I have a client
who is incredibly athletic. She's 49 years old
easily maintains around 18% body fat and is in
amazing shape. To give you guys an idea she can
do clapping pushups for sets of 10+ reps, quick
24" box jumps with ease, has around a 14
second hexagon test, and has great posture and
symmetry in single leg, and split stance. But
she cannot squat deep. Once she break parrallel
she falls backwards. Her knees are aligned, her
heels are flat, but her torso just falls backwards.
Now, if I put her heels onto 1" pieces of
wood she squats perfect, of course if it's on
the toes...she falls. I've put her through what
RNT I know with the core board etc, but I'm missing
something...
Now here's the most amazing part to me. She complains
to be that her golf swing is horrible, and that
she cannot serve or hit well in tennis I have
been confused as to why for months because I see
such amazing things in the gym. Her half and tall
kneeling chops, lifts, etc are symmetrical....I
do spit stance curl to press, and alternating
chest presses with her...they're all right on!
(these moves took her time to learn but once she
did they're awesome...) So anyways I find myself
asking; WHY can't she swing a club or hit a tennis
ball!? After diving into her life yesterday I
found out that as an infant she never learned
to crawl. She went straight to walking. When I
looked closely yesterday at her gait her arms
do NOT SWING opposite arm and leg! They're all
distorted...for example left arm moves with left
leg. If she really concentrates she can do it
right but then she sometimes confuses her breathing
pattern....COULD THIS BE IT? What is happening
with her?! I feel that there HAS be a correlation.
ANSWER:
As for the first part of your answer, the first
thing you need to do is assess your client. If
you are not assessing (length tension, dynamic
movement patterns, neurological testing, SIJ,
breathing, shoulder, spine, atlas, TMJ, pelvic,
etc), you are guessing. Typically when trainers
or practitioners refer clients to me because they
are perplexed, the missing link is that they did
very little to no assessments. If this is out
of your league, refer out.
If I was to guess, it sounds like a couple of
things. She may have and most likely has a flexion-extension
imbalance. This can be and most likely is inner
unit to outer unit dysfunction (most likely within
her anterior and posterior oblique systems). If
she is going a back squat, are you using too much
weight and that is throwing her backwards? It
does not matter if she can lift it, it matters
if she can do it with quality of movement. Another
thing you might want to try would be to do front
squats. This front loads a person, decreasing
the amount of pressure on the discs and facet
joints, as well as creates firing of the short/long
thoracic extensors and most of the anterior flexors
of the body. It is a great leg exercise, but even
a better back exercise. The goal here in your
training sounds like it needs to be taken out
of the strength phase and regressed to the stabilization
phase. This does not mean just mat exercises;
it just means you have to alter the variables
(sets, tempo, rest, sets, etc) to match her physiological
load. I would do some of the same exercises, but
slow the tempos up a bit, to get more slow twitch
recruitment. This will eliminate outer unit compensations.
The second part of your question is quite intuitive
on your part. Most do not even think on this level
or even know to think on this level. As a CHEK
Level 4, this is part of our assessment process.
We do an infant development assessment to see
where a person stop developing and at what age.
It is quite and in depth assessment, but I will
give you the gist of what is going on.
As we develop in the womb and as a child, we
go through many phases of development. Linda Hartley
in Wisdom of the Body Moving explains these as
the star fish (naval radiation-primitive reflexes
developed in the womb), the tunicate or sea squirt
(mouthing pattern-developed when we breast feed,
pushing and pulling stimulating the cerebral spinal
pump), the lancelet (prespinal patterns), the
inch worm (spinal patterns), the fish (spinal
reach to pull pattern), the frog (homologous patterns=
UE/LE), the salamander (homolateral patterns=
R to L), the cat (homolateral pull to reach),
the ape (brachiation), the human. These are essential
the patterns we go through as humans. We assess
these to see where a client stopped developing,
quick typically gives us answers on why someone
is not “coordinated,” has trouble
with contralateral or homologous movement patterns,
with movements in life or sport.
We assess these all on a mat using different
movement patterns, crawling, pulling, pushing,
reaching, and then standing with more primal movement
patterns (squat, push, pull, bend, lunge, walk
and rotate). AS well are assessing, we are looking
at all the different development patterns and
this will help dictate the exercise program. Whether
we do things sitting, standing, single arm, ipsilateral
or contralateral movements, etc.
When we walk, it is more of a contralateral movement
pattern. Your client is doing it more like an
ipsilateral pattern, which would tell me that
she stopped developing around age 3-5 months and
is stuck in the homologous stage of development.
Here is what I would do:
1. Homologous: Integrate movement patterns into
her program for about 6 weeks that incorporate
synergistic teamwork between pushing and pulling
of the UE’s and LE’s. To simplify,
examples are the forward ball roll, neutral stance
squat to bilateral row, supine lateral ball roll,
bilateral cable push, etc.
2. Homolateral: After 6 weeks, start using more
ipsilateral movement patterns. This would entail
more pushing and pulling, same leg to same arm
movements. To simplify, this would entail patterns
such as SA pull, SA push, etc
3. Contralateral: After that, you can start incorporating
more primal patterns into her program. As well,
you can use other patterns such as the crawl,
horsestance, etc.
The other two important areas that you want to
focus on are breathing patterns and naval radiation
(inner unit work and proper recruitment). I find
that most people’s developmental compensations
and pain patterns are highly correlate to breathing
dysfunctions (inverted, hypo or hyper mobile ribs,
decreased first rib angle, forward head posture,
trigger points in diaphragm, etc) and lack of
inner unit recruitment. This is where all life
and movement begins and ends. If we can’t
breathe properly, we die. So the body will compensate
anything and everything below in order for us
to live!
This is quite a complex thing that takes lots
of time to learn, assess and incorporate into
someone’s program. Do your research and
I am sure you will help her.
Good luck!
Joshua Rubin
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