I
am not a physical therapist or a physio and therefore do not treat
pain. It is always best to understand what the actual injury is, or
what the limitation is before you start tinkering with exercises. So
if in doubt seek professional advice initially and build from there.
What
I can do is shed some light on is how to incorporate smart training
and programming while you feel all busted up and helpless or just in
need of some immediate action points that you can incorporate to keep
progressing and moving forward.
Quick Story of a friend of mine.
-Debilitating
and season ending low back injury from over arching and sharp
movement of throwing a football.
There
wasn’t much initially that didn’t hurt. Bending, leaning,
twisting, running all aggravated and stopped him from playing.
12
months later he is 10kg heavier, broad jump and vertical jump has
increased, deadlifting and squatting is completely pain free and now
a dominant figure sitting smack bam in the mid field. Cutting,
turning, jumping, sprinting is all fair game.
Below
I will outline some tips for you. How you can do so with yourself and
your injury/mishap.
Because,
you can ALWAYS train around an injury. Always
Whatever you do it must be pain free
I
think this goes without saying, but it does warrant a mention. I have
heard it time and time again, and I will also say it.
IF
IT HURTS, DON’T DO IT…
It
does not matter if it is the number 1 exercise that your specialist
or favourite guru said you should be doing. If it causes you pain or
discomfort, stop it….Now!
There
is always an alternative.
It
won’t put you right off track if you need to sub in some Barbell
hip bridges instead of your beloved deadlifts. If it means pain free,
and creates a positive effect, well I am all for it.
For
example do lunges hurt your knee? First off: try doing them
properly. That’s a novel idea, right?
A
lot of the time this alleviates some issues. I won’t go into
correct form in this post, but it’s safe to say that there is a ton
of info on internet that you can go back through.
If
that’s still no good, go through a pain free range. Or as an
example try these Low Co-Contraction Lunges with Anterior Pull. These
allow you to feel more controlled and keep more of a vertical tibia
therefore performing the exercise more effectively.
Start
Point: With your right hand on Vastus Medialis (teardrop shaped
muscle) and left hand on your glute and your right butt cheek
squeezed hard, lift yourself off the ground a few cm.
Mid
Point-End Point: Raise up stopping shy of lock out. This will keep
tension throughout and reduce the range. Be prepared for the burns,
and an intense stretch through your trail leg. This is fantastic to
engrain 90/90 position and give instant feedback on what muscles
should be working.
The
point is even if it’s a magic exercise, it’s not magic for you if
it hurts or aggravates an issue.
Focus on what can do, rather then what you can’t
This
piggy backs on the above, but it definitely is worth mentioning.
Accept
that you may not be able to perform your heavy squatting pattern for
the time being, and focus on what movement you can do to create a
training effect.
This
is exactly the process that I went through when I broke my fibula and
dislocated my ankle being tackled. Write down a list of movements
that can be done pain free, and focus on these.
Can’t
squat/deadlift/lunge due to injured/stiff/recovering ankle: Maybe
it’s a time to hammer on your glutes and hamstrings through various
supine based exercises. Lean on the cautious side and build up.
I
recently just had a friend who outstretched to catch a ball and his
ankle blew up to balloon status. We had sumo deadlifts programmed,
but ended up starting out with plenty of upper body as well as
quadruped glute work, glute bridges, single leg glute work, strap leg
curls and went up from there.
After
a few weeks we worked up to barbell glute bridges, and now as ankle
mobility has nearly been regained I am confident, as he is to slowly
incorporate some standing work.
Here
he is with some warm up sets on the barbell glute bridge.
Try
incorporating some dumbell pressing variations and a lot of pushup
progressions, while hammering and bringing up your back strength.
There is hyuuuggeee variety to use.
For
example we have successfully regressed back to single arm fat grip
floor presses with a neutral grip (mouthful I know) pain free. This
still lends itself to some heavy lifting, while respecting the body.
