Sunday, August 19, 2012

Injury FREE!!!

No, not really.

I am usually plagued with one injury or another.  But as a martial arts teacher, I am expected to be injury free.

First, a definition of injury...tweaking of oneself to the degree of not being fully mobile and functional.  Yeah, this means if you break a fingernail you are technically injured.  Minor injuries are like bruises, or cramping.  Something that heals up with a day.  Tougher injuries are strains, pulls, concussions were you may need to rest for a day.  Major injuries are like having a leg ripped off.  Kinda puts you at a disadvantage in your next "Butt Kicking" contest.

Due to my workouts being long and stressful it is real easy to earn an injury.  When you do three hundred pushups, whether all at once or spaced out, it only takes one wrong pushup to strain a wrist, or forearm or upper arm.

I know, yeah but as a teacher you should have mastered the exercise.  Well, you lose focus on just one rep and you lose structure...BOOM an injury.  You get tired and strain the wrong muscle group to compensate and BOOM an injury.  You lose vigilance for a second and this is when injuries occur.

We have all been there.  Driving and your attention is distracted to the right as the fellow in front of you jams on their brakes.  Someone offers to shake your hand and sneezes into theirs a split second before you grab.    Now you are sick.  This is why I like ear punching.  I never caught a cold for socking someone in the ear.

Recently, I was recovering from right upper arm strain and tendon strain of the left elbow, as well as, serious stiffening in the lower calves and Achilles tendon.  I was not moving at 100% and but still scrappy.  During a demo, I performed the Hua Fist.  It is one of our longer and more robust forms.  At part I just finished covering 21 feet in 3 bounds and then reversed my momentum to leap backwards.  As I landed on my left leg, I felt my calf muscle twang like the big "E" string on a guitar.  There was a dramatic pause that everyone thought was me forgetting the form.  I was waiting to for the damage to register.  Nothing, so I continued.

When I landed, I had very little strength in that leg and if I straightened the leg...TOTAL AGONY!!!!  I had severely pulled my left calf muscle.  It was two days before I could begin to walk normally.  Folk thought nothing of it since I went on to teach another class and attend a three hour seminar after that.  I had been reduced to 20% effectiveness.

Martial arts has taught be to still be able to move when injured.  Keep going.  My long grueling workouts set me up so when I am at 20%, I am still more the 400% of the physical level of common folk.

Injuries are not to be ignored.  They are great lessons in being eternally vigilant so they never happen again.  Perfect lessons for continuing to move and adjusting for your weakness.  And as my wife says, valuable lesson in learning to rest and heal.

Yes dear!

Injuries are inevitable, just like taxes.  Do you best when you are 100% to be ready for when you are not at your best.

Good Training,
DarkArashi


1 comment:

Sherrie said...

You are an animal! Your wife is right: even warriors must give the body time to rest and heal