Copyright © 2019 by Jujimufu ISBN: 978-0-578-56067-0 (print) All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. Table of Contents Disclaimer and Legal. . . . . . . . . . v Will You Overcome Training Injuries? . . . . . . vii Part I: Never Get Injured . . . . . . . . . 1 Say No to Injuring Yourself. . . . . . . . . 3 Know Normal Pain from Not Normal Pain . . . . . 7 Don’t Step on Broken Glass . . . . . . . . 10 Warm Up Like a Grown Up. . . . . . . . 13 Don’t Rush Your Training. . . . . . . . . 16 Limit Your Training Time . . . . . . . . . 19 Don’t Do Too Many Special Exercises. . . . . 23 Don’t Accidentally Cool Off. . . . . . . . 25 Do Dangerous Stuff Before Safe Stuff. . . . . 28 Get a Life to Avoid Injuries. . . . . . . . 31 Part II: Oops! You Got Injured . Injuries are Distractions. . . Show the Pain Who the Boss Is. Should You See a Doctor?. . Train When You’re Injured . . Recovery is a Learned Skill. . Refuse Assistance from Others. Do the Math for the Long Run. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 37 40 42 45 48 50 53 Part III: Conclusion . . . . . . 57 . . . OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES . iii Appendix I: Some Stuff I Learned. . . . . . 63 Appendix II: Interviews . . . . . . . . . 89 Devon Larratt—Professional Arm Wrestler . . . . 93 Magnus Midtbø—Professional Rock Climber. . . 101 John Wayne Parr—Professional Muay Thai Fighter . . 107 Antoine Vaillant—Professional Bodybuilder. . . .113 Martins Licis—Professional Strongman. . . . . 121 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson—Professional Strongman . . 129 Stefi Cohen—Professional Powerlifter. . . . . 133 Connect with Me . iv . . . . . . . . . 153 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES DISCLAIMER AND LEGAL In reading this book you, and any you teach, understand and agree to the following terms: that you/they will not hold the author and his affiliates responsible for any direct, indirect, incidental, consequential, special, exemplary, punitive, or other damages, under any legal theory, arising out of or in any way relating to your use of this Book/eBook and its information, or the content, even if advised of the possibility of such damages. The author shall not be liable for any physical, psychological, emotional, financial, or commercial damages, including, but not limited to, special, incidental, consequential, or other damages. The information contained herein is meant to be used to educate and entertain the reader and is in no way intended to provide individual medical advice. You agree to take full responsibility for your decisions and actions. All diet and supplement advice in this book is not intended as a substitute for the medical advice of qualified medical practitioners. Any products, supplements, and services mentioned in this book are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, alleviate or prevent any diseases. All content in this Book/ eBook are the opinion of the author who does not claim or profess to be a medical professional providing medical advice. Advice from your professional medical advisor should always supersede information presented in this book. You understand and agree that you will indemnify, defend, and hold Jon Call (Jujimufu), its creator, and his affiliates, harmless from any liability, loss, claim, and expense, including reasonable attorney’s fees, arising from your use of his Book/eBook OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES v products, or your violation of these terms and conditions. Jon Call assumes no responsibility for the exercises, practices, or behavior of any kind, or implications of them, described herein. vi OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES WILL YOU OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES? Hi! I’m Jujimufu. I’ve been making crazy, funny training videos for 20 years. Even before YouTube existed, I was making videos and posting them online on various websites. Since exploding on the internet, I quit my day job and now do fitness entertainment full-time on social media. Training has, for me, become my job. Now I have to be more careful than ever because if I get injured, it’s bad for business. Fitness is my business and livelihood. My family, friends, and fans depend on me staying healthy to build and share value. My cats rely on me making money to feed them and pay for vet bills. It would be selfish of me to get hurt doing something without some careful consideration. Injury = Hungry cats. What am I doing to stay injury free now that it’s more important than ever? I want to answer that question thoroughly, so I wrote this book! Look, we don’t have a choice whether or not an accident outside the realm of training afflicts us. (Getting hit by a boat, stepping on a poisonous frog, slipping down an escalator). But we can still try being careful when we can. Especially in the realms of training: we can considerably reduce the chances OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES vii of hurting ourselves while continuing to train by adopting a workable set of beliefs and behaviors that protect us. Part I of this book will take you through the most important concepts of injury prevention. Regardless, injuries and accidents will happen. No matter how hard you try, if you’re trying hard when you train, an injury will occur. Part II of this book will help boost your recovery confidence; this will get you moving in the right direction towards a speedy recovery. We’ll conclude with an important message. In the appendixes, you’ll find more cool stuff that’ll educate and inspire you. Such as interviews with top performing athletes as well as a bunch of details I’ve noticed while training that can keep you safe. With all of this information in your hands, will you overcome training injuries? viii OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES PART I NEVER GET INJURED Read these dozen or so headlines to help you prioritize an injury free training life! SAY NO TO INJURING YOURSELF Most training injuries happen because you don’t say no to social pressure. Have you heard the whole “not listening to your body” thing? “Not listening to your body” will get you in trouble, or hurt they say. However, “not listening to your body,” just means you were listening to something else and said “yes” to social pressure when you should’ve said no. Why would you say yes to an exercise or repetition when your gut is telling you something is wrong? We’re not talking about fatigue, discomfort, or even fear; we’re talking about that feeling you get before you do something you don’t think you should. Why do we ignore this and say yes? Because we want to be accepted. Because we think we’ll let others down if we don’t do it. Don’t disappoint OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 3 grandchildren or gym bros I guess. Or your followers, or the coach, or the couch the coach is sitting on. We love that couch. Almost every training injury I’ve ever had came from not saying “no” to some real or make-believe social pressure. That social pressure comes when we’re alone too. You have ridiculous expectations of yourself, and you think others are watching and will see you wuss out, even when they aren’t there! Here are some things we might say to ourselves: “I can’t be weak! I have to finish my workout routine as programmed, or I won’t reach my goals!” “People are watching!” “I haven’t posted in a while. I have to make this count!” “I can still do this! I have to prove to myself I’m as strong as I used to be!” “I read about this Navy SEAL guy who was tough, and if I stop, I’ll feel bad about myself.” Our brains are crazy. Our brains make up all these fake stories about other people judging us. We push to transcend ourselves and experience some sort of oblivion in a moment of effort. We ignore that feeling that something is wrong and try to go beyond where we aren’t ready to go yet or try to go to a place we don’t belong at all. WE DO THIS TO OURSELVES THOUGH! WE SHOW OFF! Several years ago, I sprained my ankle for a second time. I was at my first Fitness Expo as a guest, and I was “Jujimufu, the Anabolic Acrobat!!!” … Nobody really knew who I was at the 4 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES time as I only had like 70k followers on Instagram, but I felt special cause the expo paid for me to go and perform. Before I began working on the first day, I began going to booths for fun. I went to a jump rope booth and started jump roping to impress people. Then I did a backflip cold and sprained my ankle. It was a grade I sprain. I was trying to show off. I hobbled away and the rest of the expo I had to work around that messed up ankle. Nobody cared that I did a backflip. You’d be surprised how much people don’t care in this regard! Imagine you are the only human left on earth. What would be the chances of you getting injured training? Probably very low. Why? No rational explanation is necessary, the emotion you get from fantasizing this is enough: you can feel yourself in that situation and know the reality of hurting yourself training wouldn’t be a likely thing because nobody is there to judge you. You won’t do something stupid if nobody exists but you. You want to learn how to say no? Learn to use your imagination! If you can imagine your life depending on your training health and progress, then you can imagine the threat an injury would incur to both. “What’s the worst that can happen?” You could blow out a knee and be sick in the head and make no more progress if you don’t be sensible, patient, or grateful. “What’s the worst that can happen if I don’t do it now?” “I wait another month to better prepare for this lift or skill, so I have no chance of blowing a knee.” Pit your imagination against your stupidity in situations where you are pressured from yourself and others to do something you feel isn’t going to end well. Acknowledge that letting some OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 5 people down now is better than being a whiny bitch the rest of your life cause you had that “injury” way back when. You don’t want to become that person. Also, hurting yourself in front of others is a buzz kill. Hurting yourself by yourself is also a buzz kill. Just say no to injuring yourself. Say no to everyone and everything. 6 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES KNOW NORMAL PAIN FROM NOT NORMAL PAIN Lung breaking fatigue, massive muscle burn, towering mental barriers: yeah that stuff isn’t dangerous. Haha. Just very uncomfortable! Knowing whether the pain from training is normal or not isn’t something you need to learn, you already know if something is normal or not. You don’t need a decision making flow chart to determine whether or not to proceed with a workout. Even as kids, when running and jumping and doing physical things as fast, hard, and as long as we could, we knew whether fatigue and pain from exertion were normal or not. If something feels wrong, stop. Don’t be a numb-skull. Ask OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 7 anyone who has dislocated a shoulder whether they couldn’t tell the difference between normal training pain vs. that dislocation. It’s just something you know! When you’re on the verge of actually injuring yourself and get a warning, the pain will feel very wrong. If you don’t listen to it: BOOM! However, not all injuries announce themselves before they happen. I want to share two experiences I have that relate to this. The first time I did an 800 lb yoke walk for 30 feet, was also the first time I did a YOKE walk over 600 lbs. I had trained YOKE just a few times before this, so I was still finding my limits. I didn’t know I had it in me. About 30 feet into the walk, my right shoulder popped. I dropped the YOKE, and my shoulder had a lingering range of motion restriction for almost a year after that happened. The third arm wrestling competition I entered, I tried to defend a top roll near pin against a guy nicknamed “Top Roll King.” I wasn’t experienced enough in arm wrestling when this happened to know what was a losing battle and what wasn’t. That was a losing battle, but my ego got in the way, and I wanted to make a comeback in the match to show how macho and strong I was. So I held out for a moment before he pinned me, and my elbow popped several times. I strained my tricep tendons very badly. Knowing normal pain from not normal pain is easy, but it’s not enough. You also have to know normal exertions from not normal exertions. If something feels wrong, is unfamiliar, or “painful in a bad way,” then stop! If things are risky, take a moment to strategize your safety. Are people watching? Good, 8 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES stop. Don’t worry about those people. You have to learn to stop when others are watching and expecting something out of you. They suck, remember that. Think of it as a social confidence PR (Personal Record) when you don’t injure yourself in front of others. Nobody wants to see you get hurt. That was something that took some time for me to learn, but one of the things I’m proudest that I’ve learned. Again, it means saying “NO” and that needs to be said a lot. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 9 DON’T STEP ON BROKEN GLASS The word “spotter” is used both in gymnastics and weight lifting. A spotter is someone to protect you against hurting yourself. In gymnastics, a spotter is someone to help you complete the rotation of a flip if you bail. Wasting your time learning solo with mattresses, sandpits, pools, platforms, and other DIY safety emulation methods is a bad idea because you can set bad habits and still hurt yourself anyway (because they don’t help you progress in getting over the fear component). In weight lifting, a spotter is someone that helps you complete 10 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES a dangerous lift if you cannot finish. You can also use a power rack’s spotting rails, or a set of spotting straps instead of a human to keep the weight from crushing you in a lift like the bench press or squat. Use them both. In my opinion, you should always use spotting when you’re approaching a max effort. Aside from spotting, though, there are other ways of improving a training session’s safety. Clearing an area so you don’t trip or fall on to something is an easy thing to overlook. When I’ve practiced the snatch in the past, an Olympic lift, I tend to fly 6 feet backward on some fails. Simply making sure there is nothing behind me could protect me from crashing into something dangerous. One thing I’ve seen many people make the mistake of is misloading plates on either side of a barbell. Make sure the weight is the same on both sides, even if someone loaded them for you, take a quick look. Also collars: it annoys me when people don’t use barbell collars. If you’re one of those idiots who leave collars off on lifts so you can “dump it” on either side if you cannot finish, then you win the award for a selfish tool: that’s what a human spotter or spotting rails are for, you’re putting others in danger if leaving collars off the barbell is your safety strategy. Putting collars on a barbell is like wearing a seat belt in a car, there are NO drawbacks, and it takes 5 seconds. The ROI for that action is tremendous. Think about it, if you get in the car twice every day for a year and it takes you 5 seconds to put on and take off your seat belt, that’s 1 hour out of your entire year for something that could save you from a truly debilitating crash. I feel the same way with barbell collars, nobody needs to lose a toe, and you don’t OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 11 want to be lifting weights that aren’t evened out on both sides. One time, I was practicing my flips on a private field when I stepped on broken glass in the grass. It sliced my foot pretty good. Thankfully no stitches were needed, but from then on I looked for debris like glass before jumping barefoot in fields. It also became a metaphor for me related to checking on things before acting. Hence, the name of this chapter. The act of “looking out for broken glass” so you don’t step on it is at its core, an act of looking out for anything that could go wrong and taking the time to put things in place so that they don’t go wrong. Just check on your surroundings before you do dangerous things, make sure you have space, and the ground isn’t slippery or full of glass. Make sure the equipment is sturdy (have you ever done a box squat onto a box that was missing one of the pins in the height adjustment uprights underneath? Scary stuff). If you have things to protect you from getting hurt, use them. Don’t be lazy or stupid. 12 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES WARM UP LIKE A GROWN UP The longer your warm up, the more time you have to become aware of something being more at risk of injury. Warming up prepares your entire body for higher levels of exertion by several means. The amount of time you need for a warm-up depends on many things such as the following: you’ve built some muscle, you are heavier or taller, you trained yesterday, you’ve developed your skill level higher than before, you’re one year older than you were a year ago! No matter what you do, your warm-up time will increase as your life continues; This may sound ridiculous because it’s true, and true things are OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 13 often ridiculous. Even if you do everything right, it will still take longer for you to warm up as years pass, as you improve, or as you get larger. Get used to it! Short warm-ups are for children and chumps. Don’t be ashamed if you are noticing your warm-up time increasing, and that you are the last one to start doing things with appreciable strength or speed in a group. Take your time, let the idiot kids rush into it and get hurt. The only reason you’d ever do something that you usually warm-up for without warming up is to show off or for survival. Think about this: if you could backflip, would you do one first thing upon rising out of your bed in the morning, in your bedroom, with nobody watching, and without filming it? Why would you do that? You wouldn’t. No proof, no glory. Would you deadlift your max cold if nobody was watching, and nobody would be able to watch you do it? Of course not. You wouldn’t do “your thing” without preparing for it unless you were doing it to show off like a doofus or were late and had to rush things. About ten years ago, I broke my right index finger doing a back handspring. It was early in the morning, and I showed up late to open gym time. Their scheduled time was 10 am to 12 pm, and I was half an hour late. These times were strictly enforced! They would kick you out at 12 pm and close the gym. I had to hurry! Open gym was $20 for that time slot, and it was the only time to practice on the gymnastics flooring I had each week, so I had to make it count. I began quickly warming up so I could make the most of my time. I rushed right into a 14 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES back handspring and broke my finger on the floor. I asked for a refund because I had only been at the gym for a few minutes and they wouldn’t refund me. I was out $20 and a good finger all because I was late and rushed my warm-up. Warming up is not hard or complicated; it’s the easiest thing to learn that has to do with training because doing it right is intuitive and sensical. Here’s how you do it: ask yourself what you’re training today. Deadlifts? Then put a barbell on the ground with lightweight and do that a bunch of times. Rest even if you don’t feel like you need to between warm-up sets because you need to give your body some time to acclimate to the task. Look at your phone or something. Are you feeling stiff? Are you having trouble with some part of the movement? Cherry pick a few exercises that will help. Ex: Upper back feeling stiff? Stretch it by doing a few thoracic extensions on the ground on top of a PVC pipe. Can’t get your butt to contract? Do a few glute ham raises to get those muscles to begin firing. Just do some of it and move on. Feel it out. Already have an injury you’re working around? Then do something to make it feel better and get it ready, even if you’re not going to do anything that would aggravate it during this training session. You don’t need a separate warm-up routine for your workouts; you need to work backward from where you’re going and take your time working up to what you’re going to work on! Please, don’t make this harder than it needs to be, it’s not hard, and it isn’t fancy. Be a grown up and take responsibility for your warm-ups. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 15 DON’T RUSH YOUR TRAINING If you’re strapped for time and thinking about shortening your warmup time, don’t! Instead, keep the warmup and ditch the workout! It takes me 30-40 minutes to get to my maximum level on complex skills (squats, deadlifts, flips, splits!) If I have less than 40 minutes to work, I’m not going to shorten my warmup, I’m going to do an arm workout instead haha! If I planned to do complex, compound skills, I’ll just warm up for those things and not do them at maximum levels! Actually, I’m not going to do anything at all. Ok let me be clear: If you’re serious about strength training or skilled sports, you need to organize your life so that you have the necessary time to warm up for them. 16 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES When I had an 8-5 job, I used to get up at 4:12 am every morning, eat the same quick breakfast of grits, eggs, and coffee and then drive to the gym. I’d get there at 5:00 am precisely, and work out until 7:30 am when I’d shower, eat another meal in my car, and get to work. (My workplace was 5 minutes from the gym.) If you do the math, I had 2 1/2 hours to train. That’s plenty. I only needed 1 1/2 hours to train. Still, I liked the extra time to warm up (and I needed it that early in the morning since I was doing real workouts!) After one year of doing this, I decided to negotiate my work hours. I changed my work hours to 7-5 pm with a 2-hour lunch break. Since the gym was still 5 minutes from work, you can imagine how much better it was training in the afternoon vs. the morning for warmup time! I was naturally more awake and alert at 11 am than 5 am for tons of heavy deadlift sets. So, I didn’t need that extra half hour in the afternoon as I did in the morning. The thing I never did was try to finish my workout on a 1-hour lunch break; it just wasn’t enough time for my skill level as an athlete. Either I was going super early in the morning or taking a big break in the middle of the day; This was me, though, you may not need as long to warm up as I did. Determine how long it takes you to train comfortably without rushing, and TAKE THAT TIME! Don’t rush your training. I need 90 minutes for a good plyometric, explosive training session. I’m not going to try to do it with a time limitation of 1 hour. If you can’t organize your time or life to accommodate the workout you need, then keep the warmup and ditch the OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 17 workout. Much of the magic of adaptation and growth happens when you ramp up to your working sets, not the working sets themselves. Always keep the warmup, even if it means ditching the workout. 18 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES LIMIT YOUR TRAINING TIME One of my very favorite training mindsets is using limitation. It’s easier to romanticize about the extreme number of reps, sets, exercises, and sessions you can have in a week to reach your goal than it is to consider how little you can get away with for the same result. How many reps in that epic 200 rep set of tricep pushdowns were necessary? 