Fall Hits 2016: Brene Brown, Vulnerability, Shame, Empathy, & Compassion

  • “Shame cannot survive being spoken...and met with empathy” -Brene Brown

I recently listened to Brene Brown’s The Power of Vulnerability.  I was hesitant at first.  It seemed like a self-help book about the latest pop-psychology trend.  Plus, I had watched the TED talk and thought it was suffice for the subject.However, I quickly learned that my prejudgements couldn’t have been more wrong.  By the time I finished the book I had a new perspective on vulnerability, learned things about myself I didn’t want to know, and developed new skills to cultivate compassion and empathy for others.One of the greatest aspects of her teachings is the practical anecdotes she uses to back up her research findings.  She doesn’t cite her research in a dry, abstracted manner.  She provides personal, real life examples that bring the qualitative analysis to life.  These stories not only help to reiterate her points, but they provide a path to follow in your own life.Overall I think Brene Brown’s work offers a valuable perspective for everyone.  More specifically, I think it is a must listen for those treating people who are suffering and in pain.  The obvious reason being that it will help to improve your compassion and empathy towards the person you are trying to help.  The less obvious reason being that it will improve your compassion and empathy towards yourself.  Sometimes the flashlight needs to point inward.  Much like how a psychologist must be analyzed to make sure they are aware of their own projections and biases, I think practitioners need to be aware of their own vulnerabilities before trying to help others.Here are some of her definitions in case you’re wondering what the hell I’m talking about...Dr. Brown definitions:

Shame is ”the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed and therefore unworthy of love and belonging – something we’ve experienced, done, or failed to do makes us unworthy of connection.”

“Shame is a focus on self, guilt is a focus on behavior. Shame is, "I am bad." Guilt is, "I did something bad."

Vulnerability is “uncertainty, risk and emotional exposure”.  It “sounds like truth and feels like courage. Truth and courage aren't always comfortable, but they're never weakness.”

Empathy is feeling with people (great 2 minute video with Brene Brown)

“It’s rare than an empathic response starts with ‘at least’”

“Rarely can a response make something better.  What makes something better is a connection.”

Other articles, videos, thoughts and collections on the subject:

1) When discussing vulnerability, it is imperative to be able to see the other person’s facial expressions and make eye contact.  There’s nothing more healing than being able to communicate vulnerability and receive a genuine facial gesture of empathy.  Because you don’t need to have an answer for them.  You just need to show them that they’re heard and understood.  Maybe this is why there are so many mental health and shame issues in today’s social media world?2) Here’s a massive collection of empathy related material.3) Use the ladder of inference to rethink thinking and develop compassion4) Here’s a nice article summarizing some of Brown’s work

I talk about shame as these gremlins that fuel two primary messages: “You’re not good enough,” and “Who do you think you are?” These shame gremlins are right there when you are thinking of doing something that makes you feel vulnerable, whether it’s putting a new idea out there, negotiating a raise, or speaking out against something that is unfair. Shame is the thing that says, “Hey, keep quiet. You’re not smart/good/informed enough. No one will like you if you say that.””

5) “All men are brothers and love is mankind’s most potent weapon for personal and social transformation” -Martin Luther King Jr (read this book)6) Love really is the answer.  Oxytocin levels are related to empathy.7) More prosocial (empathy, agreeableness, trust, perspective taking, helping, etc.) behavior through experiencing the beauty of nature.  “Beautiful nature promotes greater prosociality for those who perceive natural beauty.”  #GetOutside8) Empathy is a great predictor of clinical outcomes9) Self-awareness is a prerequisite to empathy10) It’s not about being right or changing beliefs.  It’s about listening to their story and understanding.11) “Compassion recognizes the suffering of another as a reflection of our own pain. Compassion is shared suffering.” -Jack Kornfield12) Daniel Goleman’s 3 Kinds of Empathy

Cognitive Empathy - “simply knowing how the other person feels and what they might be thinking. Sometimes called perspective-taking, this kind of empathy can help in, say, a negotiation or in motivating people”

Emotional Empathy - “when you feel physically along with the other person, as though their emotions were contagious.”

Compassionate Empathy - “With this kind of empathy we not only understand a person’s predicament and feel with them, but are spontaneously moved to help, if needed.”

13) Rule #1 = people need to feel validated14) “Treat everyone you meet like God in drag” -Ram Dass15) Read Theresa Wiseman’s article on empathy:

3 Components of Empathy

1. Affective (sensitivity)

2. Cognitive (observation and mental processing)

3. Communicative (helper’s response)

“Rogers (1957) states that bemg understood is the most basic human need, and it is only by being understood and accepted that individuals are able to change and grow”

“Communication of understanding seems vital if empathy is to be felt”

5 Defining Attributes of Empathy

1. Ability to listen

2. Seeing the world as others see it

3. Non-judgemental

4. Understanding another’s feelings

5. Communicate the understanding

For Empathy to Occur

1. Interaction involving the communication of a feeling

2. Listening on both sides, one to the feelings and thoughts of the ‘empathee’ and the other to empathy being conveyed

“The consequences of an empathic interaction is that 'empathees' have a basic need to be understood satisfied, they feel valued and more ready to understand themselves and change”


The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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Fall Hits 2016: Psychology, Neuroscience, & Pain

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  • “Nothing is either good nor bad but thinking makes it so.” -Shakespeare

