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Archive for June, 2009

Controversy Still Hot Over Core Training Methods

June 30th, 2009

LA Times Article Confronts Core Training MythLA Times Article (Left) Raises Controversy Over The Right Way To Train Your Core.

NO SIT UPS?

I can hear the cheers from across the globe!

But I can also hear the steam coming out of the ears of the millions who do theirs faithfully and swear by them.

So what gives?

Here’s the deal…Sit ups where you curl up with a rounded back put a TON of pressure onto your discs.  That’s the main reason my teacher, Dr. Stu McGill, is so against them.

He’s been sticking electrodes in back muscles for decades at his lab in Waterloo, Ontario and has VOLUMES of literature about the causes of disc injuries.

So if Stu says no sit ups,  I agree!

Well sort of!

Here’s what I mean.  You should always look at an exercise and say, "Does this help train and protect my body during my activities of daily living?  In other words…"IS IT FUNCTIONAL?"

Well, the answer to the sit up question is, "Of course it’s functional!"  If you’re lying down, you should be able to "sit up", right?

So yes, you should be able to do it…BUT to do it 25, 50, 100 times?  That’s way too much disc load and even if you have no pain with them right now, why risk the repetitive injury??

So, what to do instead?

There’s a series of a few exercises on video that go along with the article that we’ve been implementing here at Core Wellness for over 10 years!

As a matter of fact, our thinking here at Core Wellness has evolved even beyond these "man made" exercises to the "neurodevelopmental model" that’s come out of Eastern Europe the last few years.

I mention it in my comment I left of the LA Times blog (copied below) and wrote about it in the first post ever on this blog.

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COMMENT #290:  Well written article. I’ve worked with dr. mcgill personally several times over the last 10 years and the man’s amazing with his detailed science.

the “belly button to the spine” for most people, tends to create a flared rib cage in the front and a loss of intra abdominal pressure which creates an “energy leak”.

so for human FUNCTION, you must train FUNCTIONALLY!

here is where we must look to infant posture development as the model of how to train the “deep core stability” system. this system is automatically triggered by reproducing the environment encountered by the infant as posture is developed fully at four years old.

this new model has emerged from prague and is the only one that’s ever made PERFECT sense. this is because it’s how we were designed.

there’s a blog post about this and several self test videos at http://gettoyourcore.com/the-origin-of-your-core-revealed

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What do YOU think about sit ups and core training?

Any questions, Comments?  Leave a comment here on the blog!

core stability, exercise tips , , , ,

Give A Dog A Good Name

June 19th, 2009
I have to admit it, when I got the email alert for a comment on my “Piriformis Stretch…Actually Done Right!” YouTube video I felt a surge of anxiety and stress.

I was essentially attacked by a physical therapist telling me that I had no business evaluating muscle dysfunction and that if I wanted to do so, I should go to physical therapy school!

Well, after I cooled down, I took to heart an extremely important principle I learned from Dale Carnagie’s classic book, “How to Win Friends and Influence People”…

“Give a dog a good name”.

I copied his comment to the video and my reply below.

2bestrong (2 days ago) Show Hide
I am a physical therapist and went to 3.5 years of graduate school to learn how to evaluate muscle dysfunction, posture, body mechanics etc and treat mainly through exercise and modalities. It is not been until recent years that Chiropractors which are not MD’s but Doctorate of Chiropactor have begun their job encrochment into the relmn of physical therapy and why? Because their techniques alone do not work. Doc–get a PT degree if you want to evaluate and treat muscular dysfunction.

posturedoc (1 day ago) Show Hide
Thank you, 2bstrong, for your comments, I understand your feeling of being encroached upon by DC’s. And I also agree that receiving adjustments alone is often shortsighted and can create a dependent relationship between doctor and client. That is why I chose to pursue chiropractic rehabilitation and have received over 200 hours of post graduate training in evaluating and treating muscle imbalances, starting with rehabilitation classes in chiropractic school.

posturedoc (1 day ago) Show Hide
Dr. Craig Liebenson’s “Rehabilitation of the Spine” was my textbook in chiropractic school and continues to be the the main textbook for the new paradigm and all postgrad courses are an amalgam of PT’s, DC’s, PhD’s, and students all working together for the sake of creating self empowered patients who are capable of excellence in patient care without regard for letters behind the name.

(Here’s what else I had to say but the ability to post multiple comments on you tube is apparently not allowed:)

“Yes, chiropractic education is evolving as any good science should.  Amazing things are happening
in Eastern Europe and my education has been based on these new advancements in respecting the
neurodevelopmental model (www.rehabps.com) of good saggital stability before any other motion
patterns are grooved into the nervous system.

If you would like to see more of the evaluation methods I employ, I also have posted examples of
how I assess.  You can see all my videos at my “posturedoc” channel.

Again, thank you for you comment.  It sounds like you have great skills and great education. ”
-END

If you so feel the need, please let this kind therapist know if you’ve ever had chiropractic care “work” for you!

You can comment directly to him by replying to his comment on this page.

But remember…BE NICE!

Dr H.

P.S. Interesting that he or she never commented back.

P.P.S. Also, as this blog is read by people all over the world.  If you’ve had a good experience with chiropractic care, share your story by commenting on this blog post!  The sign in process is easy.  Just click on the “comments” area at the top right of this post!

exercise tips, posture correction