So
this week's post is a follow on from You are injured, not dead! Part 1 where I spoke about the need to make your
movements functional, but more importantly reduce your risk of injury through
better movement mechanics. And I want to focus on this specifically because
this is a lesson I am currently experiencing myself.
Quick
overview, I currently have a herniated disk at L5/S1 (yep pretty much the same
injury as Annie Thorisdottir) and the bulging disk is pressing on my sciatic
nerve that has been causing me pain and discomfort going on 5 months now. I
originally got this injury about June or July 2012 when I was deadlifting to
get ready for a strongman comp, and yes I was deadlifting with poor mechanics
and poor technique. At the time I had no one to coach me on how to move better
and what I should be doing, however I am not passing the buck as I should not
have been lifting the weight, reps and sets I was at the time plain and simple.
I never took the time to get this injury fixed properly so this became a
weakness that finally put me down for good just before the end of last year.
Yet without having ever sustained this chronic injury I would not have found a
level maturity in my own approach to being a better athlete that is necessary
to go to the next level, or the foresight to give athletes and clients that I coach
the right words to avoid or deal with chronic injuries and mobility issues.
So
5 months on I am glad to say that after finding a really good physio who
introduced me to McKenzie Method, being mature about my approach to recovery
for once, refocused my training efforts and even taking up pilates to
strengthen my core, things are looking very positive. I was told last week by
my physio last week that I am doing far better than he expected someone with my
injury to be doing at this point, and I will be back to where I was sooner than
expected. In this time I have learned a number of lessons:
- CrossFitters like to blow themselves apart, no matter the cost
- Fitness is not a short term focus, but a life long event
- Taking the time to build the right foundations will be the difference between building a skyscraper, or becoming a statistic of failure.
- Patience and maturity are your best friends when it comes to getting over long term injuries or chronic mobility problems.
The
first lesson is pretty self explanatory. Be it ripped hands from pull ups that
stop you from holding onto a barbell for the next week, a shoulder impingement
from attempting to go that last set of unbroken snatches in a WOD, or pinching
a nerve in your lower back trying to do a big set of heavy deadlifts when you
are already fatigued. CrossFitters will race the clock and each other to win
today even if it means an injury rather than taking the focus of trying to be
better tomorrow. If you cannot train tomorrow because you hurt yourself today
then you are not fitter tomorrow, you are weaker tomorrow.
This
leads into the second lesson
CrossFit
is supposed to build capacity as we age and restore functional movement. Our
hierarchy of development means good movement mechanics first and intensity
last; not "that'll do" mechanics second and intensity first. For
those who have done the Level 1 Seminar will remember the Sickness - Wellness -
Fitness continuum, that decrepitude is a symptom of sickness and fitness means
more than just low body fat and high Vo2 capacity. If you want to continue to
play in life well into old age, to still be able to go out to run or swim, jump
and play then one must avoid injuries. So if that means not finishing a WOD, or
not going for that new PR today, that is fine it is just not your day; the
weights will still be there next week and you can try again, but if you are
injured than you have no option to try again.
This
leads into lesson 3 in that if early on you take the time to ensure your
movement and positions are correct you will not only be better in your training
and in life, but you will bulletproof yourself against injury rather than
making yourself a prime candidate for injury. This includes mobility issues and
flexibility issues, for example if you have really tight shoulders and cannot
keep a neutral spinal position and have your arm straight up in the air so
there is one straight line between your fingers, elbow, shoulder, hip and
ankle, then you should not be overhead pressing yet, and definitely not
snatching. Yeah snatching is really fun, but trust me in that having functional
range of motion in your shoulders as you age is far more useful than attempting
one heavy snatch and your shoulder not working properly again.
And
this is where lesson 4 comes into play.
Be
mature in your approach to training and be patient in recovering injuries or
rehabilitating mobility and flexibility problems. The weights will be there
when you get better so rather use this time to work on weaknesses you might have in other
areas that you can work (we both know they exist), you will be better in the long run for it. Blowing
yourself apart for one workout or one competition is just not worth it if you
will lose the ability to have functional movement in life where daily tasks or
recreational activities are no more.
I
have used my time away from heavy lifting to work on my core strength through finding a good
pilates instructor (click here to like Pilates Bodies) who understands my needs as an athlete, I have taken a larger focus on building upper body strength and
muscular endurance which has always been a weakness of mine, and I have worked
on my positions and movements to the point that my air squat is looking the
best it ever has for me. I know that when I can do all the movements and
weights again that the weaknesses I had that facilitated my injury the first
time or held me back during workouts will no longer be an issue.
When
you do have that chronic injury or mobility issue that doesn't allow you to
train at full capacity, it is sort of like going to prison for a little while;
rather than staring at the bars on the windows feeling sorry for yourself, it
is time to pump some iron so to speak. Be honest and decide what you suck at,
is it your core strength? Shoulder stability and strength? Perhaps it is even a
mobility and flexibility issue that you now have the forced time to work on.
This
time will be difficult when you see all the kids playing on the other size of
the cyclone fencing and razor wire, you just need to bide your time and focus
on working what you can work on so that once your injury is healed or your
mobility issue is a thing of the past, just know that you will have ultimately
lifted your game to make you a better version of yourself both in life and as
an athlete.
Eat clean, Train hard, Stay Strong
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