Psychology, Mental Health, Mind Training

1) Buy a djembe and drum up some good vibes.. “When viewed holistically, communal drumming creates a physical and emotional experience of belonging that addresses one of the core psychological components of depression: feelings of isolation, alienation, invisibility and worthlessness.”2) “What people are paying attention to doesn't just reveal who they are... it makes them who they are in that moment”' -Robert Cialdini3) Your narrative identity is important.  Is your life a contamination story?  Or a redemption story?4) Dropping forms. “Well, consistency is good, right? Only to the degree that we want to be who we have been.”5) A different kind of medication - “A single dose of psilocybin, the active ingredient of magic mushrooms, can lift the anxiety and depression experienced by people with advanced cancer for six months or even longer, two new studies show.”6) Sleep and the circadian cycle continues to show its importance in research.  This latest research shows how disrupting the circadian cycle can lead to “helplessness, behavioral despair, and anxiety-like behavior”7) Looking at trees decreases your stress more than looking at buildings #GetOutside 8) Want to soothe your cognitive dissonance (both conscious and unconscious)?  Put on some music.  “Thus, because we constantly grapple with cognitive dissonances, we created music, in part, to help us tolerate – and overcome – them.”9) It’s a dynamic system.  It’s all connected.  “increased levels of inflammatory cytokines are associated with increased rates of depression and psychosis, and that treatment to reduce cytokine levels can reduce symptoms of depression”10) Marvin Minsky on why our brain doesn’t separate emotion and thinking.  It’s all emotional states.  And emotional states bias thinking.  “The word beautiful means I’m in a state where I can’t see all the flaws in it.”11) A crime-plagued McDonald’s in Dallas started playing classical music.  Their crime rates dropped dramatically.  Environment matters.12) The body-mind connection is real.  Here’s a classic study to support it “In study 1, participants who briefly held a cup of hot (versus iced) coffee judged a target person as having a “warmer” personality (generous, caring); in study 2, participants holding a hot (versus cold) therapeutic pad were more likely to choose a gift for a friend instead of for themselves.”13) We need physical contact for our well-being.  “The answer is that interpersonal touch is a crucial form of social glue.”14) People are apart of your enviornment too.  “Partners of people with depression are more likely to suffer from chronic pain, research has found.”15) “Most of the bad feelings you have are caused by irrational beliefs.  Next time you’re feeling negative emotions, don’t focus on the event that you think “caused” them. Ask yourself what belief you hold about that event. And then ask yourself if it’s rational”16) Intermittent fasting continues to gain momentum...skip breakfast to decrease depression17) 3 Things That Successful Cultures Share: 1) Good People 2) Dedication to Improvement 3) Social Facilitation

“uses social facilitation to foster an environment of continuous improvement and accountability to the team”

18) Writing your story is good for your mental health - “Professor James Pennebaker has shown that just 20 minutes of writing your story for 4 days has the power to dramatically improve your life. It helps people overcome anxiety, tragedy and heartache. Those who wrote about their problems felt happier, slept better, and even got better grades.”

Neuroscience

19) Cortical representation is interesting. These researchers are asking better questions: “That we found no relationship between S1 representation and the duration of CRPS signs and symptoms is intriguing and raises some novel possibilities: is the difference in S1 representation between hemispheres pre-morbid and does it reflect a vulnerability to CRPS onset? Or might the difference between hemispheres arise early on in the disease, for instance soon after injury or during immobilisation?”20) Now we can tell our significant others that it’s for an altered state of consciousness -“rhythmic sexual stimulation - if intense enough and if it lasts long enough - can boost neural oscillations at correlating frequencies, a process called "neural entrainment."

Pain

21) This is some good shit.  “Swearing can add emotion and colour to a description, salience to a statement or be used as a means of acceptance – the willingness to break a cultural taboo in front of others creates an atmosphere of informality and a sense of community. Swearing can also act as a cathartic means to cope with pain.”22) Reorganize your pain neurotag:

1) Explore/Find safe movement

2) Go for a walk outside #justamemory

23) “Age, anxiety, catastrophizing and insomnia associated with MSK pain severity” -Derek Griffin24) “Optimism decreased the negative influence of pain catastrophizing on shoulder function, but not pain intensity.” #BePositive25) This is one of the better pain articles I’ve read in awhile - “It is important to clarify here that although we talk about the mind, thinking and emotions in relation to pain, the actual experience of pain emerges in the person and is felt in the body or the space in which the body should reside (for many biological reasons). The notion that pain is in the brain or in the head is nonsense. And, we are more than a brain.”26) This is a great article on Dr. Sarno with plenty of links regarding pain science and the biopsychosocial influence.

 “Furthermore, Dr. Sarno also began to see associations between emotional distress, early life adversity, and certain personality profiles (notably perfectionism and the need to please) and the onset of back pain and other so-called functional syndromes, such as headaches and irritable bowel syndrome. And most importantly, he found that when a patient is diagnosed with having a psychosomatic illness and given a clear understanding of that process, many people have dramatic resolutions of their symptoms, even if they were of a long-standing nature.”...”Over time, a few other physicians and therapists began using Dr. Sarno’s methods and they had equally impressive results. Research studies came out showing that most people with chronic back pain do not have a clearly defined medical explanation and that MRIs are abnormal in the majority of adults who do not have back pain. Studies of surgery for back pain have not shown better results than non-surgical interventions. Injections for back pain have not been shown to be better than placebo injections. Studies of brainimaging show that physical pain and emotional pain are equivalent and that emotionally laden regions of the brain (rather than somatosensory areas) are activated in chronic back pain. And emerging research shows that psychological interventions that target emotionsare showing significant results.”

27) How do you adapt to millions of years of harsh and painful conditions?  Evolve the ability to dim sensory perception to modulate pain.  “Evolutionary tweaks to the amino acids in their pain receptors make naked mole rats extremely insensitive to pain after they are born.”28) Sure, diagnoses and biomechanical talk can cause fear. But it can also cause ease, understanding, and social belonging. “These results are indicative of social exclusion of patients with pain for which there is no clear medical explanation.”  And remember that loneliness is linked to increased pain...29) +2000 patient study shows that expectations dictate outcomes30) I like using the LANSS questionnaire.  I have my patients with signs and symptoms of central sensitization fill it out.  It helps them understand that what they’re feeling is normal.  It helps them feel that others have these symptoms too.  See #2831) “Insomnia and short sleep duration are risk factors for developing chronic pain” -Mary O’Keefe32) People always like videoshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvrhBF4RHlo

Opioids

33) Regarding Opioid Induced Hyperalgesia, “Your biology fights back and says, ‘I’m blindfolded to pain by all these chemicals. I need to be able to sense pain again.” -Martin Angst34) But let’s not throw the baby out with the bathwater…”There is no question that in many cases opioids have been used inappropriately (prescribed too much or too little, given at too high or too low of a dose) for many individuals suffering with pain. But, it is also a very effective drug for many people in pain. Opioids help reduce acute nociception and can potentially reduce the risk of developing chronic pain for those in the more acute phase. They can also be an effective part of a comprehensive chronic pain treatment for some. My hope is that those of us in the physical therapy profession educate ourselves properly and understand how to talk to our patients about the use of opioids, because they will ask us.”-Korzy Zimmer35) It's an epidemic 36) Ask your patients if they take any pain medication.  Educate them on how to use medicine after surgeries and injuries.  Be a responsible provider.


