Tendinitis
Re: Tendinitis
I bought a BlueTooth headset so I don't have to deal with bending my elbows for a long time to talk on the phone.
Re: Tendinitis
would it be consistent to conclude that the effectiveness of the flexbar and sleeping with one's arms straight address the same cause? i.e. imbalance?
i'm not trying to make a point, i just wonder if kind of in an evolutionary way our bodies know to diversify?
i'm not trying to make a point, i just wonder if kind of in an evolutionary way our bodies know to diversify?
training is for people who care, i have a job.
Re: Tendinitis
Cleveland, if it feels like it is in the center of the elbow it could be biceps tendonitis. I deal with that quite a bit. For me it usually comes from doing a lot of chin-ups (fingers facing you), pushups and curls. Do you also feel some pain / inflamation in the front of the shoulder (the other attachment point)?
Re: Tendinitis
I don't have any pain in my shoulder but that sounds like it could be the problem. I have been doing a lot of pushups and pull ups lately and my project at the gym has a curling type motion off of a sloper/pinch hold. What do you do when your is acting up? Ice and Ibuprofen?bcombs wrote:Cleveland, if it feels like it is in the center of the elbow it could be biceps tendonitis. I deal with that quite a bit. For me it usually comes from doing a lot of chin-ups (fingers facing you), pushups and curls. Do you also feel some pain / inflamation in the front of the shoulder (the other attachment point)?
"Do it"
Re: Tendinitis
in the long run, try to strengthen your opposing muscles with pushups and dips, if it doesn't hurt to do them
Re: Tendinitis
I try not to do ibuprofen, usually I just lay off those excercises, which is always hard to do. I tend to do more chin-ups (as opposed to pull-ups) because I'm better at them, but that is what causes it for me.
Re: Tendinitis
Push ups actually hurt pretty badly, I might try some dips, which do you prefer grizzly or skoal? 8)dustonian wrote:in the long run, try to strengthen your opposing muscles with pushups and dips, if it doesn't hurt to do them
"Do it"
Re: Tendinitis
Does it go away if you rest for a little while or is it one of those things that heals while you aren't doing the exercises and then comes back when you start doing them again?bcombs wrote:I try not to do ibuprofen, usually I just lay off those excercises, which is always hard to do. I tend to do more chin-ups (as opposed to pull-ups) because I'm better at them, but that is what causes it for me.
"Do it"
Re: Tendinitis
The last time that it got bad I gave it 2 weeks off and it was good as long as I lightened up on the pushups / pullups. IIRC, I was doing p90x at the time and the routine included a ton of pushups and pullups. So it could be a side effect of finishing the 90 days which kept it away that time. Maybe just avoiding pushups / pullups on back to back days would be enough? Or lower your # rep / # sets or something. I don't recall it affecting climbing in any way other than the annoyance of the pain.Cleveland wrote:Does it go away if you rest for a little while or is it one of those things that heals while you aren't doing the exercises and then comes back when you start doing them again?bcombs wrote:I try not to do ibuprofen, usually I just lay off those excercises, which is always hard to do. I tend to do more chin-ups (as opposed to pull-ups) because I'm better at them, but that is what causes it for me.
I guess it would depend on your goals. If you are trying to work opposing muscles with an injury prevention approach you could likely do a lot less than you are and have it still be worthwhile. Like Dustin said, a few pushups and dips 2 times a week maybe? What was the goal?