196 of them? 180 of them? Less than 100 of them? Begin distinguishing between reps, sets, exercises, and sessions that matter, and those that don’t. It doesn’t take a lifetime of OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 19 training to be able to know when something is useful or not. Many people I train with find it odd how I’ll stop in the middle of a workout. “You’re done already?” … Uhhh. Yeah, it’s not useful anymore. Either my body wasn’t in a receptive state for a training stimulus, or I got the job done quickly. If you can get the job done in 2 sets, don’t do 5. If you can get your result training a movement three times a month, don’t train it ten times a month. If you feel like you’re missing out on something, determine whether it’s just a ridiculous feeling because you think other people are better than you because they’re training more, or if you really are missing something. It is not hard to do this. Just make sure the first real set does something that the warmup sets don’t. That means taking the time to warm up so that when the first real set comes, it’s a real set. To make sure real sets are real, schedule more time, so you don’t feel like you have to rush a warmup. If you want to be on a higher level and safeguard yourself from injury in the process, then ask yourself a series of questions like this: “What if I only get to train two days per week for 1 hour each day. What would I do and how would I do it?” “What if, no matter what, from the time I started my warmup, I could only train for 30 minutes. The moment the time was up, I had to stop completely.” “What if I just skipped the last set of 5x5 squats, and did 4x5. Does that last set matter? Which sets matter?” “What example do I have of not having trained something for a long time, and still, after a long break I could do it? Perhaps 20 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES I was stronger? Why did that happen?” In March of 2012, I sprained my ankle because I was training my acrobatic tricks for over three hours. My calves and ankles began to act funny, but I wanted to keep going. I should’ve heeded that warning because they finally gave up on me, and the cushion of the plyo floor took my ankle into a direction it was never meant to go. I couldn’t practice my skills for six months after that. Had I only stopped half an hour before that happened I would’ve been fine. When I train my gymnastic, acrobatic tricking skills now, I always put a 90-minute time limit on total practice time. That 90 minutes includes the warmup. If it takes me a whole hour to get into the swing of things (and sometimes it does), then I’ll only get 30 minutes to play in the flow state. I learned that things got unnecessarily risky past 90 minutes, and all the extra reps after that time were usually not useful. I began keeping track of time while training, and when 90 minutes hit, I would stop abruptly NO MATTER WHAT. It was a very serious, personal rule I made for myself. The benefits of following this rule have been very significant! I’ve never suffered an injury tricking since then. Let’s assume I have extra energy after the 90 minutes is up, and I’m killing it. Do I keep going? No! Haha! Oops, I took too much pre-workout, it doesn’t matter! 90 minutes is 90 minutes. Now I’ll have a ton of energy to do other things after training. All in all, the extra 30 minutes trudging around or winding down training was never useful and would slow me down the OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 21 rest of the day. It also delays recuperation (you quit sooner, you can feed yourself a post workout meal sooner, and save reps for tomorrow). Oh, and you know, since this is a book about injuries, imagine if you pooled together the countless number of useless training hours you could be saving yourself from, maybe 50-100 hours per year just deleted. That’s 50100 hours not spent doing something that could injure you. That’s like reducing your chances of getting in a car wreck by eliminating 50-100 hours of driving time per year. If you could reduce that risk without missing out on any training gains, wouldn’t you do it? 22 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES DON’T DO TOO MANY SPECIAL EXERCISES The exercises that will serve you best in preventing future injuries are the very exercises that are most likely to injure you. Do you think someone trained in doing double backflips would hurt themselves doing a backflip? No. Do you think someone who can deadlift 1000 lb would hurt themselves deadlifting 500 lbs? Probably not. Do you think someone who can do BOTH those things would hurt themselves lifting boxes or jumping over their neighbor’s fence? No. Because a person who can do a double backflip and a 1000 lb deadlift is invincible. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 23 Special exercises like bird dogs, tibialis raises, scapular retractions, windmills, supermans, neck raises, etc. are generally hated not because they’re ineffective, but because we just hate them. We’d rather do double backflips and 1000 lb deadlifts, but that’s not how things work. To do the ultimate skills, we need to precede them with thousands of repetitions of lesser movements and preliminary skills. The interesting thing is, if you never attempt to do those ultimate skills, you’ll never achieve the highest levels of bulletproofing yourself against injuries. The best exercises for injury prevention? Double backflips and 1000 lb deadlifts!!! AAAAAAAAaaaaaand…. Things like bird dogs, tibialis raises, scapular retractions, windmills, supermans, and neck raises. Yep, there is no way around it. You must do everything. Or do you? You can save yourself from doing too many special exercises if you’re restricting them to only a full spectrum of the things RELATED TO YOUR GOAL. Wanna injury-protect yourself for deadlifting? Then backflips aren’t your go to. However, reverse hyper-extensions might be a good idea. Along with deadlifting a lot of weight! Do you want to protect yourself from tendinitis from grip exercises? Then manual therapy work and extensor training will help you. You gotta eat your vegetables too. You can’t just eat dessert. Chocolate cauliflower is the best food for preventing injuries. Yippie! 24 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES DON’T ACCIDENTALLY COOL OFF Accidentally cooling off is one of the most dangerous things you can do when training, especially if your training involves explosive things like jumping and sprinting. Have you ever had someone interrupt your workout and talk to you about bullshit for 16 minutes? You just got to your peak, haven’t fatigued yourself, and so you’re raring to go! But this person won’t shut up! So your body gets cold, and you get distracted. It’s much easier to take a punch to the gut when you’re braced than when you’re not paying attention. This is OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 25 essentially what happens when you try to jump back into what you were doing after you cool down. You’re throwing high levels of impact towards systems of your body that stopped paying attention. Coming from a background of acrobatic tricking, I’ve seen this “cooling off accidentally” thing destroy many tricksters. Tricksters gather for group events where 30-100 people will crowd one gymnastics floor and throw down. That’s a lot of people for not very much floor. Only one person can throw at a time; otherwise, two people will probably fly right into one another. There is no line; people just jump out and go for it. The more timid, uncertain individuals will wait because they aren’t assertive enough to keep jumping out to do moves. When they finally step out, 20 minutes later, they’ve waited too long. Because so many people are watching, they will throw as hard as they can after cooling off. SMASH. SNAP. POP. Do you want some timing recommendations? If I’m training for strength with weights, I rest between 3-5 minutes. If I’m training with heavy weights, I can rest as much as 8 minutes. I can only do a couple of sets like this per workout that require rest periods that long. An example of an exercise that needs up to 10 minute rest periods for me is knee-wrapped, super heavy squats. That’s very demanding. If I’m doing acrobatic stuff, and I’m in the zone, I’ll keep throwing moves until I’m out of breath, usually 2 minutes worth of doing moves without intentionally breaking. That might be 3-6 moves or combos. Then I’ll rest as much as 5 minutes after this series. For me, anything beyond a 10 minute rest period for super intense efforts is rare or accidental during training circumstances. 26 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Many things will cause you to cool off accidentally. If it happens, you either have to end the workout or warm back up with a few extra warmup sets to see if you can get back into it. Do a substantial drop in difficulty for safety. If you’re doing explosive skills, go back to prerequisite skills and rep a few of those and wait until things peak again. Whatever you do, if you were working at +90% capacity, don’t just jump back into it. Interruptions are frustrating, but injuries are more frustrating. Next time you have someone interrupt you to talk about bullshit have an exit strategy for conversation. And if it’s YOU distracting yourself with something on your phone, then have an exit strategy for yourself. Don’t accidentally cool down. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 27 DO DANGEROUS STUFF BEFORE SAFE STUFF I experienced paralyzing arm tendinitis this year for an obvious reason: I entered an arm wrestling competition with no training! What makes it even crazier is the night before the event, we filmed a super intense bodybuilding arm workout video. I was very sore and fatigued from that workout before the competition. I was not aware how bad the arm tendinitis was until the day after the arm wrestling competition when we went indoor bouldering (technical rock climbing). I’m not good at bouldering, and I 28 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES knew from experience it tended to cause great pain in my arms from finger to shoulder. Moving around my large body with bad technique in a bouldering gym for a video trying to not look “too bad at this” resulted in unbelievable pain. I’ve ruptured muscles that were far less painful. The result from this 3-day recipe was excruciating arm pain flare-ups from simple things like picking up boxes to moving around unloaded barbells and plates in my garage gym. These flare-ups and the inability to train my arms the way I wanted lasted 3 weeks. There are many lessons to learn from my story. The part I want to focus on now is talking about sequencing training stuff properly in a week and a day. Day 1: explosive, dangerous, fast stuff. Day 2: not as explosive, dangerous, or as fast of stuff as Day 1. For years I mixed training acrobatic tricking with heavy weight lifting in the same week. The worst way to do it was to hit the weights hard, get sore, and then try to do flips and stuff on grass outside the next day. Sure, I sequenced my training this way a few thousand times in my life. However, as I got more experienced, I did this less. I realized sequencing my training this way didn’t work well. If I could get away with it, the results didn’t matter anyway, because the results were “meh.” When organizing a week’s worth of training, put the most dangerous, explosive, fast stuff first. Gymnastics flips or high box jumps before heavy deadlifts. Heavy deadlifts before bodybuilding accessory work (unless we’re pre-exhausting, in which case the heavy deadlifts aren’t as heavy anymore). Do OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 29 harder, faster stuff before easier stuff. Do shorter, more intense work before longer bouts of stamina training. Do it by day, and within a day. You put the most dangerous stuff in your line up when you have the most attentive capabilities and energy when you are the freshest; this will optimize your safety. Conclusion: don’t have arm day before arm wrestling day before rock climbing day. The results from training this way aren’t good, and you will hurt yourself. 