 The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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Fall Hits 2016: General Healthcare

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 1) Environment matters. Want to know more about your patient's environment? Look at their significant other. "Doctors tend to treat people as individuals, guided by the need to ensure patient confidentiality. But knowing about one partner's health can provide key clues about the other's. For instance, signs of muscle weakening or kidney trouble in one may indicate similar problems for the other."2) Another reason why you need to work on your aerobic fitness “new research suggests that fitness, not physical activity alone, plays a protective role in guarding the body against risk factors for heart disease and other conditions.”  3) I think it was Joe LaVacca that said something like, “if left unresolved, your knee pain will become heart disease”.  This study shows he’s right.  “Not only are people older than 40 years who report a history of knee or ankle injury more likely than their uninjured counterparts to have osteoarthritis (OA), they are also more likely to have a cardio­vascular or respiratory disease, the researchers found.”4) Opioid Induced Hyperalgesia (OIA) - “At high doses, opioid painkillers actually seem to amplify pain by changing signaling in the central nervous system, making the body generally more sensitive to painful stimuli.”5) “A study by researchers at UCLA’s Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior has found that a healthy diet, regular physical activity and a normal body mass index can reduce the incidence of protein build-ups that are associated with the onset of Alzheimer’s disease.”6) The continuing decline of American health - “the life expectancy for 65-year-olds is now six months shorter than in last year’s actuarial study”7) Mesothelioma is a life-threatening, terminally ill disease caused by exposure to asbestos and those who suffer from this disease could possibly use the dedication, commitment, and resources that this website site provides.8) Lose weight to save our future.  “In addition to immediate implications for pregnancy complications, increasing evidence implicates maternal obesity as a major determinant of offspring health during childhood and later adult life. “9) Longevity and healthy lifestyle is more than just diet and exercise.  It’s stress management, social support, and helping others. 
 The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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Fall Hits 2016: Clinical

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1) Everyone is different (joint, osseous structures, myofascial structures, developmental history, etc.).  So it’s easy to understand why “there are no systematic advantages of one foot strike pattern over another when it comes to running economy”.  #DynamicSystem2) "Proximal joints act as motors and distal joints as adjustable dampers & springs" -Derek Griffin3) Are we overlooking the blood flow component of tendinopathies?  “Tendon blood flow tends to decrease with age and compression, which often results from increased mechanical load. This decreased vascularization, at least theoretically, can contribute to the probability of tissue damage as tissue compliance and flexibility will be compromised (LER). Oxygen consumption of ligaments and tendons is 7.5% lower than skeletal muscle, which may contribute to longer healing times (2,3).”4) The Gait Guy’s breakdown of a case study is always worth the time.  In this one they find the driver in the spine.  In this one they breakdown the biomechanics of 4 different runners.5) What do we use to regulate ourselves?  Thought or awareness?  Seth teaches us how using thought can lead to chronic pain.  “But we can’t think our way out of a physical “problem”. The autobiographical self (story we tell ourselves) and the embodied self (our experience in the present moment) are separate neural networks.“6) Michael Mullin teaches us how to use farmer’s walks within the PRI approach. Off set load with more weight on the left or perform a slow pause when in left stance. 7) I put kinesiotape on a knee replacement’s scar.  Just a simple vertical piece along the scar.  The temperature and swelling of the knee joint decreased dramatically (upon assessment 2 days later).  Many professionals talk about the importance of managing scar tissue.  But I never thought about it’s effects on swelling and temperature.8) Charlie Weingroff shares some of his latest thoughts on rehab and training. 9) Leon Chaitow goes over the possible positional release mechanisms - “At its simplest, positional release techniques as used in manual therapy settings, involve the unloading of tissues, placing them into less-stressed, “ease” positions. In such a comfort state, a number of beneficial changes may emerge including reduced pain perception and reduced inflammation, greater local muscular strength, reduced fascial stiffness, reduced pain-medication use and number of days of hospitalization, as well as enhanced peripheral circulation, post-surgically.”10) One of the better PT business articles I've read in awhile from Ben Fung. “If only 8% of the general healthcare consumer population ends up seeing a Physical Therapist for musculoskeletal concerns, we are missing out on 92% of the population who very much NEED OUR HELP! This is a terribly and massively underserved need in our society; we are doing a disservice to ourselves and our customers by not upping our advocacy game.”11) A well designed study and a good study are not always synonymous.  Researcher vs. Clinician.  Theory vs. applicability.  Scientific respect vs. real life patient outcomes.  Confirming hypothesis vs. solving clinical questions.12) People shouldn’t be allowed to do research without at least 5 years of clinical work.  13) “N=1 for your patient, N-100 for your research” -Matt Dancigers14) “Like sleep deprivation, chronic poor sleep quality impairs postural control in healthy adults.” -Jordana Bieze Foster15) Maybe it’s because they’ve lost balance?  They need a wider base of support?  Maybe the coronal plane isn’t as robust as the sagittal or transverse?  Maybe it’s a disuse thing?  "older adults prioritized medial to lateral control over forward progression during adaptive walking challenges."16) “Exercise is characterized as a test of physical limits, of grit and suffering and never succumbing to defeat.  It is a competitive chore for you to conquer and get over with.  Play is cooperative.  It is a coexistence with task and environment” -Christine Ruffolo17) Movement and anxiety are linked “Researchers have discovered that the response to anxiety in teenagers may include not only the parts of the brain which deal with emotions (the limbic system), as has been long understood, but also movement control centres in the brain, which may be associated with movement inhibition when stressed (“freezing”).”18) Get to the joints through the muscles. “Hilton's law, espoused by John Hilton in a series of medical lectures given in 1860–1862, is the observation that in the study of anatomy, the nerve supplying the muscles extending directly across and acting at a given joint also innervate the joint.”19) 2016 Exercise and Pregnancy Recommendations20) Ultrasound is effective as a diagnostic tool for stress fractures. “TUS (5 cm2 probe, 1 MHz) was conducted at the site of pain with continuous ultrasound at highest intensity (2 W/cm2) and the most symptomatic point was spotted for 30 seconds (probe was moved at 1 cm/s)”21) It took me almost a year, but I finally finished Daniel Lieberman's Evolution of the Human Head.  It’s not a book you read.  It’s a book you study.  It took me on many different tangents and pointed me to places I didn’t even know existed.  I had to put the book down and study from other sources before I could progress through.  It may not offer interventions, but it definitely takes you several layers deeper.  #FunctionalIntegration #Tinkering22) Mechanotransduction, again.  Although I wonder if these researches have ever heard of something called exercise and physical therapy.23) “Stretching any part of your body increases flexibility in other parts (more than just a cross-over effect from one limb to another)”-Chris Beardsley24) Charlie Weingroff writes a nice article on the differences between rehab and training and how they should be used simultaneously. “When we engage in intelligent training in the joints that can sustain it, we create hormonal effects that that can help the tissue in the shoulder heal more quickly and reduce pain.”25) Seth Oberst teaches a short class on mindful movement “But moving in real-time frees us. We aren’t anticipating pain or tension, or remembering pain and tension the last time we moved.”26) “Do clinicians spend too much time trying to change stressors rather than working to develop coping skills? #stress #resilience #coping” -Derek Griffin (nice info graphic)27) Tell your patients to go for a walk outside.  Meta-analysis shows walking is an effective intervention for chronic pain.

