mad_m: (5)
[personal profile] mad_m posting in [community profile] bodies_in_motion
Hello fellow Bodies in Motion! Wondering about your stories of healing and recovery. I'm on the road back from a long layoff from running related to overtraining and muscle imbalance, and a major rock fall last September. Without getting into the details of the problems (long, boring, trust me), I finally owned that I'm getting older and simply taking a few months off with stretching just won't cut it anymore. That was a long road of getting past depression of not being able to move the way I wanted, at the speed and with the power I used to.

I hate it when I get the advice from medical professionals or massage therapists to not run, not push it, perhaps take it easier - I found the right mix of body work with an acupuncturist. After a few months of work with her, and on my own (stretching, rolling muscles, and pushing tennis balls into my trigger points at home), I'm now able to do some walk-running, body weight exercises, and the occasional short dyno at the rock gym. I also got outside to lead a few easy sport routes over Easter weekend. I used to be too proud to mix running into my walking, wouldn't climb routes I thought were beneath me, and didn't think strength training had a place in improving my climbing (totally bought into "if you want to climb, then climb!") In short, I was holding myself back with standards that my injured self couldn't meet, standards that were arbitrarily set. After letting them slack a bit, I realized how much I really can do after all, and that I'm on the road back to where I want to be.

What are your stories of breaking and rebuilding? What personal myths did you need to overcome?

Date: 2017-04-26 05:01 pm (UTC)
lunabee34: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lunabee34
I had to get over the idea of the runner's high or the idea that I was going to have this euphoric experience when exercising. I know it happens for some people, but it hasn't happened for me, and I don't think it's going to. I had to stop being disappointed about that.

I also had to get over the idea that I was going to be able to do a lot of running on the ground. I run on the elliptical, but that's so different from running on the ground. Running on the ground really activates my interstitial cystitis, and it hurts my knees. I do it occasionally because it does work different muscles (or when I'm on vacation and have no other exercise options), but I had originally thought I would turn into this person who could run around the neighborhood, and I just can't.

Congratulations on figuring otu what works for you. That's awesome.

Date: 2017-04-26 05:12 pm (UTC)
alexseanchai: Katsuki Yuuri wearing a blue jacket and his glasses and holding a poodle, in front of the asexual pride flag with a rainbow heart inset. (Default)
From: [personal profile] alexseanchai
I think I'm only just starting in the "rebuilding" part. Like. I didn't used to be this thoroughly disabled. (Or if I was, I was ignoring the fact, and what has changed is my ability to get away with that.) My brain keeps going on about "you used to could, why can't you now?" and like? hi, disabled? and we can argue about the nuances of the social model of disability from here to eternity but the word "impairment" is in there somewhere regardless?

ugh. :(

Best luck with getting back where you want to be!

Date: 2017-04-26 11:37 pm (UTC)
snippy: Lego me holding book (Default)
From: [personal profile] snippy
Learning that adequate recovery time is the key to resilience. I spent most of my life thinking it was normal to be exhausted all the time, so long as I was moving fast and doing all the things. Only in the last few years I have been forced to rest after multiple surgeries and an asthma attack (put on forced bed rest by doctors), and discovered that there's no such thing as pushing though for me. I have to rest enough to recover; I actually have more capacity to breathe and walk at my normal speed after a week of walking slow and a day or two of rest than if I keep pushing myself every day to make progress.

Date: 2017-04-27 03:11 am (UTC)
geekturnedvamp: (Default)
From: [personal profile] geekturnedvamp
For me, learning about anatomy and physiology and biomechanics has been helpful, because having a more realistic understanding of the capabilities and limitations of the body (both in general and my own body in particular) gives me some perspective on my limitations. That said, I still have to remind myself daily that part of the reason I can't do some of the shit that a lot of my classmates--who are almost all current or former dancers/yoga teachers/super fit personal trainers--are able to do is that they're significantly younger than I am, have spent many more years doing this than I have, and spend more time practicing than I do. (Especially the first one, because while intellectually I know that age makes a real difference in how quickly we can progress in physical training or recover from injury, I look much younger than I am and that makes it easy to keep forgetting that my body is actually older than I think it is.)

Date: 2017-04-27 04:10 am (UTC)
fred_mouse: line drawing of sheep coloured in queer flag colours with dream bubble reading 'dreamwidth' (Default)
From: [personal profile] fred_mouse
Like one of the other posters, I had to learn that the myth of 'a little bit every day' doesn't work for me. I've been doing marked steps up in functionality very slowly by every January setting a physically challenging daily goal, and at the end of January (whether I met it at all, sometime, every day) stopping that. For me, this is easy to manage, because it fits with school holidays, and so when school goes back, I stop whatever the thing is.

As a result, I've gone from unable to run at all, to being able to do a couple hundred metres at a slow run.

I've also had to move outside the standard kinds of get fit activity that are common around here (gym, running/jogging, swimming) and find something that makes me work hard without making breathing so hard that I don't bother. As a result, I've taken up figure skating (hello mid-life crisis bad ideas) and ballet, both of which are doing great things for muscle strength and my cardio-vascular health.

Off-topic

Date: 2017-04-28 08:40 am (UTC)
rydra_wong: stick figure on an indoor climbing wall -- base image taken from the webcomic xkcd (climbing -- xkcd)
From: [personal profile] rydra_wong
But -- fellow climber! We have a comm at [community profile] disobey_gravity, if you haven't already found it.

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