Monthly Archives: November 2011

Pronation: Decelerating Naturally

“Muscles behave in a similar way to a spring.  They resist deformation which results from internal or external joint loading and tend to return to their original position following lengthening. ‘Muscle Stiffness’ which is a quality reflecting the ratio of force change to length change in a muscle, is a term to describe the spring-like qualities of the muscle.  Thus when a muscle has high stiffness, increased force is required to cause lengthening of the muscle.” — Excerpt from Therapeutic Exercise for  Spinal Segmental Stabilization in Low Back Pain

A muscle(s) has to be able to contract at the right time, in the right plane and at the right joint(s) in order for you to be efficient.

The ground, gravity and momentum will take care of the rest.

(Optimal Stiffness)

You can not look at pain and degenerative changes at the knee without exploring the mechanics of the foot *and* hip first.

Pronation is a combination of motions throughout the foot that have to occur at the right time, in the right plane and at the right joint in order to set the system up for success.

Your foot is the support (foundation), your knees are the bridge and your hips are the suspension.

When the foot can pronate successfully, you increase your chances of supinating *or* overcoming gravity successfully.

*Your* brain knows that you have to get to your big toe.

It also knows that your knee will react, absorb *and* dissipate force much more efficiently when you land on your forefoot/midfoot first.

Try running in your barefeet on the cement *and* I guarantee you will not land on your heel first.

(Principles)

It is not only about  the pain that you will experience when you strike your heel on the cement repetitively…it’s about efficiency.

Ultimately, it comes down to…

How fast can you get to your big toe?

(Boing)

Your feet are your foundation *and* connection to planet Earth.

Photograph by Natalie Harding

(Proprioception)

You and I have a bone  in the foot (talus) that sits on top of the heel (calcaneus) like a hat.

Wherever your heel goes, your talus follows.

When your heel and talus are in an environment that allows them to move naturally, the lower leg follows the talus at the ankle joint.

The foot and the lower leg are *free* to collapse naturally, e.g., Pronation.

*Imagine* the lower leg rotating in as the leg and the rest of the body come over the foot.

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Defending Normal

“The shoe cannot make up for what the body is incapable of doing. The structures of the body must be trained to reduce the force over as many joints as possible using the elastic properties of the muscles, ligaments, and tendons.  Coleman Horn, former designer of Nike shoes, put it best when he said, ‘The best a running shoe can do for you is not hinder your gait.’  Choose footwear that will allow the foot to act naturally, to work with the body to reduce and then produce force.”  – Excerpt from Athletic Development — The Art & Science of Functional Sports Conditioning by Vern Gambetta

Everybody wants to defend their story.

*Defending* your story is just human nature and that makes it                         okay or normal (for now!).

The running magazines have been telling you the same stories on stretching *and* injuries month after month for many years.

*Every* month that you buy the story (and the magazine), they go back to the drawing board and ask the same questions differently.

I imagine the meeting goes something like this:

Somebody in the front of the room asks, how can we tell the same story in a different way while continuing to defend our original story on stretching?

Meanwhile, everybody in the room desperately wants somebody in the front of the room to pick their answer *first*.

Eventually, somebody from the back of the room says, let’s add a rope (a prop) to that supine hamstring stretch *and* then tell the consumer that the stretch is active (not passive!?).

Nobody in the meeting cares about what the science says about stretching *and* performance, they are only interested in telling the story.

They are looking for permission to be more normal, by defending normal.

I don’t know about you, but I have absolutely no interest in defending normal.

I will be the first to stand up and say…

I got it *all* wrong for the first eight years of my career.

I could not have been more wrong.  (emphasis added)

I bought the story on tight muscles, trigger points *and* stretching… hook, line and sinker.

(Perspective)

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Loading To Unloading: Improving Proprioceptive Feedback

A master of T’ai Chi was so sensitive to the forces around him that if a fly landed on his shoulder, he would sway gently under its impact.  Legend has it that a sparrow was unable to jump from his open palm and fly, because as it pushed away, his hand would sink beneath its legs.  Such sensitivity reflects our own potential, refined through practice.  – Excerpt from BODY MIND MASTERY by Dan Millman

Just twenty minutes from where I live, the Lovejoy (Lucas, TX) Cross Country Team runs barefoot in the grass everyday before their run.

What do they know about stretching *and* warming-up that the running magazines that are trying to reach the masses don’t know (or choose to ignore)?

(Proprioception)

Embracing and connecting to something *weird*.

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