Showing posts with label functional movement screen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label functional movement screen. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2012

Deadlifts, resistance bands and BOSU balls.

Because reading about workouts is boring, but mountain
biking is always fun. Plus, it IS the point of this blog.
Okay, so the Functional Movement Screen showed me to be ‘hypermobile’ and ‘lacking in strength’ – to which I said ‘bah!’ – as I may be particularly bendy but I would never say that I am not strong. Anyway. After a bit of back and forth in which I challenged the above assessment, I warily signed up for a session with Steve Neal, along with my good buddy Jodi.

And I know it’s super boring to read about other people’s workouts, so I won’t get into too much detail about the ins and outs of this one. There were (yep) deadlifts, resistance bands and BOSU balls, and a nifty ankle strength exercise and some neat kettle bell stuff and overall about 25% new-to-me stuff which was great. The rest of the workout was stuff I’ve done before, which was also pretty great – primarily because Steve is a real stickler for proper form and, it seems, for drilling the idea into your head that just because you’re doing, say, a deadlift  - doesn’t mean you’re only using your legs for proper form, you’re also using your core AND your cardiovascular system. This applied to (honest to god) every exercise we did. We paid a lot of attention to breathing. Which sounds sorta dopey, but I really was made to feel very conscious of taking a deep breath at the start of the exercise, and releasing it as I progressed through, particularly in the deadlift, where apparently it’s going to come in real handy when the weights get heavier and heavier. Woot.

The good news is, apparently I don’t lack strength after all. Or at least it didn’t seem so to me. I’ll have to ask Steve when I see him again on Thursday. And woohoo, in the even more good news department, so far, my leg doesn’t hurt any more than it usually does (which is always a teensy tiny little bit). Which is, you know, nice.

Friday, January 27, 2012

I love exercise. My leg – not so much.

Spin class - this time, it didn't hurt.
Next time, who knows?

Yup. That’s the totally ickily bummer thing about having such a bad old leg. It hurts - sometimes during exercise. Almost always after. Which, well, sucks.

I use exercise like a stress-relieving drug. I know now, after years and years, that exercise is the one thing certain to put me into a better frame of mind, no matter the circumstance. When my dad was sick and dying of cancer in palliative care, I am quite certain that exercise kept me from spiraling into despair. When I went through major life change after that, exercise kept me sane. Even now, when things are calm and settled – life still has its crappy moments, and exercise is still the thing I like to use to feel better. 

So when it just so happens that most forms of exercise that involve LEGS (sigh) tend to aggravate my right hip/thigh/knee – sometimes to the point of limping pain after, it can be a crazy upsetting, not to mention a real crap shoot trying to figure out what to do to get a workout fix.

This is all perfectly frustrating, too, as I’ve now gotten into a pattern, wherein I will get back into the gym (for example) for a good four weeks of strength training and lung/heart conditioning, with just twinges of pain. And then whoosh, all of a sudden, my leg will freak out, and then I limp around for a week, which seems to negate the four weeks previous, whereupon, at the end of the limping week, my leg seems okay, and then I tentatively get back into some sort of pattern, only to have it disrupted again. Profoundly annoying.

Anyway. I called Collingwood Sports Medicine to find out next steps, now that they have received the results of my x-ray, and I have an appointment booked for the end of February, prior to the as-yet-unscheduled MRI.

And next week, I will be doing something called a Functional Movement Screen with Steve Neal at his Crossfit Gym here in Orangeville. Steve did an awesome bike fit for me years ago, which resulted in instant and remarkable climbing improvement (it also improved just about every other darn thing I did on my bike). He’s also a great mountain bike coach, so I am really looking forward to hearing his impressions of how this leg of mine is working/not working.