Cervical & Cranium

28) “Extra ocular muscles are 300x stronger than mechanically necessary to move an eye in a socket. #thingsthatmakeyougohmm” -Alex de la Paz, DPT

29) Five of the 6 muscles that move the eye attach to the sphenoid bone

23) I like reactive and antalgic postures. They help with diagnosis. And are a fun way to predict diagnosed when watching injuries happen on TV (I can't be the only sick PT that enjoys this, right?). Examples of antalgic postures are an AC joint dislocation unloading their affected side by holding it up. Or a fresh ACL trying to posteriorly glide their tibia. Here Sian sharing some antalgic postures for cervical radiculopathy.  What are your favorites?

24) I did not know there were this many different types of headaches.  

“To breakdown the neural and vascular mechanism of migraine we can say that a migraine headache depends on:

1.The Activation of the trigeminovascular pathway by pain signals that originate in peripheral intracranial nociceptors, and

2.Dysfunction of CNS structures involved in the modulation of neuronal excitability and pain“

25) “Chronic neck-shoulder pain: Heavy strength training improves strength and rate of force development” -Lars L. Andersen

26) Solid summary of cervicogenic dizziness by Sian

27)  It's always nice to have studies that back up what we see in the clinic.  Neck patients are respiratory patients.  “Patients with chronic neck pain have reduced vital capacity, expiratory reserve volume, FVC, and minute volume.”

28) Proximal > Distal.  “Neck muscle fatigue alters upper extremity proprioception

29) Unfurrow your brows to stop the headaches.  “Research from the journal of Plastic Reconstructive Surgery in 2007 specifically points to the corrugator supercilii as a chief culprit of headaches and "complete resection" of this muscle is necessary for "effective decompression of the supraorbital nerve and supratrochlear nerve branches in the surgical treatment of migraine headaches."

Thorax & Upper Extremity

30) Homo naledi had an upward rotated and laterally positioned scapula.  Suggesting the upper extremity was used for locomotion as opposed to throwing and manipulating objects.

31) Christine Ruffolo dissects wrist motion through her movement exploration practice - “Wrist movement is directly affected by forearm rotation”

32) Clinical pearl from Eric Schoenberg, “Prone external rotation with no support results in increased use of deltoid to support the arm against gravity”

33) I like this upper thoracic MWM

34) Hand Grip Strength from Noah Harrison (massive article)

Predictor of mortality

Directly correlated with respiratory muscle strength

Associated with overall body strength

Dominate the homunculus

“Hands are extensions of our eyes”

Integrated with shoulder stability muscles

4 Areas that increase irradiation: feet, jaw, respiration, hand

4 Forms of gripping: pinch, open, closed, hook

3 Ways to work on it: farmers carries, bottoms-up KB, hanging based movements

35) Forward shoulders. Is it a tight pec minor? Postural adaptation? Or maybe your body’s way of making up for the lack of center of gravity shift that a normal thoracic kyphosis would cause? #PRI #GaelynRogersBeerThoughts

Lumbo-Pelvic

36) “Back muscles of healthy individuals had a type 1 percentage ranging from 54%-74,3% and type 2 from 16,4%-30,2%. In the thoracic muscles, there is a higher percentage of type 1 fibres.”

37) The best way to treat extension based low back pain is to perform the SFMA break out and address the impairments and patterns. For those who don't use that system, try this great shotgun approach from Dan Pope.

38) 5 easy extension based low back screens

39) The drama continues…”Stabilization exercises are better than general exercises for people with chronic non-specific low back pain.”  My thoughts...don’t get caught up in the professional drama.  Don’t be that guy.  Do what gets YOU positive outcomes in the clinic.  If your chronic back pain patients aren’t getting better, then YOU need to get better.  And that might mean finding a different approach.  n=1 goes for not only the patient, but for each clinician, and each clinical relationship.

40) Sacral autonomic neurons are sympathetic, not parasympathetic.  “the parasympathetic nervous system receives input from cranial nerves exclusively and the sympathetic nervous system from spinal nerves, thoracic to sacral inclusively” (via Michael Mullin)

Hip

41) “Use step under uninvolved limb to address compensatory weight shift during bilateral exercises.” -Terry Grindstaff

42) The Gait Guys teach us why external tibial torsion can limit hip extension “When the hip is in an externally rotated position it is easier to extend; the femur head moves anteriorly, the femoral joint capsule becomes tighter and stability is created”

43) If you want to be active, move well, and prevent injuries, then you should strengthen the hips. It's associated with ankle sprains and shoulder dysfunction.

43) “The superior portion of the gluteus maximus had significantly greater relative EMG activity than the inferior portion of the gluteus maximus during exercises that incorporated elements of hip abduction and/or external rotation”

44) It's not always about mobility and stretching the hip flexors.  “Hip flexor muscle strength was found to be decreased in patients with labral pathology compared to control subjects”

45) Jennifer Pilotti writes a nice article on closed chain hip flexor strengthening

46) “A recent study investigated the use of the single leg hamstring bridge (SLHB) as a clinical test in predicting hamstring injuries in football players. The single leg hamstring bridge tests the hamstring muscles in a functional position similar to terminal swing and assesses endurance parameters rather than peak torque. This study demonstrated a significant deficit in preseason SLHB scores on the right leg of players that subsequently sustained a right-sided hamstring injury.”

Knee

47) “Patients who sustained an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture were more likely to develop secondary meniscal injury and arthritis when compared to a matched cohort. Specifically, those that were treated nonoperatively or with delayed surgery may be more likely to develop secondary meniscal injury, develop arthritis, and be in need of a total knee replacement when compared with those patients treated with early surgery.”

48) I usually focus on 3 things immediately after knee surgery: 1) edema management 2) knee extension ROM 3) quad development

49) Interesting study on the forward lunge.  “Trunk and shank position have a significant influence on patellofemoral joint loading of both limbs during the forward lunge, with the trail limb generally experiencing greater total joint stress. Restricting forward translation of the lead limb shank reduces patellofemoral joint stress at the expense of increased stress in the trail limb.”

50) It’s as easy as strengthening hips.  New meta-analysis shows “significant hip strength deficits exist in people with knee osteoarthritis.”  These exercises are an easy way to improve hip strength in the osteoarthritis population.