Pushup
variations allowing the scapula to freely move are an integral part
of a complete program as well.You
won't die if some extra some pushlups are programmed.
You may actually feel better.
It
never hurts to incorporate more back/upper back work into the mix all
year round too. A 2:1, sometimes a 3:1 ratio of pulling to pushing
can help regain some normality in your posture and any strength
deficits you may have.
Some
pressing variations that tend to give the shoulders a bit more room
to breathe and be a bit more joint friendly are floor pressing
variations, Tucked neutral grip pressing exercises, ½ kneeling
cable/band presses, standing split stance cable/band presses, ½ or
tall kneeling corner presses. There’s more this just gets you to
think outside the norm.
This
variation is great as the resistance is low on the shoulder, and it
is an angled press. So therefore we get a fatter grip, neutral hand
position and varying resistance all while the glute is on and we get
a bit of anti-extension throughout. Perfecto!
Don’t forget the other limb
There
are times when being couch or bed ridden is unavoidable. Although
when you are able to be up and moving around, there is then also the
chance to begin to start the process in moving forward.
When
we injure ourselves, or something doesn’t go quite as planned we
can feel quite defeated and mentally drained.
With
my ankle injury I wasn’t going to let both my legs turn to jelly
and lose everything I had gained. Having 3 surgerys over a 12 month
period I needed some avenues to keep me mentally and physically on
top of things.
The
results of the carry over were positive. Training the other limb has
a slight carry over in strength and muscle control.
Choose
exercises you can do, and do so with a slowly progressing volume.
Most exercises can be done single side loaded or off set loaded.
On
a note on stretching here is a hip flexor stretch I had to use when I
couldn’t put pressure on my left foot. It worked a treat, and I
used it frequently.
(All the pressure is taken off the front foot).
Hit the other half of your body hard
If
you are someone who trains 4-6 times per week and can’t bare the
thought of missing scheduled training sessions, then don’t.
What
we can forget is that although we are injured, and recovery is number
one at times, we still have 80-90% of our body to train. That’s a
big chunk to me. Don’t let 10-20% get you right off track with
everything.
Get
your meathead on and add in a varying upper body session. Alter the
rep ranges, and go for it. Maybe even add some arms in there. I won’t
judge.
If
it’s your upper body, add in a lower body conditioning session, or
some extra lower bodyweight exercises.
If
your ankle/knee is playing up and you can’t join in team training
sessions, try incorporating some battle rope conditioning sessions to
jack the heart rate, and minimise joint stress.
Try
these battle rope variations to keep it interesting and challenging.
Not all will be able to used if you can’t walk forward or backwards
but you get the idea.
Check List to kick A#*when injured and recovering
I
wanted to provide you with a list to go over and sift through, and
take note of what you are doing/can do/and will do to make the
transition from where you currently are, to where you want to be.
-
When in doubt, seek professional advice and determine your injury/restriction
-
Focus on what you can do, what you can’t is not important and irrelevant
-
List movements you can do pain free. Think in terms of horizontal push/pull, vertical push/pull, squat, hinge, isolation.
-
hat would you like to achieve in the next 2,4,8,24,52 weeks that you may be recovering etc
-
Do you have any weaknesses/imbalances that you can work on and bring up?
-
How many days per week do you want to train/ or can train?
-
Do you have some opposite limb exercises to perform to carry over to the injured side?
-
Omit the days of your current program that you can’t do, or tweak the exercises so you can do them
-
Add in some pain free conditioning/metabolic methods to utilise if this is what is needed
-
Surround yourself with positive people, and a powerful network that can help you when necessary
-
Remain positive and know that this is short term and you can get back to your normal regime when it’s time.
Being
injured and recovering takes a new skill set and different approach
to training and lifestyle. Some small tweaks to your current plan,
and you can remain on track, keep some normality and sanity and in
general feel good that you are doing something to benefit not hinder
the process.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire