Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Stretch your hips for you back demo photos/ Thanksgiving Edition

Happy Thanksgiving all.  I hope you are all preparing for or are recently recovering from eating obscene amounts of food.

"What the hell is wrong with you!?"

You might ask.  And I would reply, "There are many things wrong with me.  To what specifically are  you referring?"

And you would respond in a very judging tone, "How dare you encourage people to eat too much on Thanksgiving!  You are a horrible example!"

And I would say, slightly offended but mostly skeptically, "Look, one day out of the year someone, perhaps even yourself, goes through the trouble of getting up at the crack of dawn to roast a turkey, makes homemade everything from stuffing to potatoes to delicious vegetable casserole to an average of 3 - 4 pies per U.S. capita.  FOR THE LOVE OF GOD EAT IT!!  Be good the rest of the year.  Seriously, I dare you."

Anyway, once you are done stuffing your face with reckless abandon take a look at photos, as promised, for stretching your hips and strengthening your glutes for helping with low back pain:

Static Hip Stretch
This is another look at the static hip stretch as seen in the previous post.  Next we have a variation with a twist which gives the slightly more flexible individual a better stretch:

Static Hip with Rotation
And finally we have the starting position for glute strengthening.  Remember, 15 forward, 15 backward and 15 up and down.

Hip Circles
Thank you to Courtney for your help with photos and please "Plus 1," Forward or Comment to let her know we appreciate her work.  If you need additional information please visit www.canyonptandf.com or e mail me at tom@canyonptandf.com

Next week I will post the photos for the Knee Exercises Even You Can Do.  Until then, give these a try!  Oh and I highly encourage you to count and record your calories during Thanksgiving din...  Haha who am I kidding!  Happy Thanksgiving!

Thursday, November 20, 2014

What to do for the non-falling out of a tree related shoulder pain.

Today we conclude our body part series with shoulders!  I want to start with yet another disclaimer.  If you fall out of a tree and land on your shoulder, seek medical attention immediately.  You should also seriously re-evaluate your choice of hobbies.  Why exactly were you climbing a tree?  Were the authorities in anyway involved?  Is there a pending restraining order?

But if you wake up one day and you feel a little discomfort in that shoulder or if you are getting a little discomfort doing pushing exercises I recommend a little light stretching before you commit to visiting the doctor's office.  Again, by way of disclaimer, if after 2 to 3 weeks you do not see significant improvement it is time to go see the doc.

Each of these four stretches is going to have a dynamic (moving) and static (not moving) component to it.  There will be a 5 count and then a 20 second hold:

  1. Straight Arm Against Wall: Find a corner of a building, preferably one you belong in, and hold your arm straight out, even with the shoulder.  Place your hand on the wall and rotate your body so you feel a stretch in your chest.  Stretch and release, stretch and release 5 times and then hold for 20 seconds.
  2. Bent Arm Against Wall: This is essentially the same stretch only you will bend your elbow 90 degrees so your fingers are pointing up.  Place your entire forearm (or as my friend Claire calls it the "forceps.") on the wall and do the same stretching technique as the the straight arm.
  3. Arms Overhead: Reach your arms up overhead with fingers pointing toward the ceiling.  Shifting the shoulder upward, reach and relax, reach and relax, 5 times plus 20 seconds.
  4. Hands Behind the Back: With straight arms, interlace your fingers behind your back.  Without bending at the torso, bring your arms away from your body and let them come back.  This is also done 5 times plus 20.
Do this every day for a couple weeks and see what happens.  If your shoulders start to feel better, you were successful and it was all a result of my help and you should probably send me a large cash donation.  If it did not help it was probably because you did not follow instructions properly but you should still send a large cash donation.  Oh and make an appointment to see an actual physician.

I discovered this week writing these descriptions is pretty challenging!  I imagine reading them has been equally challenging.  So starting next week in celebration of Thanksgiving I will GIVE you pictures and maybe even some video of all the exercises from our body part series if I can talk someone, Courtney, in to doing them for me.  