51) Injuries are complex.  The neurocognitive continuum is something we see all the time in the clinic.  A new study measured this and correlated it with injury.  “Athletes with low neurocognitive scores are more likely than their higher-scoring counterparts to demonstrate landing mechanics associated with anterior cruciate injury (ACL) risk” #Variables #DynamicSystem

52) Glute Med and ACLs - “There were significant group by phase interactions for the GMed during both SEBT and the SDT. GMed activation was lower for the ACLR group during the return phase of the posteromedial direction of the SEBT compared to the control group (P = .03). During the SDT, GMed activation was higher for the ACLR group during the ascending phase than descending phase (P<.001), while the control group showed no difference between phases (P = .707).”  I like doing these inner-range holds with my ACLR patients early in their rehab (I manually position them instead of having them set up on a table or wall).

53) “A professional athlete who fails to meet functional criteria for return-to-sport or who has a low hamstring:quadriceps ratio is at greater risk for an anterior cruciate ligament graft rupture.”

Foot/Ankle

54) You can tell a lot just by looking at feet. “Post hoc pairwise comparisons showed a significant difference between flexible versus stiff AHF (arch height flexibility): those with flexible AHF exhibited reduced CPEI (greater hyperpronation) while those with stiff AHF showed elevated PP. Results suggest that, in addition to AHI, the arch flexibility may affect dynamic foot function.”

55) Tell your patients with peripheral neuropathy to wear stiffer shoes. It's the next best thing to being barefoot. #IncreasedSensoryFeedback

56) “the findings suggest that foot overpronation may affect Achilles tendon blood flow, particularly at mid-tendon, thus enhancing the possibility for injury”

57) “The findings of this study are interesting because it shows that physically active individuals with CAI are “pre-activating” muscles differently than healthy controls to try to protect the previously injured joint in preparation for landing.  However, it remains unclear if participants with CAI had these activation patterns prior to developing CAI or if the activation patterns developed as a result of the injury and subsequent CAI.”

58) Training complex movements to fatigue is never a good idea.  “A fatigue running protocol caused increases in forefoot push-off time in all participants, but caused increases in different foot regions based on arch height.”

59) There are 3 planes of motion to compensate in.  Don’t assume.  It’s not always pronation for an absent heel rocker.  “Frequently a premature heel rise can force knee flexion but in this case the rise just kept going vertical and forcing them into the use of the gastrocsoleus group and thus forcing a lift of the entire body.”

60) A weak toe grip is associated with hallux valgus

61) Are you standing up?  Look to your left behind you.  Do you have enough cervical and thoracic rotation mobility?  Do you have enough left hip internal rotation?  Do you have the motor control of your rotational slings to drive the rotation?  Do you have enough right foot pronation?  Or are you going to have compensate with excessive left supination and sprain your ankle?  Biomechanics matter.

62) “Ankle plantar flexor and toe flexor muscle performance was impaired in individuals with plantar heel pain”  This is a good starter toe flexor exercise (the hallux flexion variation)

63) Less ankle dorsiflexion during a squat increases valgus moment, decreases quad activation, and increased soleus activity (among other things not measured in this study).  Here are 4 great ways to increase ankle dorsiflexion mobility (MWM, neurodynamics, histological stretch, pattern specific)

Some Kathy Dooley Anatomy Lessons

64) Kathy Dooley is one of the best anatomy teachers out there:

TFL wants to be an accessory quadricep so badly, that this muscle embryonically migrated from the gluteal region to the anterior thigh. This makes the TFL a wonderful connection between the quadriceps and gluteus maximus during the propulsion phase of gait.”

A lack of hip IR is usually not a flexibility issue, it’s usually a lumbar stability or pathoanatomy problem.  “the hip’s internal rotators, like TFL, gluteus medius, and gluteus minimus, which receive their major spinal innervation from L5. (Think: L5 on the side of the hip). “

Use the grip to test if the scalenes are locked long “When testing grip, the test will likely improve upon coronally stretching the OPPOSITE side, which shortens the stretched-out side in this plane. This takes the stretch tension off the compressed neurovascular bundle, resulting in better circulation and nerve conduction.”

Trouble swallowing?  “When many people stress, especially when the stressor is huge and out of nowhere, they alter breathing.  The gasp is a sharp inhalation, creating concentric tightness around the diaphragm.   This tightness constricts the esophageal hiatus of the diaphragm, which permits passage of the esophaus and vagus nerves in and out of the thorax to the abdomen...But if vagal tone is already low, the typical indigestion the person may feel now is accompanied with a lump in the throat. This is because the vagus nerve also innervates the laryngopharynx (lower throat) and larynx (voice box).”

The cervical lumbar connector - Longissimus Capitis.  “The LCap is covered on its posterior surface with the posterior layer of thoracolumbar fascia (TLF). This connection from skull to lumbar spine helps the cervical spinal musculature fire when the lumbar spine fires...This explains why you use your neck as a secondary set of core muscles, often deemed the extrinsic core.”Kathy Dooley is one of the best anatomy teachers out there:

Breathing

54) So breathing is pretty important.  “We have proposed that a sigh serves as a psychophysiological resetter, restoring homeostasis both physiologically and psychologically when a homeostatic balance has been compromised,”

55) Sometimes people really struggle restoring normal breathing patterns.  Sometimes people get frustrated and make no progress with internal cues.  Sometimes people need an easier place to start.  Since we’re all very visual and very addicted to our phones, these gifs may be an ideal entry point.  Big thanks to Nathan Pyle for providing a wonderful visual cue to help people coordinate their breathing patterns.  And thanks to my friend, Peter Hwang, for sending them my way.


 The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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Fall Hits 2016: Table of Contents

This is a collection of information to help improve health and movement.  It includes articles, videos, and quotes that I have found helpful in studying the human species.  Due to the complexity of this subject matter, I have tried to include a variety of variables that can influence the dynamic system.In an attempt to avoid information overload, I’ve separated the information into different categories.  I will post each category separately to make it easier to scroll through.  The links below will be added over the next month as they are posted.Feel free to follow me on social media to keep up to date on the latest postings.

Twitter

 Instagram

 Facebook

 YouTube

 AG Project Blog

Making this information accessible for everyone takes a great deal of effort and time.  If you have the resources, please consider a donation.  Your support to maintain this website is greatly appreciated.

