other people are at with these as the key motivation to a successful outcome for the struggling client often lays within these:

How important is it that you make a change?
How confident are you that you can make that change?


 Neil ERIKSEN BSc Health & Fitness – Personal Trainer, Biomechanics Coach, Massage Therapist

Thursday, 16 July 2015

If you have ever stretched, why?

In fitness we know certain things like if you run more you get better at it, the same for all movements. If you lift weights you will traditionally get stronger or bigger and maybe even leaner, if you have the right diet to support those changes. But what about stretching? Well it's in the name isn't it, when you stretch something it gets longer. So the mental shortcut that we all go through is that when we stretch our muscles they get longer, it happens with other things so it must be true. Stretching has been the mainstay of fitness and therapy for decades, to prevent 'short' and 'tight' muscles we have stretched them. But does it work to lengthen your muscles?

It's understandable that people without specific knowledge would adhere to the general guidelines provided by people who obviously know about these things. If they say that after a workout we should stretch all of the major muscles used in the workout for around 15 seconds for a maintenance stretch then you would of course do it. My issue with this is that it's just not very personal and a prescription such as total body stretching can take around 10-15 minutes to complete, after every workout that could be around an hour a week or a couple of days a year. With time being a constant issue for many, time saving may help more people get the much needed exercise. Also, many have spent significant time stretching without significant improvements in the length of the muscle and subsequent range at the associated joint i.e. tight hamstrings seen in hip flexion, so stretching doesn't always stretch, fact, why not?

The body is complex, there are any number of reasons why one would have a tight muscle, if the reason is not to do with an unaccustomed sensory experience of the stretch feeling then what is it? The answer lies in the relationship of that muscle with the rest of the body, indeed the first place to look might be around the local region but this is commonly not the case. If stretching the hamstring as an example over 8 weeks doesn't work then I'd stop doing it and look elsewhere, in my experience, your best bet is a Biomechanics Coach but it all depends on the experience and knowledge of the specific professional.   

So with all of the knowledge that I have accrued over the years my advice would follow thus:

1. Follow a programme of exercise that maintains structural balance and you will reduce the need to correct posture with stretching or other interventions.

2. Prevent static postures for extended periods of time to reduce the need to correct faulty movement and postural issues gained from them.

3. Use massage techniques such as foam rolling and self massage to help maintain natural viscoelastic properties of tissues and work out old issues.

4. Avoid injuries from progressing too quickly in exercise and vary activities to reduce overuse injuries, get injuries seen to as soon as they present.  

5. Maintain a healthy diet and level of hydration.

6. Reduce stressful situations and utilize methods such as deep breathing and meditation to combat it if you become stressed.

7. Get the rest your body requires.

8. If a muscle or movement feels like it needs stretching then by all means do so. It might not need stretching, it might need the opposite or something else entirely. Seek further advice from an adequately qualified professional on the correct approach to treat an issue if there is no change. Be prepared that this may take time to assess and develop a strategy for you.

To review, stretching probably shouldn't be called stretching but it is, off the top of my head I can't think of a better single name. Personally I would attempt to decide what the required outcome is and call the movement something to do with that. Muscular Sensory Reprogramming MSR springs to mind for traditional use of stretching. So generally in the absence of better advice I'd carry on with your stretching as you wish, if your body is trying to tell you something via pain, discomfort or obvious movement issue then you should pay attention and have a professional investigate. 

Here's a quote from an incredibly enlightening article I have finally read.

"Traditionally, rehabilitation literature has attributed increases in muscle extensibility observed after stretching to a mechanical increase in muscle length. A growing body of research refutes these mechanical theories, suggesting instead that in subjects who are asymptomatic, increases in muscle extensibility observed immediately after a single stretching session and after short-term (3- to 8-week) stretching regimens are predominantly due to modification in subjects' sensation. This research brings to light the importance of using sensory endpoints when assessing muscle extensibility, the value of multidimensional muscle length assessment, and the need for basic research in this field. Multidimensional evaluation of muscle length can lead to a more comprehensive and effective approach to addressing disorders of muscle length and has application in developing fitness guidelines".

Increasing Muscle Extensibility: A Matter of Increasing Length or Modifying Sensation?
  • S. Peter Magnusson. Physical Therapy. 2010
  • Wednesday, 8 April 2015

    Do we need prehab? 'Therapy' before injury.