30 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES GET A LIFE TO AVOID INJURIES Many are going to disagree or misunderstand my message in this section.... Well, let’s do it anyway! The most injury-laden individuals I’ve ever known seemed to share a sort of similar lifestyle: messy apartment, not much money, not many personal connections with others, fragmented relationships, and not much going on except being wholly consumed with the most minute details of their training. So what’s going on here? Is their living experience trash because training is their obsession, and they don’t care about comfort? OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 31 Noble. Cool. Ok. Or is an obsession with training the reason they live this way (and the reason they’re injured?) You can get a success story from this formula if the obsession is something other than selfish training pursuits. For example, easily value-added things like… basically, any pursuit geared towards HELPING people tends to create success stories when they’re obsessions. However, becoming obsessed beyond everything else with something as self-absorbed as getting a pump in the gym or budging 5 lbs on a lift, (things that are difficult to translate into value added for others) can make for an awkward living experience. When training is used to vent frustration, it will become riskier. Those self-absorbed, poor souls hurt themselves all the time because they’re seeking oblivion or escape. Deloads are like pulling teeth for some of them! It looks like a training addiction. Thankfully it’s training and not recreational drugs, but from the outside, it might as well look like they’re a junkie based on their lifestyle. A real training addiction rarely works itself out to a happy ending. Of course, a select few of your favorite athletes lived terrible, obsessive lifestyles and approached training like someone running into traffic, and were lucky as hell to come out of it as awesome people. However, that’s a select and lucky few, very few. The fewest. It’s the exception, not the norm. You’re reading a book; those people don’t read, so you’re not one of them. The vast majority of real training addicts, the 99% are annoying as hell to be around, and they’re injured all the time. They don’t have a life. The closer you get towards real training addiction, the more ridiculous and ineffective things become for those 32 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES individuals and those around them. Oh, and don’t think this is the only way to be an awesome athlete. There are 100x more examples of people who have good lives with balance that are more successful and skilled athletes than these obsessed training junkies. I notice far fewer people hurting themselves when they get older. Why? Isn’t being older a higher risk of injury?! Perhaps. Are they training like wimps? That’s part of it, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t getting results still. You can train like a wimp and still get great results. Look, typically the older folks hurt themselves less because they’ve had more time to get their life together and form an identity instead of throwing everything out the window but the pursuit of 6 pack abs. “When I get six pack abs, crowds of people will part for me.” Don’t laugh, people can think like this. I had idiotic, arrogant thoughts like these sometimes when I was a teen. NOBODY CARES ABOUT YOU! You aren’t a threat, a contender, or lurking in the shadows as some unforeseen force that will come out of the woodwork and make people feel sorry that they weren’t training as hard as you. Dorian Yates left a legacy in bodybuilding that sort of reads this way. He was nicknamed “The Shadow.” Read more closely, and his legacy is only as good as the diligence he approached his practice with. Diligence that was only functional because he was successful at getting his life together. Dorian networked, cooperating with people, and paid for things he needed to be 6x Mr.Olympia. Do you think Arnold Schwarzenegger lived in filth and made $0 and only did bodybuilding stuff? Look up his story, every step of the way Arnold was building the ultimate life, it wasn’t just about training. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 33 Having a life that isn’t just some forsaken training destiny, is an important means of fully actualizing your training potential! If you have some friends, some money, some other things going on that make you feel purpose, that will carry over to training. You have to care about these things too! Care for others, family, friends, cats, and yourself. If you care for yourself, you’ll look at your life as a rich, multi-dimensional story. Do you just want to be someone that lifts X, Y, Z? A name on a spreadsheet for an organization? Or do you want people to know YOU? The A, B, C, D, E, F, and G that round out the X, Y, Z into a fantastic almost fictional existence? You are more than the sum of your lifts and skills; you are more than a training montage and a collection of body part measurements. You are what you care most about, and if you only care about training, then what happens when you screw yourself up doing it? You’ll lose your mind! I’ve seen it happen to many of my friends. Injury will more likely occur if training is the only thing you care about because you’ll train more out of desperation to escape an otherwise crappy living experience. Get a life! Leverage it to make your training the best you can. Recognize it and consider it whenever you’re about to do something risky or stupid while you’re training that could injure you. Regardless of how good your sensibilities are, you’re gonna screw yourself up training at some point. 34 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES PART II OOPS! YOU GOT INJURED Even if you do everything right, you will still get injured! OOPS! INJURIES ARE DISTRACTIONS Most of us experience injuries as bad because they come with pain that can hold us back from doing what we want. They’re also annoying and sometimes expensive. But as many wise men have tried to point out, the greatest pleasures often come with the greatest pains. Achieving really great things is always a road filled with lots of pain. But injuries aren’t just painful physically, they’re also painful psychologically! In fact, psychological trauma can set you back as much as any physical trauma. Compare. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 37 One month relationship breakup = is equivalent to = Minor knee aggravation. Your lifetime soulmate dies in a car wreck = is equivalent to = Major spine injury. You cannot convince me that breakups and deaths of loved ones, or even bad relationships that you’ve been in for too long, will not negatively affect your training as much as tearing a ligament or something in the long run. Keep this logic in the forefront of your mind so that you can adequately recognize the millions of smaller distractions outside the realm of acute physical pain for what they are: they are DISTRACTIONS THAT CAN RUIN YOU. Stubbed toe, sprained ankle, popped rib because you wore your lifting belt too tight, food poisoning, kidney stones, digestive disturbance from cheap whey protein, insomnia, a hangnail, a hangover, itchy elbows, constipation from safe toilet syndrome, your boss chews you out Monday morning for something completely out of your control, the list goes on and on! Do you know what they all have in common? They cry out for your attention, they are crying out: THE HELL WITH TRAINING, THE HELL WITH WHAT YOU WANT TO BECOME, PAY ATTENTION TO ME! Injury is everywhere, and it is a word of degree. What all of these degrees have in common is that they distract you. That’s the one common denominator between all injuries 38 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES physical and psychological, they distract you and steal your attention. And that is your first clue for how to deal with an injury: TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR ATTENTION! OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 39 SHOW THE PAIN WHO THE BOSS IS Your thinking after an injury is a muddled haze of bodily chemicals and nonsense. To make sense of it, you have to do something about it. That’s the part most people mess up, they try to make sense of it first before dealing with it when they really need to deal with it first to make sense of it. Remember the last time you spilled rice all over your kitchen floor? What did you do? Did you ask yourself questions like these: 40 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES “What if there is rice in places I cannot see?!” “How long will it take to clean this up?” “Will I get all the grains?” “What should I do about this rice?!” NO! You muttered the word “shit,” and you got the broom and dustpan out and went to work. You didn’t try to figure out how to deal with spilled rice. Now think back to the last time you hurt yourself badly, what did you do? You drove yourself crazy with doubt and concern: “What if it’s worse than it seems?” “How long will it take to recover?” “Will I ever be the same?” “What will I do about it?” Direct your attention away from these thoughts and outward towards actions you can take right now. First, get help if needed (if you can). Are you leaving the gym? Get your stuff together so you can take it with you. Are you thirsty? Probably. Get a drink. Not thirsty? Drink anyway. Water is a good bet. Need to pee? Do it even if you don’t need to right now. Do you want a protein shake or a meal? Get one even if you don’t want one, eating after you train is the right thing to do, even if you injure yourself doing it. Hey, you don’t want to go into shock hungry. Hah! The point here is to show the pain who the boss is. By not being scared by thoughts of “What will happen? What if?” and rather, maintaining control of your attention by directing it towards ordinary and necessary biological needs, and your next steps towards recovering, you’re setting the tone for your comeback. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 41 SHOULD YOU SEE A DOCTOR? Should you see a doctor? Probably if you have little experience with injuries, maybe not if you do. If you do, approach a doctor’s visit like you would a chess match… First and most importantly, a doctor may be able to determine how badly you were damaged or what your problem is. A lot of people have injuries that never heal well because they skipped visiting the doctor or avoided surgery. I’ve known a lot of those people. They never fare as well as the people I’ve known who were not afraid to get under the knife. Don’t be cheap or shy: 42 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES surgery can save your life and maximize your chances for a full recovery. Every surgery I’ve had was a huge success. The only orthopedic surgery I’d recommend getting some second opinions on is spinal surgery (this is, of course, within the scope of training injuries). The spine is particular and peculiar, it’s not as straight forward as knee, elbow, or ankle surgery. On the upside, it’s possible that the injury is not as bad as you thought and the doctor won’t suggest surgery. For example, in the case of an ankle sprain, the doctor may say it’s a grade I sprain instead of the grade II sprain you thought it was. The doctor may tell you to start rehab now instead of later. Good news! Now get to work doing painful, tedious exercises with stretchy rubber band thingies three times a day. They’ve always worked well for me, and they were dreadfully dull. Some doctors are giant assholes. Even good doctors can have bad days. Don’t take stock of any doctor’s pessimism. For example, the doctor I visited in the ER in 2004, after I crushed my neck in my backyard doing a roundoff-flash kick flip, condescendingly told me that I was too old to be doing such childish stunts. He told me that I needed to grow up and have more mature ambitions. One week later, I was out at a park overcoming a newly developed fear of flips. The doctor I visited after I ruptured my hamstring deadlifting in 2008 told me that I would never lift as much as I did before the accident. Six months later, I beat my old personal deadlifting record, and all traces of that injury had vanished and never resurfaced since then. Wow. These doctors sure were winners. Incredible. Had I let these doctors’ attitudes discourage me, I might have set my ambitions elsewhere: like medical school! Oh boy, I want to OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 43 be a doctor when I grow up like these doctors because they inspired me to help people! Never accept that your setback will take as long to heal as a doctor says it will. The average recovery timelines for injuries are based on recovery for average human beings. Those who train seriously are not average human beings, they are supraaverage and have extraordinary recovery capabilities (that is, as long as they continue to train during recovery. More on that in a moment). You should be able to recover in three weeks instead of six! You should be able to resume light activity in two weeks instead of four! You should be back in the gym the very next day after you get hurt. 44 