Have you looked at your forearms, or shoulders actually.
Smash them.
Was this in response to my golfer's elbow question?
I do a bit of shoulder work already (inc press, OHP, lat raises, rear lat work). Not sure what else I need for them? Forearms less so since I've been using a grip strap on my sore arm (pulling movements hurt a bit without it). I do have a couple of grip squeezer things, but not been using them for fear of making things worse. Was that it that kind of thing you were thinking of? Or more dumbbell wrist curls?
If you get to the point where you're doing pull-ups again, one thing I've found with them that really helps* is using rings or grips that can rotate, so you can move from somewhat pronated to somewhat supinated through the ROM rather than having the hand - and to a minor extent the arm position - fixed which lets things move naturally. Not qualified to diagnose or recommend anything to fix it though!
Also, this is anecdotal may be helpful going forward... I feel like practicing yoga has made me more aware of joint alignment (because certain poses can be hell on ligaments and tendons if you don't have the flexibility and compensate for that by twisting and forcing things into certain positions) and so I try to think about that in both executing movements and actual exercise selection in the gym... think of knee valgus when squatting, where a joint that is just supposed to hinge is being loaded whilst out of alignment, and as a result I've had less niggles.
Forearm/wrist stretches are nice and although it's probably placebo I've enjoyed voodoo flossing my elbows in the past when I've have the odd complaint.
I don't do fully supinated chins because my lats are tight. This makes maintaining shoulder external rotation hard (because tight lats want to pull the shoulders back into internal rotation), which means at the bottom of the movement tend to compensate for this tightness, but because the hands are fixed this puts pressure on my elbows and wrists. I can avoid this by cutting the ROM but then it's not really a full chin, so now I tend to stick to either rings or a more neutral grip.
By smash, I mean mobilise. Lacrosse ball, soft tissue work.
I will look up voodoo flossing! Cheers. My wife keeps trying to get me to do yoga with her, so maybe I'll have to give that a go too (though a number of the stretches I use are already very similar to yoga stretches tbh).
Ah, I see! Yes, I have a lacrosse ball and I do use that to dig into my forearms and front delts. Maybe I need to up the frequency I use it (only once every three or four days at the moment, so could try it daily).
Cheers.
I will look up voodoo flossing! Cheers. My wife keeps trying to get me to do yoga with her, so maybe I'll have to give that a go too (though a number of the stretches I use are already very similar to yoga stretches tbh).
Speaking of pain...
Anyone had experience of recovery from golfer's elbow?
I have it quite bad in my left arm and less bad in my right. I've dropped pull-ups from my routine, which are the main thing I think aggravated it this time around (it's a recurring issue for me - quiet for years and then it can flare up again). I'm also using forearm/elbow straps on both arms and a grip strap on my left for pulls and I'm now happy that I'm lifting without pain (and thus I'm assuming I'm not making it worse with my exercise).
Thing is - it just doesn't want to go away this time! I'm doing Tyler twists with a Theraband bar, along with massage, stretching, icing. About 80% of the time it feels fine, but then I'll wake up one morning, push myself up out of bed and *bam* there's that soreness and pain again, and it then hangs around most of that day.
I really want to get to the point I feel it's improved enough to put pull-ups back into my routine (one of my favourite exercises), but it's not happening. About six weeks since it flared up badly this time around, and whilst it's better than it was in the first three weeks or so, improvemnet has definitely stalled.
Any advice (hopefully not cortisone injections) would be really appreciated.
So, randomly got on to pistol squatting due to my daughters ice skating hobby. Thought I would it a go, and surprised myself, I can hit pistol squat on my right leg, as soon as I attempt on my left leg, as soon as my knee breaks in to the movement I get pain.
The pain gets more intense the further in to the movement I get. Oddly enough I do not get this pain during normal squats, now I am concerned this might be due to my right leg doing a lot more work to compensate without me realising.
Any thoughts on what the issue might be with my left knee, could it just be weakness in my left leg that then just forces more pressure on to the knee joint itself or something more?
I found tennis elbow cured by heavy deadlifting... Kind of weird, but nice to know my lifting is medicinal.
Ultimately, you need to see a sports physio (assuming you haven't already): chinups might be one of those exercises that you currently don't have the mobility for, so you could fix that but the likelihood of getting it right without a "spotter" is moderate to low.
It could be that all your pulling work needs to be done with hooks for a while...
Do regular bro curlz hurt and if so where?
I suspect this has something to do with weighing twice as much as the average bouldering hipster.Indoor bouldering = do I even lift?
Also = can I even lift the next day? Finger doms and back in bits. Going to be a less than ideal session tomorrow...
I suspect this has something to do with weighing twice as much as the average bouldering hipster.
I suspect this has something to do with weighing twice as much as the average bouldering hipster.