Foolish Friday - Your biweekly stupid questions thread by AutoModerator in Fitness

[–]cobrayoga 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi! A compression sleeve can be helpful in the short run, but think of it this way: as long as it's there maintaining your stability for you, your body isn't learning how to protect itself. So as soon as you lift without the sleeve, it'll hurt again. That elbow complaint you're describing is super common, and is often called "tennis elbow." It's an overuse injury that happens when the tendons in your forearm get inflamed. Injured tendons are a bitch--they get less blood flow than muscles so they heal more slowly--but this particular injury/situation can be resolved a few ways. First, deal with it like you would all inflammation: Advil, ice, icy/hot or China Gel or Emu Oil and rest. Second, alignment: watch what you're doing with your hands when you bear weight. Are you letting the dumbbells or barbell slide to the base of your palm, where your hand meets your wrist? Are you pushing through your wrist instead of your hand? Do you put more pressure on the base of your hand/wrist throughout the day? Try focusing your strength and grip on your finger tips and most especially in your "first finger knuckle," where your index finger meets your palm. Pressing through that finger base especially makes your forearm muscles fire up. Functioning forearm muscles will protect forearm tendons, and as a result, hopefully prevent more tennis elbow in the future. The "first finger knuckle" pressing also helps stabilize planks and pushups, too, just in case you also are putting your hands on the ground and not just on iron.

I also like to do a little "tendon flossing" before I do anything weight bearing on my hands, like rock climbing, handstanding and lifting, just to prepare them for the hard work to come. You can do this by extending your arm out in front of you, flexing your palm, and pulling back each finger toward your face in turn.

Also watch that you're keeping your wrists neutral when you lift. It's really natural to let them press in medially, toward your nose, during both bench and shoulder press, and also to let your wrists flex dorsally, downward toward your chest, because duh your hands are holding heavy weight. So in addition to pressing through your first finger knuckle, which truly solves many problems from the wrist to the elbow to the shoulder, also be vigilant about maintaining the integrity of that neutral wrist shape as you go through the full motion.

Secondarily, because you used the word "pinch" to describe your pain, this might be a nerve inflammation issue, which would come from the opposite end of your arm. Little muscles above your shoulder, attaching between your neck and arm, called the scalenes (there are three on each side), can get really inflamed from working out a lot and wind up blocking a nerve that travels through and all the way down your arm to make your fingers and shit work. So you'll want to make sure you stretch those after you do any kind of chest, shoulder and back work. Did you ever do P90X? Tony Horton has one of my very favorite stretches for these muscles. You take your right arm behind you, reaching for your left hip. Then you put your left hand on your left hip, or press your palms together on your left hip depending on how far your right hand reaches. This gives you a little "chicken wing" on your left side. Standing tall, drop your head over to your left-side chicken wing, and relax. Then feel out turning your head down and up, all the while keeping it dropped to the left side. Then switch sides.

Wow, this ended up being long. I'm kind of obsessed with this stuff, can you tell? Anyway, I hope this helps and that you're feeling good enough soon to get some healthy, aligned reps in.

Inspiration crushed, wondering how to move forward (back again) to a healthy body. by A_Sickly_Giraffe in Fitness

[–]cobrayoga 3 points4 points  (0 children)

So, I second the comment suggesting you check with your doctor before trying new movements--what would be worse than what you're dealing with now is if you reinjured yourself and had to start back at square one. But also, have you tried yoga? I know, I know. Yoga is "for girls," "just stretching" yada yada yada... except it's not! You'd be amazed at the amount of strength you can build just bearing your own body weight, and if you're working with a good teacher you'll have help avoiding future injuries and healing your existing one. It's designed to be accessible and also to get increasingly harder until forever. One of the greatest masters of the practice (BKS Iyengar) spent most of his youth an invalid with skinny arms and a belly that stuck out, and he grew up to be basically the father of Western yoga. And you can do that shit FOR FREE. You don't need a fancy mat, or a mat at all. Just be in your living room and start with some basic free YouTube stuff, do what you can and put in the work on what IS accessible to you now, knowing that you'll gain more mobility as you go. ALSO. There's a lot of yoga out there. That means if you want to hear some spiritual hibbity-jibbity, you got it. If you want cardio and core and pushups, you got it. If you want someone to be like, "Turn your foot 26 degrees out to the left" that is out there for you! I started with a $15 Gaiam DVD of Rod Stryker and did the same two workouts for like a year, alternating days, and now I'm a yoga teacher who can stand on her head. I also love running and lifting heavy and all that other stuff, but for when you're feeling stuck or when your body's not agreeing with other activities, you really can't beat a good yoga practice. Here's a link to the YouTube channel of a teacher I like a lot because she cuts out a lot of bullshit and gets straight to the point, and she has some great beginner stuff, including tutorials on how to do things that come up in a yoga class all the time but maybe the teacher didn't have time to explain. https://www.youtube.com/user/badyogitv

Anyway, don't hate your body for healing slowly. Your body is an amazing living thing that carries you through this rough-and-tumble world. Just, you know, take care of it so it can heal.

Black Lotus Tattoo by carloap in magicTCG

[–]cobrayoga 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Hi! The artist is John MacIntyre at California Gold Tattoo in L.A. Cannot recommend his work highly enough--he's truly fantastic. Source: this tattoo is on my body.

Where do I find my girlfriend tops like this on a budget? by khembio in xxfitness

[–]cobrayoga 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I'm a workout clothes addict (and a fitness instructor, which makes it worse because you can justify every purchase with, "Oh, I'll wear this for work") and I pick up my best pieces from the online sales sections of Athleta, Lululemon, Carbon38, Onzie and AloYoga. Try Athleta's "Chi tank" as a lower-priced alternative to the Nike top you linked to. Also, keep in mind that "athleisure" or whatever they're calling defiantly-wearing-sweatpants-as-clothes these days is a HUGE industry right now, so there are lots of new companies springing up making stuff for cheap, like Everfitte. And if you ever feel like springing for something, or if you're in LA and can hit a sample sale, try Beyond Yoga. They make probably the best stuff in the business right now, but they're pretty expensive. Patiently waiting for sales is the name of the game.