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES TRAIN WHEN YOU’RE INJURED The big thing I’ve done that actually made a difference in turning around each and every injury I’ve had, which I have told hundreds of strangers through e-mail inquiry, which helped me bounce back from injuries rapidly, make comebacks repeatedly, and even changed my perspective on life itself was… When I got injured, I trained! Training like a lunatic around an injury allows your body to enter into the optimal hormonal/neuronal state for rapid recovery. While you were doing a million weighted chin ups OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 45 when your knee was messed up, your whole body entered a frenzied state that was extraordinarily helpful for your knee’s recovery: waste products were exported more rapidly from the knee injury; endogenous recovery chemicals and your workout drink’s nutrients were delivered to your knee, all while you were barking at the chin up bar. If your hamstring ruptures, do some light activity on your poor hammy. Get some blood flowing to that area; stimulate it but don’t aggravate it. The blood flow is a good thing. Okay, great. Now annihilate your upper body! Remember this adage: train around the injury, not through it. Don’t add insult to your injury because of impatience. You can be aggressive while being patient. Do what you can, and do a lot of it. Do what you can, and do it really hard. If you aggravate the injury, you are losing. If you can’t focus on training around your injury because it’s still acute, then take some painkillers. I remember right after I had my finger surgery, I refused to take the narcotic painkillers prescribed to me post-op. I was trying to be hardcore. The pain got horrible, and my index finger became my universe. I couldn’t focus or do anything but rock myself back and forth in a chair in agony. Anybody that has ever broken their index finger can probably relate: it was my most painful injury. If rocking back and forth in a chair wasn’t “hardcore” enough, I actually went for a walk barefoot on hot pavement when it was 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 Celsius) outside. My feet were on fire. I did this on purpose, to distract myself from the pain in my 46 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES finger. Wow, what a bright young lad I was. When I got back to the house, I said, “screw this” and took the painkillers. After they kicked in, I could actually think and pay attention to things. Wow. Then I went to the gym and worked out my legs because I wasn’t engulfed by the pain in my finger. And then I started my comeback. So did I destroy my liver and kidneys forever from using painkillers for three days? No, man, no. I got moving and was able to focus my attention on recovery and building momentum. I set the stage for the next three months of working around the finger. Training around an injury is the most important thing you can do to recover. Whatever can help you do that, use it. Painkillers, stimulants, creativity! Get creative with your exercises! This is the embodiment of recovery. Being so hellbent on making a comeback that you “come back” to the gym the next day to train harder than ever in any way you can figure out: it’s poetry. It’s a metaphor for the ultimate success as a human being. After every major injury or setback I’ve had since I was 18 years old, I started training more after the incident. When it was my thumb, I continued doing flips around it, even in a cast! In 2012 I screwed my ankle up and couldn’t jump off of it well for six months. I got aggressive with the rings for six months. Six months of training aggressively on the rings added 15 lbs (7 kgs) of lean upper body mass to my physique and got me an Iron Cross. Ankle injury = Huge lean body mass gains and an Iron Cross?! Holy crap!!! OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 47 RECOVERY IS A LEARNED SKILL Recovery is a learned skill that you can get better at, just like strength training. If you practice strength consistently and diligently you improve. Much of that time is spent practicing to solve riddles. Just as a computer needs time to “compute,” you need computation time to solve certain riddles. That computation time happens during many hours of training. When you’re intentional with recovery practices and practice consistently and diligently, you improve in part because you begin solving riddles. 48 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES You figure things out the more you practice. Recovery is a practice, it’s not just something that happens automatically when you rest. How do we practice recovery? It’s easy, let’s write it out like a fourth grader: see a doctor, find relief, do rehab exercises, train around the injury, optimal nutrition. That’s about it, I guess. Or is it? Look, some injuries, especially those pesky chronic ones, WILL NOT GET BETTER until you make the right moves. I had patellar tendinosis in my knees for half of my training life. It was the hardest riddle for me to solve. I remember once I took six months off of training in a way that wouldn’t aggravate them to allow them to heal, and it did absolutely nothing. I jumped right back into the pain. It took me almost my whole life to understand why I had this problem. I will talk about my knee problems in Appendix I in this book, but what you need to know for now is that resting and avoiding aggravating the problem may not work. Some injuries are resolved in part due to things that seem really far fetched. Some injuries are avoided by not doing specific exercises that may be bad for YOU. Not everybody should back squat, deadlift, or bench press the same. Maybe one of those exercises isn’t right at all for you? Perhaps just not right now? Things are complicated and change all the time, but you can become skilled enough to make swift and great comebacks. Think of the best musicians you can, think of the number of levels they can climb and how good they can get. Start thinking of recovering and injury management like that. It’s a skill with a high ceiling. It’s something you can get better at. Much better at! So do it! OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 49 REFUSE ASSISTANCE FROM OTHERS Most of us take longer to recover from an injury than we should because we enjoy sympathy from others. A lot of people hesitate to jump back into training after they get hurt because they secretly or unconsciously enjoy the pity. It seems like a nice vacation or a nice excuse to take a break or re-evaluate your life priorities. Well, it seems like it’s that way, but it’s not that way. Trust me, been there, done that dozens of times myself. Doesn’t work well. That sympathy is a line of credit you don’t want to use. You want to recover with as much help as you can provide yourself outside of others. 50 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES If people are in disbelief over how quickly you’ve recovered, and are thinking you’ve lost your mind over the frequency of work you’re putting into coming back from an injury, and are cautioning you to take it easy, and are beginning to suspect your injury wasn’t as severe as it seemed, then you are doing a good job! You are winning! Make it an art form, be the best rehabilitation artist there is! Make peoples’ jaws drop at how quickly you can recover from your setback. Be the person that other people come to when they hurt themselves in the same way. Sure, we all secretly love bragging about how bad our injuries are. We all exaggerate. We are all insane. Bragging about how bad your injury is, and exaggerating its magnitude, sends the wrong signals to your unconscious mind. Doing these hinders your recovery. Don’t brag or exaggerate the severity of your injury. You can take a break and enjoy other people feeling sorry for you for a little while, have your parents cook your meals for a few days. Sit around a lot or something equally as useless. Or you can get on with your damn destiny. Refuse yourself opportunities for assistance within reason, try to continue doing things for yourself. If you’re hobbling around, continue to prepare your own food and do your own laundry, etc. Your parents or housemates may demand that you take it easy and let them serve you: try your hardest to decline as much as possible politely. Accepting too much help delays psychological recovery. Refuse yourself opportunities to be pitied and battle your unconscious mind’s thirst for resentment. Others may say “ok” and let you be self-sufficient, but then at some point, you will OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 51 be in a position where someone can help you but doesn’t. If you pay close attention to your feelings, you’ll notice a mysterious frustration can overcome you that arises because you ceased accepting assistance. Keep that in your mind for a moment… Perhaps people will make requests of you as if you were healthy, and you will feel the itch to play your “injured” card and get out of the obligation, “hey, after all, I’m temporarily handicapped, and they’ll be easy on me.” No! Fight these psychic gremlins! It’s a temporary, but very real insanity to refuse help but secretly feel resentment when they stop offering that help you’ve refused. Getting over this “temporary insanity” is vital for your recovery. It’s crucial for your comeback! Leave others out of your recovery as much as possible. In the long run, you need to cultivate a higher capacity to reconstruct yourself, by yourself. Start now. Your friends and family love you most when you are strong, not when you are weak. 52 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES DO THE MATH FOR THE LONG RUN Let’s do some math. I’ve been training 20 years now. If I ruin my ankle and the prospect of a “full recovery” is around half of a year… Well… What is 1/2 a year of the 20 years I’ve been doing this? It’s less than 3% of my total training lifetime. This is the long run perspective. Interestingly, these past 7 years of my training life have been some of the healthiest years for me. Ages 24-33. Comparing these years to when I was training at ages 19-23; Reflecting back on those early years, I was a physical wreck! I thought I OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 53 was getting old when I was in my early twenties! I was wrong. Nobody has any clue how much time their body has left. You may have a total of 27 years of awesome training or whatever in you. What’re 7 months compared to 27 years? It’s 2%. That’s not much. So if you injure yourself and the full recovery is gonna take half of a year or so, then keep that 2% time in mind. The 98% grows more and more in your favor and enriches your years beyond comprehension. Be long. What if you only have 2 more years of high-performance training left in you? You don’t know what you have left! Stop playing these games. Besides, brooding over how much time you actually have left does you no good even if you accurately knew that number. Be long term! And the 2% and 3% of your training lifetime thing? That doesn’t mean 0% effectiveness as an athlete, that just means you aren’t 100%. If 2-3% of your entire training lifetime means you’re training at 60-70% capacity because of an injury, then that’s better than being dead. This math will keep you sane, keep doing the numbers it only gets better. To most trainers, “training” is unconsciously synonymous with “maximum performance,” anything that isn’t maximum performance does not matter much. This is a foolish mindset, and it’s why there are so many loser has-beens out there: they just gave up when they peaked at their sport because they weren’t creative enough to look at how they were still developing as a well-rounded being. When you are injured, you have to stop comparing yourself to your healthier states, lower your expectations. You took a hit, you’re not as good as you were yesterday. Eat it, lower your expectations, and move around and beyond the injury. 