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Sooooooo.... Do you sell crystals? :32 (20):
No, I don’t sell anything other than the occasional ice pack.
Sooooooo.... Do you sell crystals? :32 (20):
No, I don’t sell anything other than the occasional ice pack.
My issues with chiropractors are that they are hit and miss. I have been to 4 in total and 2 were awesome and the other 2 were garbage.
One of the guys tried to "adjust" me and didn't get a single vertebrae to crack. Said I was a big fella and it may take a few sessions to loosen me up to be adjusted. OK twig, lift some weights if you can't crack the back of a guy my size. On my way out, he tried to sell me a shelf full of "supplements" to help loosen me up. Fuk that guy!
On the flip side, I went to a guy for about 3 months that had me walking straight from my lower back issues, drastically improved my range of motion in my shoulders and had me literally pain free in the gym for months afterwards. I'll add that this guy had a physical therapist in his office as well and the combination of the 2 were life changing for me. He was also a former college athlete so he understood and had experienced but of my pain.
Like I said above, you have to find the right one which can be tough.
I had some very basic training from a dr/chiro who referred to those knots as trigger points. Taught me how to do at home pressure point therapy with an omni roller ball. Can find it on Amazon easy. Cut a piece of Velcro and stick it to the wall then lean back on it for sixty seconds. And repeat. There might be videos on you tube. There can be a bunch together that’s when that start to make funny shapes like bananas. If you have someone to help they can use their thumb. You have to place the hand of the side with trigger across your chest on opposite shoulder. That rolls the blade out of the way to expose the triggers better.
Bad part is when you get good at it. Your whole family will have you working on them. I’ve helped everything from head aches to stiff necks. I hope your problem is just that and not something more serious. Best of luck. When you move around you will know your on it. Just hang in their and use less pressure if it’s too bad.
Saw a grown man throw up, and another black out. Trigger points ain’t no joke. Need constant maintenance for active people. In my humble opinion :32 (17):
My friends chiro was selling her on her 3 chihuahuas needing adjustments and to bring them in. Wtf
A good chiro will definitely give you some relief. Thing is, a lot of alignment issues come from muscular imbalances. So you’ll get adjusted, feel great for a day or maybe even a week, then your muscles will pull you back out of alignment. Don’t blame the chiro in that case, your banged up and need a lot of attention to detail with the imbalances!
I second this. If you have muscular issues (chronic inflammation, knots etc) that are pulling your skeletal system out of whack, having someone realign you is only going to be a temporary fix. Physical therapy and also good deep tissue massage to relieve the knots may allow things to fall back into place on their own, if not, once things have loosened up a bit, THEN get adjusted.
It's the same as working out; with consistent work we overcome our bodies desire to stay the same and we grow muscle. In this case you probably hold stress in your shoulders (me too) and now, your body is used to that and considers it normal.
It's a process to untrain and retrain it back to where it should be.
I've had good and bad experiences with chiros, but you certainly can't expect them to just crack your back and magically fix a problem that didn't arise overnight.
With a well rounded approach, you can be better a lot faster than you think. Massage, PT and then maybe an adjustment. Most importantly is to learn why those knots developed and and how to keep them from recurring.
Shoulders rounding is caused by tightness in the pectoral muscles, and weakness in the trapezius and rhomboid muscles.I've noticed my shoulders are rounded forwards some probably from bad posture over a period of time. Im sure that doesnt help either.Its just hard to decide who to dish out money too first. Im thinking a doctor first then a PT or massage based off what they say
Shoulders rounding is caused by tightness in the pectoral muscles, and weakness in the trapezius and rhomboid muscles.
When you start using heavy weights in your workouts, you're unable to exercise your rhomboids properly. This means you have to target them individually, to prevent an imbalance.
I would suggest doing bat wing rows https://www.t-nation.com/training/reawaken-your-rhomboids and pectoral stretches