    Here's something that seems to be a bit contentious in the Sports Physio world, or at least with one that I have met. This Physio seems to think that colleagues would follow the same belief that trying to predict someone's chance of injury and "addressing problems before they even exist" has the potential to in itself cause a problem.

    What was being referred to is the connection that quite rightly exists between the muscles/structures and the control systems in and under conscious or subconscious control. There is the possibility that through the knowledge that one has an existing issue which has the potential to cause injury or excessive wear and tear over time that the issue could be worsened or another one arise in its place.

    So is a Body MOT, a prehab intervention to do just this necessarily a bad thing? Well this Sports Physio certainly thought so and wouldn't like to align business with mine to help individuals avoid injury or aid recovery with added prevention of future recurrence. I wouldn't like to suggest that as the role of a sports physio is primarily to aid recovery of injury after it has occurred and that as many injuries are of an overuse intrinsic biomechanical nature that their prevention in the first place could well affect business therefore being counter productive.

    Actually I would love to say that. There are a number of activities that a person probably shouldn't do if they wish to avoid injury and move forwards in their goals. Knowing what those may be isn't an exact science at all. The question when thinking about exercise or activities: Does this person have a tolerance to support this activity?

    How would we know the answer to this? Practically, a survey would start to reveal answers that could be interpreted by a professional with experience. The most basic example could be: This person wants to run 5km, Have they run before and if so have they run this distance before? That's pretty basic so to improve the accuracy of this one would go further. Some professionals would just need to view the person running to give a reasoned answer. Another way, and it's just a tool like all the others is to perform a biomechanical analysis.

    Much research that now exists and the work that is being undertaken by many, does suggest that (as has always been the case) 'prevention is better than cure' and that a great degree of prevention is possible through specifically targeted pre-habilitation. It only takes a certain amount of common sense to know this but non-the-less the researchers are out there doing their thing to bring the science in and seeing supporting results.



    Monday, 15 December 2014

    Look great and have confidence: 10 things to look for in posture.

    If you're going to start a health and fitness programme in the new year? Get a head start and get your body ready for more activity by balancing your muscles. Doing this will increase your fitness and reduce the chance of increasing tension followed by injury or worsening posture.

    10 Postural Things (you can see) That You Should Be Able To Improve

    When you have these things they perpetuate a vicious cycle therefore making them worse, even if they are a set abnormality from birth or injury there will be a degree of improvement that is possible from the aquired changes that have taken place.

    Do not attempt to hold your posture, it should happen with the natural balance and tension of the muscles. Holding patterns add new issues and can normally be seen in abdominal, back and buttock dimples after a time.

    Here are 10 things head to toe with just a brief note on one aspect of dysfunction:

    1. Forward jutting head - Adding changes to the cervical spine and neck muscles.
    2. Shoulders uneven height - Causing or caused by asymmetry throughout the body
    3. Hands excessively to the front of the pelvis - Pulling the upper body forwards
    4. Rounded upper back - Weakening the upper back and breathing muscles
    5. Belly pooch - Losing tension in the stabilising muscles that support the low back
    6. Flat back - Changing the shock absorption and disc health of the low back
    7. Excessive curve in the lower back - 6. and changing the health of the spine to pelvis joints
    8. Knees knocking/bowing - Wear and injury to knees plus foot, hip and low back issues
    9. Flattening/falling arches - Wearing the joints of the feet plus changing knee, hip and back function
    10. Big toe diverting towards 2nd toe - Showing mechanical issues with proper foot function and more.

    These normally come in noticeable sets but not always.

    Where do you start?
     

    If you have anything that is more exaggerated say in the feet or shoulder you still start by addressing the function at the pelvis as issues commonly ascend or descend from here, then you move up, the spine, shoulders, knees and feet will follow to a point. This is the Biomechanics Coaching approach and is a fundamental change in the usual methods applied by many therapists from various professions. 


    Commonly therapists and trainers will address the site of issue without treating the person as a whole. In doing this the root cause is often missed and any other changes that have taken place are not addressed. We are an integrate system and should be treated as such.

    So if you're going to want to improve posture in the upper body you will want to know more about the foundations of the upper body first, fix your pelvis and move on up then down finally to the knees and feet.

    After that strengthen your body with 'core' exercises to the point where you are strong enough to cope with the task your life throws at you then train your body to be able to complete the tasks your life throws at you and then you'll truly have great posture.

    Cool huh.

    Keep in touch with my YouTube channel at 'Smile Fitness Exeter' for some cool tests and simple exercises that you can do about the body.

    Smile Fitness Website