54 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Are there some exercises you can still do without aggravating your injury? Can you learn to train alternative exercises and “be perfect” at them? Can you get a “maximum performance” experience by working on things that do not aggravate the injury? I bet you can find something to train. Invent a new “maximum performance” scenario that accommodates for your setback. Focus on what you can do! Get good at that! Focus on new things during your comeback! PR again on something you’ve never done before! And while you do this, put your rehab into overdrive! Let’s say you’re stubborn though, and high-performance training = a 200 kg clean and jerk. That’s it. That’s all you do. Cool. You are a super awesome person because of this. Neato. You can do a 200 kg clean and jerk. That’s a heavy lift. Wowzers. Incredible. Ok, you hit that in your late twenties. What are you doing in your late thirties if you keep at it? Maybe “only” a 160 kg clean and jerk? Do you know how heavy that lift still is?!?!!! This is a pretty realistic, perhaps conservative, estimation of how strong you can still be if you keep going. Wouldn’t you rather have that, still, than nothing at all because you hurt yourself some time in between these years and gave up on it all completely? “I hurt myself, and things were never the same, so I quit it altogether.” WHAT A RIDICULOUS AND INFERIOR MINDSET! You gotta care about this training thing you do, keep caring about it. If you have to change it, then change it, but you have to care enough to change it even if it feels uncomfortable. The alternative to caring about training and changing it when you must is doing nothing, and that alternative is way worse. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 55 PART III CONCLUSION Without CARE, nothing works. The real reason anyone would give up after they experience a training setback is that they don’t CARE. Is CARE an acronym? Why do I keep capitalizing the word? No, it’s not a damn acronym, it’s giving a shit about something. Do you even give a shit about making a comeback? Why? Why do you CARE about making a comeback? What do you want to make happen? What do you want to prove? Do you want to beat others in competition? Do you want to make a training compilation video? Why did you value what you lost? Why were you doing it anyway? If you put all this work into making a comeback, would you be better than you were OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 59 before? Or just, you know, maybe almost as good as you were before? Is that enough for you? Never as good as you were before, but perhaps almost? Why would you CARE about making a comeback if you weren’t progressing anyway? Maybe you had plateaued for the past 3 years, you weren’t making gains. Maybe you were getting bored. Were you just training out of guilt because you felt like you were supposed to do it? Why would you even CARE about coming back to that old plateau? Maybe enough was enough. You were at your genetic limit, you fulfilled your potential. You got comfortable. Time to move on to new pursuits. Think so? Didn’t someone once define insanity as “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”? Are you being stubborn? Maybe this injury is a wake-up call, waking you up to other possibilities in your life? For those plateaued souls: you keep training and training, and really, you seem to be going nowhere with it; do you really think this training thing is granting you your best life? Why would you rather be making a comeback than finding interest in something else? If you can’t train, or train quite like you used to, or don’t believe it’s worth it anymore, why not get into something else? Why not fulfill other potentials? You know, give yourself a break, have a life as some people say? Why not, at least, take time off and go with the flow and take a developmental detour? Was training even working out for you anyway? Was it on the downtrend perhaps? Hey. Why not just retire? 60 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Maybe you already did enough. You have enough of a training history behind you, you have already accomplished so much. You got enough pictures and videos from the past. Are your golden days behind you? Maybe it’s time to chill and take it easy. Would you CARE if others saw you as a loser has-been? But really, who gives a shit what other people think, you know? They don’t know you or what you’ve been through. They don’t need to know. But you know what, here’s the catch: if you don’t CARE about making a comeback here, why would you CARE about making a comeback in whatever else you plan to do with the rest of your life? When you experience setbacks or plateaus in nontraining worlds like relationships, family, health, finances, careers, other hobbies: will you just go with the flow and take another developmental detour? Over and over again? Detour after detour? Find something else yet again? When does all of this end? It ends when you fucking die. Now burn this into your mind: If you ever want to quit training, make sure you quit when you are making gains again, when you are at your best, beating your best, establishing a new best, or at least making some sort of progress somehow, because that’s the only time you are of a frame of mind to make any worthy decision to quit training or not. If you actually think quitting training may be the best decision, well, then, do it after you make your final comeback. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 61 Now, learn to CARE again, at least this one last time. You must get aggressive because distraction and setback are forever a part of your human destiny. Keep moving, make this come back a reality, make yourself better again, learn what you need to learn and do what you need to do to fix your problem. Then make more comebacks, month after month and year after year! Get better at this, and you will get better at everything. 62 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES APPENDIX I: SOME STUFF I LEARNED WARNING: This part of the book is one big block of text. LOL. Here I will go into the specifics and details I have experience with regarding injuries and safe training. Keep in mind, I am only one person. I can talk to you about ankle injuries, but I cannot talk to you about hip injuries (because I’ve never had a hip injury). This is not a comprehensive analysis of every condition you may experience because I cannot share what I do not know, nor will I share things I feel disqualified to share. (sorry people with hip injuries, nothing here about hips; my hips are super healthy perhaps from my flexibility). Every injury, ache, and pain I’ve ever had was something I could Google to give me helpful information. Barring out the first page of search results which are a bunch of “ice this” and “compress OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 65 this” things from WebMD website clones, if you dig deeper you’ll find value in message forums and videos. Get good at varying your search terms. One hour of googling an injury is not enough, it can take as many as 10 hours of searching (and researching) to accumulate an actionable knowledge foundation. The best information is not always in plain sight. It wasn’t for me. The best information you will find about lower back injuries and their relationship to training will be in a book or in a seminar from someone that wrote that book. Should I make a book or seminar recommendation? Perhaps search for those yourself! Get good at searching for stuff! Now, the lower back. I’ve never injured my lower back. I’ve tweaked it doing some freak things or doing too many things, but tweaks pass within days. A tweak is not an injury. Don’t be fooled though, a tweak can mean 4 days of being couch-ridden. I once tried an acrobatic combo that wrenched my lower back so bad I was couch-ridden for 4 days. On day 5, I went outside and threw down mad tricks again. That has been the crazy thing about back tweaks for me, they’re so severe when they manifest but can disappear instantly after an arbitrary amount of time. I don’t qualify tweaks as real injuries. I’ve never actually injured my lower back. So is my lower back “injury proof” or am I doing something correctly? I think the reason I’ve never injured my lower back is that I have a few key features stacked in my favor. I have insane mobility in the right places that allows me to move in and out of positions with a greater margin of safety. I have almost 20 years of beltless lifting under my belt (nice pun, eh?), which strengthened my 66 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES core in ways belted lifting does not. (I did not use lifting belts until 2018 when I got into Strongman training.) And I have an accidental preference for exercises that are healthy for the lower back. What are exercises that are healthy for the lower back? How about the reverse hyperextension. I’ve never read a negative opinion of the reverse hyperextension exercise, yet I never trained it regularly. Here is an exercise that is like a head of broccoli: few people have negative opinions about broccoli. It’s generally agreed upon that broccoli is a super food we should all eat. The same goes for the reverse hyperextension, we should all eat it, it’s a delicious exercise if prepared correctly. The thing is, I spent half my life doing an exercise that was a unilateral, unloaded version of the reverse hyperextension: the rear leg lift stretch. I just did the math, I’ve probably done more than 50,000 reps of that exercise for each leg in my lifetime. I use rear leg lift stretches for flexibility, but the motion is the same, and the stimulation on the lower back is definitely present and similar to the reverse hyperextension. WOW! I’ve been doing “reverse hypers” pretty much my entire training lifetime. I think there may be something to them! Because I love the results I’ve gotten from its cousin exercise the rear leg lift. I think the results would be better if I do both! I just got up from writing this paragraph and walked into the kitchen. There was a paper towel I left on the ground to soak up the coffee spill I left earlier this morning. By habit, I squatted down with good’ ish squat form to protect my spine, instead of bending over in a way that exposed my spine to tension. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 67 Why? I can remember when I was a teenager, a trainer at my gym told me to stop picking things up by rounding my back. He said big, strong guys usually don’t hurt themselves lifting heavy weights, because they do it well. They hurt themselves mindlessly bending over and rounding their back to pick up a sheet of paper off the floor. That stuck with me, I don’t want to hurt myself picking up spills and sheets of paper. Another thing that has protected my lower back is my exposure to a theory I read on a website about the alternating mobility/ stability of joints from the bottom of the body to the top. The theory states that you want: ANKLE MOBILITY KNEE STABILITY HIP MOBILITY LOWER BACK STABILITY UPPER BACK MOBILITY NECK STABILITY It’s been a beautifully effective theory for me in practice. If your ankles are stuck or trapped, the “mobility” needed in that joint for a movement will ask for fulfillment from a nearby joint. Nothing is below the ankle, so if your ankle can’t express needed mobility in a movement, your knee will answer. You don’t want the knee to answer the call for mobility, you’ll tear a ligament in your knee. You want stable knees, not loose, mobile knees. Let’s go back to the lower back. If your hips or upper back are lacking mobility, and mobility is called upon to be expressed, your lower back will be asked to fulfill that need. You don’t want your lower back to do this, you’ll hurt your 68 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES lower back. This is why you want to train the mobility of the joints that need mobility so that the joints needed for stability can do their job! With my background in training martial arts and stretching, I have very high levels of mobility in the joints that need them. In fact, I’ve boasted that my high level of mobility in my upper back (thoracic spine) has been the primary factor allowing me to do some really stupid feats of strength and flexibility that nobody else has dared to try. The barbell chair splits stunt I do with weight overhead? You think that’s just groin flexibility? It’s also a ton of upper back flexibility. I use the words mobility and flexibility interchangeably because I don’t care, I’m beyond that elitism. I wrote