Table of Contents

Clinical

Blood flow, self-regulation, studies, headaches and furrowing, hip flexor strength, forward lunge trunk angle, running fatigued, Kathy Dooley anatomy, best breathing gifs of all time

General Healthcare

How knee pain will end your life (another reason why PT is important), decline of american health, and why you should worry about your significant other's health

Psychology, Neuroscience, & Pain

What kind of narrative are you living?,  emotion states are all there is, bad feelings=irrational beliefs, pain is in the body too, Dr. Sarno, why we need diagnoses, and opiods

Brene Brown, Vulnerability, Shame, Empathy, & Compassion

Work on yourself to work on others

Training / Strength & Conditioning

volume effect, split squat lunge torso angle and feet distance, vertical quadruped

Social & Communication

Motivation and stuff

Diet

Microbiome and stuff

Other Good Stuff

Trees, titles, and rhinos


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Late Summer Hits 2016: Other Good Stuff

Click here for this edition's Table of Contents


  • "You can get help from teachters, but you are going to have to learn a lot by yourself, sitting alone in a room." -Dr. Seus

1. “Choosing a partner is choosing a set of problems.” -Eric Barker with a great post on relationships2. Plato’s Allegory of the Cave. 3. How to Make Good Decisions

“Spend less time trying to amass all the information and more time better defining the problem so you can find the right information.”

“For simple decisions without many factors involved (What soda should I buy?) be rational.  For very complex or weighty decisions (Am I in love?) trust your gut.”

“A new study from researchers at Rice University, George Mason University and Boston College suggests you should trust your gut — but only if you’re an expert”

“A good decision now is better than a perfect decision in two days”

Take the “outside perspective”

4. Louie CK’s 10 Rules for Success5. This is fascinating.   Fire ants and their dynamic system6. Try something new for 30 days: you can do anything for 30 days, it slows the perception of time down, small changes are sustainable, it makes you a more versatile person, it’s good for your brain, 7. “The best shape for a fire is one that’s as tall as it is wide.”

Sleep

8. Improve Your Sleep

-Get more bright light during the day

-Reduce Blue Light at Night (screens)

-No caffeine 8 hours before bedtime

-Reduce irregular naps

-Wake up and go to bed at the same

-Use melatonin (or other supplements)

-Avoid alcohol

-Make your bedroom perfect for sleep (cold, dark, white noise, etc.)

-Don’t eat late at night

-Relax before bed (use pre-sleep routine, read, hobby, bath, meditation, etc.)

-Invest in a good mattress, pillow, covers - it’s worth it

-Exercise regularly, but not before bed

-Don’t drink any liquid before bedtime

-Rule out a sleep disorder from a trained professional (google doesn’t count)

9. “22 hours without sleeping has been shown to cause cognitive and reactive impairment comparable to being legally drunk”10. Go to sleep and wake up at the same time, for your low back’s health - “These results support the concept that disruptions to circadian rhythms may be a risk factor for degenerative IVD disease and low back pain.”11. “A single night of partial sleep deprivation induces insulin resistance in multiple metabolic pathways in healthy subjects.”


 The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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Late Summer Hits 2016: Diet

Click here for this edition's Table of Contents


 
  • "The sensation of comfort can be maintained only in relation to the sensation of discomfort" -Alan Watts

1. “iron carries oxygen and is the backbone of nearly every neurotransmitter inside your skull” -Ben House2. A very thorough and well researched review of dietary fat from Vox.    3. Why we’re fat:

we’re eating out more, portion sizes have increased, we drink a lot of sugar, healthier foods cost more, our vegetables are mainly potatoes, too many of our meals are like dessert, we’re bombarded with ads for unhealthy foods

4. Rehydration Index - here's the bar chart. Interesting stuff.  5. “Study: higher intakes of berries → ↓rate of cognitive decline in older adults”6. Fat infiltration into weak dysfunctional muscles is a common physiological change. Should we start to consider diet’s role in this as well? “Diabetes creates a high glucose environment that not only results in peripheral neuropathy, but also causes adipose stem cells to differentiate into adipose cells, which migrate into muscle tissue, according to several studies”7. “research shows taking MCT oil before drinking alcohol can help protect the liver against membrane oxidation”8. “Scientists found bright light exposure increased insulin resistance compared to dim light exposure in both the morning and the evening. In the evening, bright light also caused higher peak glucose (blood sugar) levels. Over time, excess blood glucose can result in increased body fat, weight gain and a higher risk for diabetes.”9. “Now, for the first time, Cornell University researchers report they have identified biological markers of the disease in gut bacteria and inflammatory microbial agents in the blood.”10. This is terrible news “The study, published in the scientific journal Addiction, concludes that there is more than simply a link or statistical association between alcohol and cancer that could be explained by something else. There is now enough credible evidence to say conclusively that drinking is a direct cause of the disease, according to Jennie Connor, of the preventive and social medicine department at Otago University in New Zealand.”11. Authority Nutrition shares 20 science backed ways to lose belly fat:

eat soluble fiber, avoid foods that contain trans fats, don’t drink too much alcohol, eat a high-protein diet, reduce your stress levels, avoid sugary foods, do aerobic exercise, cut back on carbs (especially refined carbs), replace cooking fats with coconut oil, do resistance training (build strength), avoid sugar sweetened beverages, get plenty of sleep (at least 7 hours a night), track your food intake and exercise, eat fatty fish every week, stop drinking fruit juice, add apple cider vinegar to your diet, eat probiotic foods, try intermittent fasting, drink green tea, change your lifestyle

12. 14 ways to lower your insulin levels. Great read for some solid diet advice. 13. “Breakfast: bacon, eggs, & coffee >>> cereal, toast, & fruit juice (P<0.05)” -Bill Lagakos14. Interesting food pyramids from other countries15. “Vitamin D2 was found to be ineffective at impacting muscle strength in both studies wherein it was administered. In contrast, vitamin D3 was shown to have a positive impact on muscle strength”16. Want a better life? Try living one. Eating healthy leads to improved health in other areas, such as mental health. “The researchers concluded that people who changed from almost no fruit and veg to eight portions of fruit and veg a day would experience an increase in life satisfaction equivalent to moving from unemployment to employment”. It's all connected. #Variables 17. Checking your bone health may be the same as checking your gut health - “The human microbiome has been shown to influence a number of chronic conditions associated with impaired bone mass and bone quality, including obesity, diabetes, and inflammatory bowel disease.”