For more information or vague exercise descriptions visit www.canyonptandf.com or message me at tom@canyonptandf.com.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Two Tricks for Knee Pain Even You Can do at Home

Somewhat to my surprise the two articles on sore backs seem to be quite popular, whereas my riveting article on caffeinated underwear received little or no attention at all.   Based on my experience with the general public I assumed it was far more interested in underwear than lower backs, but, the people have spoken!

Today, therefore, I will continue my body part series.  Today's featured body part is the knee.  Before I go any farther let me clarify a couple things.  First, if you have suffered an acute knee injury, such as a falling on a slippery driveway your neighbor's child never got around to shoveling, or being hit repeatedly by a baseball bat in the side of leg you should seek immediate medical attention.  The tips I am sharing are for knee discomfort of the "CRAP!  Why is my knee sore today!?" variety.  So before you read on, please get a feel for in to which category you might fall.

One of the most common complaints I hear is "As I am getting older my knees feels 'loose' or 'unstable.'"  My first recommendation is try standing on one foot for about 30 seconds, 2 to three times, three times a week.  If that is too easy, get a foam pad, balance disk or BOSU and stand on it on one foot.  Being on one leg requires the muscles of the leg to stabilize the ankle and the knee and the more they have to do it, the more they remember how to do it.  After a few weeks, you should start to feel a difference!

Another complaint I hear is "I have this pain at the lower portion and to the outside of my knee-cap."  Often this pain is caused by a too tight IT band.  The Iliotibial (IT) band is a thick band of fibers that begins at the pelvis and runs down the outside of the thigh where it attaches at the tibia, or shin bone.  Although it is not technically a muscle, the IT band still does get tight especially for people who tend to run a lot.  My recommendation is to buy a foam roller and use it on the IT Band like the incredibly buff cartoon character in this example:



It will result in, just so you understand, a new kind of wholly unpleasant variety of pain.   BUT!  If you are consistent and do it correctly over time the pain will diminish in both your IT Band and your knee, so it is probably worth it.

Let me know how these two ideas work for you or if you have other knee related questions please comment below or e mail me at: tom@canyonptandf.com.  See you next week for our next featured body part and don't forget to visit www.canyonptandf.com to drive up web traffic and our Google rating!

Friday, November 7, 2014

Lower Back Pain, Try Stretching Your Hips, Part 2

I have not gotten any younger this week.  Although by back is doing much better, it is still giving me little reminders from time to time it is still there.  So I stretch my hips and it feels better. And then I go on with my day, and the next day I stretch my hips, and it feels better.  However, I feel like I have hit sort of a lower-back-pain plateau here.  So I decided to again be proactive and add strengthening to stretching.

In order to maintain muscle balance one must stretch the tight muscle and strengthen the opposing weak muscle.  In my case the hip flexors are the tight muscles and the Glutes are the weak muscles.  And to be honest, after looking at myself in the mirror, I can see no reasonable person will claim my glutes are too strong.  Or big, Or really even there at all.  They need some work.

Unfortunately I, like most folks, am Quadriceps dominant.  What that means is whenever I do a lower-body exercise (Squat, Lunge, Squatting Lunge, Lunging Squat, etc.) my Quads immediately take over so my Glutes can sit back and enjoy the ride.  So job one is to teach those Glutes how to work again.  I followed these simple steps and BELIEVE me, I could tell they were working:
  1. Lay on your side with the bottom leg bent so a 90-degree angle is formed at the hip and at the knee.
  2. Hold your top leg straight with your foot flexed and rotated in so the toes point down at about a 45-degree angle,  
  3. Make medium sized circles with your leg, 15 forward and 15 backward, and then raise the leg straight up and down 15 times all without resting the leg.  
  4. Repeat for the other side.
If you are doing it correctly you will immediately feel it in your Glutes.  After a few days of teaching those guys how to work, start working on squats.  With a flat back, drop into a good squat, SQUEEZE your butt, and come back up.  It is different for each person, but after a while those glutes should start firing with every squatting motion you make and HOORAY! you have achieved (better) balance.

I encourage you to give it a try yourself, and let me know how it works.  You can either comment here on the blog or e-mail me at tom@canyonptandf.com.  And because blogs with photos seem to get more attention I have, for your enjoyment, included a picture of my research assistant Matilda's favorite toy, "The Ferret!"  Enjoy!