a book on flexibility too, www.legendaryflexibility.com Let’s keep going with this lower back thing. Lifting belts. Wow. If ever there was a topic where the training world’s voices and opinions will confuse you, this is the one. Here’s some stuff I learned: a lifting belt takes time to learn to use. You can’t just toss one on and lift more weight. It took me almost 6 months to really maximize the use of a lifting belt in the deadlift. That time was also spent figuring out which belt worked for which lift. My expensive Inzer lifting belt, I learned, wasn’t the best belt for every lift. I use different lifting belts for different lifts! Some people only throw on lifting belts on their top sets, I personally think this is a poor practice because you lift differently in a belt than you do without one, and you need to warm up your belted technique. If I’m lifting with a lifting belt, I’m putting it on on my first weight jump. So I might warm up with squats with 1 plate on each side of the bar without a belt, then when I add another OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 69 plate on each side, I’m putting on the belt too. I don’t wear a belt to protect my lower back, I wear one to lift more weight and take pressure off my knees when I squat. Oh yeah, that was one of the coolest, luckiest things I discovered: when I started wearing a lifting belt when I squatted heavy weights, my patellar tendinosis began disappearing. Oh, it wasn’t the only thing I changed, I also stopped wearing Olympic lifting shoes and went back to flat soled shoes, widened my stance, and stopped trying to go super ass to grass in depth. With all these changes, how can I possibly attribute the lifting belt to relieving my knee condition? Because I can keep all these other changes, and then if I take the belt on and off alternating between sets with the same weight I’ll notice my knees being aggravated, and then not being aggravated. It’s a direct correlation. A lifting belt does so much more than just protect your back (if it even does?) or help you lift more weight. It changes the lift entirely. So should you lift with a belt or not? I do both, but I don’t switch in and out of belt use on any particular exercise for any single workout. If I’m squatting today, I’m doing it 100% beltless or 100% belted. I plan some deadlift sessions for beltless work, other days, I’m belted the entire time. I spent almost 20 years of my life not lifting with a belt. The reason I resisted the belt initially was because I was convinced it would make my core weaker. It won’t make it weaker, but it might not make it as strong as it could be if you sometimes trained without one. Later, as I grew up, the reason I still didn’t wear a belt was that every time I put one on, it would mess up my lift. I didn’t know you had to practice and lift differently in a belt! Finally, the reason I started wearing a belt was that strongman exercises like heavy yoke walks and heavy farmers 70 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES scared the piss out of me, and I began wearing a belt to add support. There is nothing natural about carrying 800 lbs on your back across a gym for time. NOTHING NATURAL AT ALL! So I tossed on a belt, took some advice on how to correctly breathe and brace while wearing one, and never looked back. Conclusion: I wear a belt sometimes. Belts aren’t the only thing to consider with equipment; we also have to consider footwear, straps, wraps, etc. Sorry, we’re talking about lifting gear here, and it’s becoming a one-sided discussion. Hey, gymnasts/tricksters/free-athletes-whateverthe-yeah: we’ll talk about the pros and cons of plyo floor training in a sec hang in there. Maybe the virtues of barefoot training, perhaps? Seriously though, we gotta talk about weight training more. Because it’s very important. It’s super therapeutic and helps bulletproof your body if done correctly. If done incorrectly, you could hurt yourself. Be sure you’re lifting things with good form that protects your body and helps build muscle and strength. A deadlift is a good lift for almost everyone if done well. Learn to do it well. It will add slabs of useful, beautiful muscle to your backside and carryover to most forms of athletics up to a certain point. My first visit ever to a chiropractor was to accompany my wife Sam for her appointment when she had a neck problem. The Chiro showed an interest in me and asked if I’ve ever had an adjustment. I told him that I hadn’t. He was delighted, “Ok, jump up on this table I’ll give you one for free. Complimentary since it’s your first.” COOL! Now, this particular Chiro was OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 71 an ex-wrestler who was jacked. I’m biased towards jacked chiropractors, massage therapist, bodywork specialists, etc. I feel like they can relate better to what I am. The Chiro had me remove my shirt to work better. After he moved me through some positions, he stopped and said: “wait here.” He then brought in the techs that worked in the clinic, “Look at his back. See that armor he’s built around his spine? This is the healthiest back that’s ever walked into this clinic.” Then he told me that I wouldn’t be seeing him again because I wouldn’t need him. Cool story, bro. But really, my back is healthy and has always been very healthy despite doing really dangerous lifts and stunts. I attribute it in part to deadlifting beltless for half of my life with good form. If you don’t deadlift, you probably should, it’s a bulletproofing exercise. Just don’t hurt yourself doing it. The first half of this book will give you some head sense for knowing your limits and having some ground rules, so you don’t hurt yourself doing an exercise as safe as the deadlift. Seriously, it’s a very safe, static lift. You shouldn’t hurt yourself doing it. I think a lot of lower back problems from doing safe static lifts like the deadlift can come from pre-fatigue. If your butt is really sore, your lower back is in greater danger. Your butt protects your lower back in many movements, so if it’s having difficulties activating, your lower back will be under more tension. If I recollect correctly, just about every time I have tweaked my back, it happened during times I decided to try awkward tricks when my butt was sore and fatigued from lifting a day or two prior. If you’re gonna do anything that involves your lower back, make sure your glutes are on board and aren’t toast from something you did the other day. 72 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Pre-fatigue can result in dangerous compensating movement patterns, but it’s not the only thing that leads to this. A more severe example is an actual acute injury. When you’re walking with a limp, your entire body is moving differently (and less efficiently) to compensate. That compensation puts other things in danger. Even when we’re seemingly healthy, we may have unhealthy movement patterns that lead to slow growing problems. Some of these creepers can be very hard to get rid of when you recognize their presence. Patellar tendinosis was one of those things for me. It was my curse for 15 years of my life. The thing that never went away. Up until a year ago, I thought it was referred trigger points from the rectus femoris and lower leg muscles. When doing therapy on those areas to relieve pressure on the tendon didn’t work, perhaps rest would?! Rest did not work. No amount of rest, even a substantial 6 months worth, corrected this issue for me. The problem was seemingly immune to deep tissue work and rest. Even warmup sets would aggravate the tendon! Exercises to help with blood flow and health did nothing. I found no relief. Except I have and did. How? What did I do to get rid of this pain and begin squatting heavy weights and doing flips again without thinking about the knee pain every rep, every day? A lot of things. My turning point with this condition came when I gave my acrobatic tricks a long break while altogether ditching my old squat form. I used to squat low bar, with a shoulder width stance, beltless, with Olympic lifting shoes, and go beyond parallel to get a good rebound out of the bottom of the lift. I did a similar form with the front squat. Squats always destroyed my knees because of these things. I changed most of those things, and my knees began healing. I widened my OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 73 stance substantially, I started using a belt, I switched to flat soled shoes, and I stopped at parallel. What did all of these things do? The new stance allowed me to recruit more muscles to take the stress off of my knees. Stopping at parallel still helped me train the muscles and movement but didn’t put me in a position that would risk knee aggravation. The belt took a tremendous amount of pressure off my knees by changing my hip position in the lift. The Olympic lifting shoes I used to wear, with a raised heel, was throwing stress right into my knees in a way my levers did not appreciate. With all of these changes, I could squat pain-free again! And I did! I was beginning to get stronger again, and the stronger I got on the squat with my revamped form, the better my knees felt on things not related to the squat! The very thing that used to exasperate my knee condition became the thing to rehabilitate it! I believe that removing the elements that were aggravating my knee while adding elements that could strengthen the muscles around my knee turned the situation around. My Vastus Medialis muscle wasn’t getting enough training stimulus in the things I did until I fixed my squat form. The squat form change not only provided relief but allowed me to target that weak muscle group that was not strong enough to support my knees in other movements like flips, jumps, and lunges. This weakness put loads on my knees that they were never meant to be responsible for. Was my old squat form wrong? No, because I see a lot of strong people squat the way I use to. It wasn’t the best form for my body type or goals. Form is personal. Technique is personal. We want to find what works best for us. I settled, for almost my 74 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES entire life, on a squat form I thought looked impressive with its depth and aesthetic (yes, lifting weights is an aesthetic thing!) but that form was not good for me. I switched to another form that was still correct but completely different. You have to ditch the idea that one technique, one form is right for everybody. Do what works for you. There are challenges in doing what works best for you, though! I was reluctant to switch from my old squat form to my new squat form because I thought my old squat form was more “hardcore” and looked better. Unfortunately, it was destroying my body. I just kept doing it the old way because I thought people would judge me for the form change. I WAS WORRIED ABOUT WHAT OTHER PEOPLE WOULD THINK! It’s also one of the reasons I avoided using a belt for so long: I had always received a lot of praise for being a beltless lifter. But if wearing a lifting belt when I squat is going allow me to train pain-free, then it’s just the way things are going to go. I’ll just have to trade getting compliments for being strong and beltless for compliments for just being plain strong. I think I’m still ok with that. When you make huge changes, though, the benefit may not be immediate. You have to work on them. When I changed my squat form, it was a progression. One thing at a time. I just noticed sometimes my knees felt better and I’d continue doing what was giving them relief. I had suspicions about why I was hurting, and I’d try things. Some things took weeks to work before I knew I was on the right path. There are a lot of things in the realm of injury management that take weeks to work. Deep tissue massage is one of those things. