Winter 2018| Friday Roundup | Week 3 | How To Move Forward Safely - Pain Care Yoga Principles In Action

Published: Fri, 01/26/18

Hey



In this week's class we talked about moving forward safely. Or, more precisely, applying Pain Care Yoga principles to your practice to ensure that you are moving forward safely.


In order for us to fully employ Pain Care Yoga principles, we need to understand some of the pain science behind them.


Here is the gist of it - I tried to condense it as much as possible, but as you have probably surmised by now, being concise is not my greatest gift.



PAIN as an alarm system:


Your probably are already aware that pain is one of the body's protective mechanisms - pain's job is to alarm you whenever there's damage to the body or when something potentially dangerous is happening.


The purpose of pain is to make you change your behavior: stop walking on that sprained ankle, nurse that sore shoulder, or stay in bed (usually with a cold - yuck, I know) - when you are run down and exhausted. Read this article about the surprising usefulness of pain!


The important thing to remember is this: pain isn't tasked with telling you accurately how bad the tissues are damaged. Pain's job is to stop the behavior that can potentially cause harm.


When pain persists, the entire nervous system changes in order to protect the organism, and these changes compound overtime. So, if your pain has persisted for longer than tissues take to heal, then increases in pain are far less likely to relate to changes in the state of your tissues and are far more likely to be to changes in the nervous system.


Recurrent pains are also often over-protective. If you have had a recurring pain for many years, each recurrence does not mean you have re-injured that muscle, joint, ligament or nerve. What it means is that something in your environment or behavior - such as a movement that caused the initial injury for example - was enough to activate the protective response.


So now you will be able to understand that, (acute trauma aside) "when I am in pain, it doesn't necessarily mean I am damaging myself."


Unfortunately, living with persistent or recurrent pain means fear of movement. We shrink our range of motion, avoid "scary" or "new" movements, and, sometimes, stop moving at all. All of the above signal to the nervous system that movement is, indeed, unsafe, and need to be guarded against.


Our nervous system armors itself with a mindset of mistrust and fear before moving (imagine what kind of muscle tension this brings on board), and soreness and fatigue afterwards.


It also splinters the body by tightening certain postural muscles (remember our previous week's topic: tight muscle = weak muscle?) and creating a grand variety of compensation patterns - something that we are addressing now on the mat.


Is there a way for us to benefit from movement without triggering the overprotective response of the nervous system?


A great way to pace yourself are to ask yourself these two questions as you move through your practice:


Does this feel safe?

Will I have to pay for this tomorrow?



 
See you on the mat
Julia + SATORI YOGA TEAM