Sugar

18. Eating a healthy diet can be complex (nutrient timing, vegetables, types of carbs/fats, protien intake, processed foods, microbiome, etc.).  But it can also be simple - EAT LESS SUGAR.  If we want to improve our nation’s health and stop the obesity epidemic we need to convince our society to stop eating so much sugar.  It is by far the single worst ingredient in one’s diet.19. “When the low-fat guidelines first came out, food manufacturers removed the fat from foods but added a whole bunch of sugar instead.”20. “People are getting a lot of sugar from conventional foods, without even realizing it. Many of these processed, high-sugar foods are endorsed by health organizations like the Australian Heart Foundation.”21. “Overall, sugary soft drinks (and fruit juices) are probably the unhealthiest and most fattening aspects of the modern diet, by far.”22. Dr. Lustig lays down the law on Sugar23. “The sugar industry paid scientists in the 1960s to play down the link between sugar and heart disease and promote saturated fat as the culprit instead, newly released historical documents show.”24. We need to start calling breakfast what it really is...dessert. 25. Here’s a layman's infographic on sugar26. 18 Foods/Drinks that are high in sugar:

low-fat yogurt, bbq sauce, ketchup, fruit juice, spaghetti sauce, sports drinks, chocolate milk, granola, flavored coffees, iced tea, protein bars, vitamin water, pre-made soups, cereal bars, canned fruit, canned bake beans, bottled smoothies, breakfast cereal

27. “Obese children who cut sugar from their diets saw improvements in markers of heart disease after just nine days, a study in Atherosclerosis found.”28. 8 ways food companies hide the sugar content of foods:

calling sugar by a different name, using many different types of sugar, adding sugar to foods you’d least expect it, using healthy sugars instead of sucrose, combining added sugars with natural sugars, adding health claims to products, having a high number of servings per pack, making sweet versions of a low-sugar brand

29.  Addiction is an unhealthy behavior...regardless of what substance it isCocaine = Addictive + Harmful = IllegalSugar = Addictive + Harmful = Legalwhat, happens, to, your, brain, on, sugar,, explained, by, science, (source)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=31IDxvpI-L0


  The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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Late Summer Hits 2016: Social & Communication

Click here for this edition's Table of Contents


  • “If you want to be interesting, you have to be interested.”

1) “The authors examined whether facial expressions of emotion would predict changes in heart function… Those participants who exhibited ischemia showed significantly more anger expressions and nonenjoyment smiles than nonischemics.”-Eric Barker with 4 ways to improve your body language2) Proxemics and personal interactions - very interesting3) Want to give a better speech? Practice in front of your dog “Addressing a friendly and nonjudgmental canine can lower blood pressure, decrease stress and elevate mood — perfect for practicing your speech or team presentation.”4) The 3 Most Powerful Words5) “researchers at the University of Virginia School of Medicine have determined that the immune system directly affects – and even controls – creatures’ social behavior, such as their desire to interact with others….The relationship between people and pathogens, the researchers suggest, could have directly affected the development of our social behavior, allowing us to engage in the social interactions necessary for the survival of the species while developing ways for our immune systems to protect us from the diseases that accompany those interactions.”6) “Google sought out to make the most efficient teams by studying their employees. Named 'Project Aristotle' the research found Psychological Safety to be the most important factor in a successful team. That is an ability to take risk without fear of judgement from peers.” (source)7) “MIT found that the outcome of negotiations could be predicted by body language alone 87% of the time.”  Read this great article by Eric Barker with 5 tips to improve your read on people8) “A study from researchers at the University of Michigan found that couples in which both parties drink reported slightly better marriages than couples where one person drinks and the other does not.”9) “That’s why, as productivity writer Seth Godin points out, evidence isn’t the only thing you need to change the minds of those around you. You also need empathy so you can see where they’re coming from, and persistence to keep the conversation going even when it feels like you should just give up.”10) “The Danes’ highly developed sense of empathy is one of the main reasons that Denmark is consistently voted one of the happiest countries in the world (this year it is once again number one). Empathy plays a key role in improving our social connections, which is a major factor in our overall happiness.  What many don’t realize is that empathy is a learned skill that many of us miss out on in America. In fact, some studies show empathy levels have dropped up to 40 percent in the U.S. in the last 30 years, while narcissism is on the steady rise.”11) Quick Book Review - Made to Stick by Chip & Dan Heath

Seth Oberst recommended this book to me.  It’s right up there with Dale Carnegie’s classic, How to make friends and influence people.  Made to Stick offers great strategies to simply...make what you say stick.  

As a PT I found this very applicable in regards to patient communication.  One of the biggest struggles for me as a PT is changing patient's beliefs and teaching important complex concepts.  This book left me with some great strategies to improve this ability.  

Below is a chart I made about the book.  Unlike the book, I selfishly made it about the concepts I enjoyed from the book, rather than making it simple for everyone.  Sorry.

 


 The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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Late Summer Hits 2016: Training / Strength & Conditioning

Click here for this edition's Table of Contents


 
  • “Once you understand the feeling and purpose of a position, change one thing..... then change one more.” -Christine Ruffolo

1. The squat is not the same as a deadlift.  The tibia should go forward (if you have ankle dorsiflexion).  Mike Robertson even cues knees first at times for this reason.2. Mike Robertson’s 5 least favorite training cues3. How to prevent choking: practice under pressure, self-disctraction, don’t dilly-dally, express your emotions before you start. For a better understanding check out my Coaching & Cueing series.4. When done correctly, the push-up is an incredibly difficult exercise that works the whole body.  If you’re only feeling your arms or chest, you should read this article from GMB.5. Some nice training pearls from Eric Cressey - single leg training is important, but if you want maximal strength you need double leg training (squats, deadlift), teach people that the deadlift pattern is a push not a pull. 6. Eric Barker teaches us how to become motivated to exercise

Don’t focus on the beginning, think about how good you’ll feel progressing towards your goals

Make a plan and write it down, and plan for obstacles ("if-then" implementation intentions)

Make it a game

Use music

7. A difficult, but important concept to intrinsically understand - going backwards can be just as satisfying as going forward.  Christine Ruffolo expands on this concept in this great post - “Making something novel isn’t the same as revealing something novel.  I don’t think anything can be invented that wasn’t here already.  The perspective and introspective journey is what’s different.  It’s what you can claim as your own and be proud of.  The passage from question to answer to another question is where confidence grows, because the dialogue is all internal.”8. “Coaches: I don't care how well you coach pros. They're already good. Show me what you can teach someone with a family and a job.” -GMBFitness9. This will cause some controversy as it doesn't match up with many accepted beliefs on strength - “New research is challenging traditional workout wisdom, suggesting that lifting lighter weights many times is as efficient as lifting heavy weights for fewer repetitions.”10. Good cue - “foam roll one inch per second”11. 5 solid fitness industry advice from Eric Cressey12. The key to reducing muscle cramps is in the mouth-to-mind-to-muscle connection?13. Dean Somerset goes over the layering approach, also known as chunking, for teaching complex movements.14. Mike Robertson has a great article that reviews some of the basic conditioning concepts championed by Joel Jameson.  

Lactic training and aerobic training work against each other. Quite simply, the better you get at lactic training, the less aerobic you become.  Lactic training is not sport-specific. While a basketball player will tap into the lactic system from time-to-time, it’s not the most prevalent energy system used. Instead, basketball tends to be a blend of alactic (explosive work) paired with aerobic (lower-intensity) demands.”

15. Velocity Based Training - “would have your athletes perform sets of dynamic effort squats at 0.8 m/s instead of at 55 percent”16. Eric Cressey reminds us how important relative stiffness is, tells us to work the serratus to improve hyperextended elbows, and job advice - become a hip surgeon.17. Mike Robertson shares a nice post on Alternating Function - “tri-planar in nature and connects the upper and lower extremities.  I like to think of alternating function in two ways:

The ability to separate or perform opposing patterns between the same side hip and shoulder. Example: Internally rotating the right hip while externally rotating the right shoulder.

The ability to coordinate movement patterns between opposite hip and shoulder.Example: Externally rotating the right shoulder and left hip, while internally rotating the left shoulder and right hip.”

18. Cue thorax rotation from the sternum19. “The researchers concluded that these results indicate that “force vector” is a key factor determining the extent to which exercises transfer to sports performance. The front squat has a vertical force vector, and transfers well to athletic activities with a vertical force vector, like the vertical jump. In contrast, the hip thrust has a horizontal force vector, and transfers well to as athletic activities with a horizontal force vector, such as sprint running. This places “force vector” among other important factors that affect exercise transfer to sprinting, like velocity, and muscle group emphasis.”20. Use the full ROM for hypertrophy - “elbow flexion exercise with full ROM seems to induce greater muscle damage than partial ROM exercises, even though higher absolute load was achieved with partial ROM.”21. “The researchers concluded that training with heavy, mixed or light loads produces similar gains in muscular size, but only training with heavy loads produces meaningful gains in strength and RFD.”22. Miguel Aragoncillo’s Bag of Tricks: Half Kneeling using an external band to help someone create internal reference points for a wedge23. GMB has a nice review of periodization. I really like the graph in this post (below).Periodization Chart

Exercise, Movement, & Techniques

24. I really like this side plank correction from Lori of PRI. 25. Stealing from yoga is always a good idea.  Here is a YogaFlow with the intention of improving thoracic rotation.27. This is a little aggressive for most of my clientele, but a nice way to add a valgus knee moment RNT. #TrainInjuryPositions 28. 15 ways to improve your vestibular system (and why you need to).29. I like this cue for wall lift offs30. Lateral lunge, rotation, and high plank flow. 31. This may be the best vestibular exercise (you won’t regret watching this one). 32. Extended Clamshell from Christine Ruffolo is a great exercise you can use tomorrow.  Plus, she reminds us to work on the ability to dissociate hip ER from hip abduction.33. One of the best rotational core exercises I've seen. Combines agility, footwork, and proximal stability. 34. Craig Liebenson is on Instagram and it's awesome.35. 3 closed chain lower trap exercises from Dan Pope36. I like these closed chain horizontal overhead wall push variations (rhythmic stabilization)37. This is a great SLDL corrective from Ruffolo38. Here's a ton of open book variations.  Fit the right one to the right client.39. Mike Robertson teaches the crossover step up.  A nice way to add more planes of motion into the step up.40. Deficit lunges are a nice bridge between traditional lunges and pistol squats. 41. Christine Ruffolo shows you how to go from no hip IR to lots of hip IR, plus this nice tip “Drive the calves down against the ground for your abs to reflexively hold you up.  You should feel the oblique of the lead leg light up as you force rotation.”42. Downdog

Push-up to Downdog

Downdog, high plank, elbow plank

Downdog Flow

Downcatcameldog

Downdog, crab, sideplank

Seated 90-90

Andreo Spina started a wildfire when he re-created the seated 90-90 position within his FRC system.  With his system’s principles and open minded practitioners, this position has boomed and become an ideal canvas to explore movement and create mobility.43. Double IR from Christine Ruffolo44. Joe LaVacca displays the seated 90/90 ER/IR Hover45. Craig Liebenson adds a med ball toss to the 90/90 position46. PRI has an exercise in this position (intentions are different than the FRC system). This can do wonders to improve R rotation (among other things). 47. For my patient population, the vertical trunk 90-90 IR hip mobilization is a little too much.  Most of them don’t have that type of hip abduction/IR mobility.  They’ll compensate with too much spinal torque.  So I’ve found this variation more accessible for the novice or impaired movers.  Think acetabulum and lower lumber spine.48. Liebenson reminds us how load can change movement patterns49. Ryan Faer shows how you can mobilize the upper extremity too with this seated 90-90 posterior sling mobility50. Master FRCer, Dewey Nielson, shares some of his 90-90 variations51. You could call this a biceps femoris mobilization, or maybe a posterolateral chain mobilization, or maybe a sciatic nerve mobilization.  Or maybe you should just consider it a movement exploration...52. Sometimes I like to finish my 90-90 work with this alternating roll.53. 90-90 Hip Abduction from Kate Galliet54. Seated 90-90 Hip IR to Hip Flexion from Dean Somerset55. Christine Ruffolo shows us that you don’t always have to be seated...supine wall, half-kneeling/standing transition, 3-D chair, extended hip, lever change

Exercise of the Month

This is a great "thoracic mobility" exercise.  It helps to expand the posterior thorax tissues, improves anterior opposition, and achieves a more neutral position (PRI).You can use this to destory flat thoracic spines, decrease paraspinal muscle tone, improve hip positioning, increase scapula protraction, balance breathing, increase ankle dorsiflexion, and/or accelerate recovery.I like to elevate the heels in most of my patients (and myself sometimes) since they don't have the best mobility.  It also allows them to keep a low-threshold movement pattern and prevents the high-tension patterns that a counter-weight may induce.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0E0HnG6vkE


 The main reason I do this blog is to share knowledge and to help people become better clinicians/coaches. I want our profession to grow and for our patients to have better outcomes. Regardless of your specific title (PT, Chiro, Trainer, Coach, etc.), we all have the same goal of trying to empower people to fix their problems through movement. I hope the content of this website helps you in doing so.If you enjoyed it and found it helpful, please share it with your peers. And if you are feeling generous, please make a donation to help me run this website. Any amount you can afford is greatly appreciated.

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