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 75 The benefits of massage work don’t announce themselves immediately. From my experience, it takes weeks for the benefits of consistent and good massage work to become apparent. Consistency, for me, is 30 minutes total per week for six weeks for any one problem. When I go to get bodywork done, on say, my forearms, to relieve bicep tendonitis and elbow pain, the specialist may work 30 minutes on each arm. It feels pretty good for maybe a day, and then the benefit seems to wear off. However, for some reason, after about 4 days, it starts to get better again. I like to think I have the right idea about it, that the benefit of bodywork has a similar timeline to training adaptations. After a workout, your body systems are ramped up, and you feel happier and better. Then you may be sore for the next few days. After your body repairs and recuperates, you come back stronger. Recognizing real progression can take months. With bodywork, you feel happier and better afterward, then you may be sore for the next few days. Your body needs to repair and recuperate after the therapy and will be healthier when it’s done. Like training, though, you need to be consistent with this type of work and recognizing real benefit can take months. Here’s what I recommend for you without breaking the bank: if you have an injury or chronic pain, go see a bodywork specialist. Have him work on you. Ask him questions so you can work on yourself at home. Schedule a follow up in three weeks. Work on yourself during the two weeks in between. After you see him the second time, continue working on yourself with new feedback. This is a good recipe for maximizing this form of recovery. Sure, seeing a specialist every week is good, but it’s expensive, and the best specialist may not be a convenient visit. My specialist at the time of writing this is almost an hour 76 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES drive from where I live, I see him every three weeks, and I ask a lot of questions. I’ve learned a lot from him. Getting over injury costs time and money. Spending time and money sends an important message to your unconscious brain: THIS IS PRIORITY. A lot of people who don’t get better don’t do things that send these messages of priority to their unconscious brain. If you have a reason you need to heal, a deadline, a competition, if you have money on the line, if you have a contract you can’t get out of, if others depend on you, if you have a lot of things that push you to prioritize a comeback, then you will do well. Put those things in place to push you, whatever they could be. Perhaps think of it as a fight. A fighter has all of these things pushing him to recover for the next fight. They signed a contract for a series of fights, which are scheduled at known times. A lot of people have money riding on their success, including the fighter. The fighter, nor the fighter’s family want to see them beat to a pulp. They may be fresh off their last fight and wrecked. What do you think they’re going to do? Let the body heal itself? Of course not, they’re going to do everything they can, and get everyone they know, to assist in recovering for the next thing. THE NEXT THING. That’s why you need to WORK on fixing your injuries. WHAT IS YOUR NEXT THING? A lot of people can’t bring themselves to do this. One big reason a lot of people give up after a bad injury is the prospect they’ll never recover 100% or be as strong as they used to be. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 77 For people sitting with these thoughts. I’ve created a chart to illustrate one of my theories. ­­­In this example, notice nothing is as good as an ammonia inhalant. That’s important. Aside from accepting that, this is how I like to think of “retraining” prospects after a bad injury: If you stop training when you formerly had a high-performance knee, then it will be fragile, and you will, perhaps, suffer from arthritis-like symptoms and stuff from inactivity; However, if you make a comeback, you could be indiscernibly as strong as you were. With many previous injuries, the tissue is never the same, that’s true, but if you train it back up, it could be “good enough” to do what you want, or at least just as good as before. Lesson: don’t stop training! Don’t stop moving! The point that I’m trying to illustrate is that for bad injuries, you may never recover completely, but you can recover not only good enough to perform the way you want but also to some of the highest levels of performance if you demanded 78 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES it. Indeed, you can probably recover to the point that you wouldn’t be able to tell that you were ever injured in the first place (if you continue training it for functionality). If you ever stop training for functionality, your past injuries will haunt you with weakness and/or chronic pain: your default has been lowered. This is why older people who used to train a lot, or had some injuries in the past, who start to slow down, complain about the stupid training things they did in their youth. They had old injuries, their defaults were lowered, and now that they’re slowing down, they’re haunted by arthritis and chronic pain in those old injuries. We’re talking about bad injuries. The worst injury I’ve had was a grade II ankle sprain. How did it happen? I did a cheat 900 double kick to aerial combo, and to help transition to the aerial I pointed my foot forward on the landing of the kick instead of out (out is the correct placement) and my foot exploded on landing that kick. LOL! Can you dig the details? Cool. Ok, but really, my peroneal muscles were exhausted after almost 3 hours of training my acrobatics. That’s too long. Since then, I always arbitrarily cap my acrobatic practice time to 90 minutes, including warmup. This is my personal rule to protect myself. So my ankle gave out because my lower leg muscles were too exhausted to brace for landing. However, I was training on a plyo floor. Here are some details you want to keep in mind if you ever have the mind to go to a gymnastics gym to do anything ever: most of these gyms have a plyo floor. Plyo floor is made up of hard springs with layers of plywood and carpet on top. It’s not a trampoline, but it gives a little bounce, which helps a lot with rebounding movements and impact absorption. I personally believe training on this floor is excellent as long OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 79 as you don’t train too long. That’s the problem though, plyo flooring tempts you to continue training into the highest states of fatigue, which is dangerous. The plyo flooring is soft enough to allow ligaments, toes, fingers, and stuff, to go too far in the wrong direction upon the immediate impact, but then you reach a hard bottom. In other words: plyo floor can be a trap, it lets you in but won’t let you out. So you sprain an ankle, tear an ACL, or break a digit. With all of this said, my ankle has never been the same. The first two years were the worst. My left ankle was chronically more swollen than my right. I continued to use it, and after a few more years, my left ankle returned to the same size as the other one. My left is more fragile, though. It doesn’t have the bandwidth for error it had before the accident. That’s ok, I just don’t make mistakes anymore! My ankle is just fine if I’m on my game. Let’s talk about ankle health. If you do barbell sports, you’ll likely never have to worry about ankle health or conditioning. It’s a non-issue. If you like jumping, or both jumping and bodybuilding, then you must learn things about ankle health. Ankles are very strong but very susceptible to injury. Here’s a bunch of knowledge bombs: jog barefoot on grass sometimes, stretch your toes by gripping them and manually moving them around, walk around while clawing the ground with them, lift heavy barefoot occasionally, grab your ankles and force them into rotations, try those rotations while your ankles are wrapped in Voodoo floss, spell the alphabet with your ankles, do those boring tibialis dorsiflexion exercises, stretch your ankles, stand on your tippy toes (literally, on the tips of your toes) and hold it, jump rope, walk on the tops of 80 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES your toes like ballerinas, watch ballet videos on YouTube, do ankle eversions and aversions, throw a band around the base of a power rack and then around your midfoot and jerk your ankle around, perhaps do some heavy calf raise exercises too? Training the ankles is excruciatingly boring, but if you depend upon them, you gotta find a way to train them in a palatable and effective way. Injuring an ankle sucks. Thankfully, since ankles are at the bottom of your body, it’s pretty easy to find exercises to do while your ankle is injured. You have everything on top of the ankles to play with. When I was dealing with my ankle sprain, I wasn’t able to do my acrobatic skills for months, but I could deadlift heavy weight within a week of the injury! While I’m talking about ankles, I gotta say that one issue with recovering an ankle injury is the difficulty of compression and elevation. I personally like compressing and elevating injuries, and since the ankle is at the bottom, I gotta wrap that sucker and prop it up? Good grief. It’s inconvenient. Still, do it when you can. If you want to take compression recovery modalities to the next level, try pairing voodoo flossing an injured joint with high range of motions movements. Ex: ankle needs rehab. I’ll wrap it in voodoo floss for a high level of compression, grab that sucker, and move it around through a high level of amplitude with my hands for 30-60 seconds. When I unwrap it, my ankle feels better immediately. I’ll repeat this type of thing up to 3 times. Recently I’ve done it with an elbow injury incurred through arm wrestling with decent results. Compression rocks. Compression is therapeutic, recuperative, and it helps you lift more weight. I love using compression gear when I lift. I love knee sleeves, knee wraps, elbow sleeves, etc. I can lift more, and OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 81 I recover better. Compression gear can also be stylish. For me, it’s win-win-win when using compression gear! Compression gear also helps if I have pre-existing pain. Try it. If you have some sort of knee or elbow pain, try knee or elbow sleeves. To get to an expert level, add a little liniment to the joint before putting the sleeves/wraps on, the increase in blood flow and warmth will provide relief, and possibly promote healing. Really, training can be a totally unnatural thing. Barbells, double backflips, plyo floors, etc. are all very unnatural things. The idea that you can enter a world of unnatural stressors and come out unscathed without some unnatural means of protecting yourself is absurd. Nothing is natural. Microwaves, shoes, air conditioning, steel formed into weird shapes to exercise with in weird ways, none of this is “natural.” This is why I advocate for the use of any type of equipment you can use to protect yourself. If you have joint issues, you really should wear sleeves or wraps or something. If you don’t, you should still probably consider the use of these things to keep what you got as long as you can. I’ve seen older people squatting with elbow sleeves on. “Wait, why are you wearing elbow sleeves? Do you even need them for squatting?” and their answer “I only have so much mileage left, even in joints that I’m not using for this exercise, it feels better, what’s the drawback?” Really, what’s the drawback? The body isn’t some infinite wellspring of recovery. Our joints only have so much mileage. Or are you one of those fellows that’s concerned what others will think if you’re wrapped, strapped, and belted to the gills? I’ll take my wraps, straps, and belts if I can get another 10 years of lifting in me using them, and an extra 100 lbs on my lifts… Thank you very much! 82 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES I’m not going to post a video of me squatting with a description: “660 lb PR on squats in knee wraps and with a belt and wrist wraps.” Screw that. I’m going to announce if I default to an unequipped state instead: “500 lb squats beltless, no sleeves, raw AF.” There. If you think I’m wrong, then try using more equipment when you lift and see how you feel. You’ll likely be stronger and be having more fun! If my ankle hurts, I’m wearing an ankle brace to protect myself. If anything hurts, I’m going to protect it. If nothing hurts, I’m still going to protect it! The point is to progress and not hurt yourself. Going through the ins and outs of how you do that is a real art; one you learn for yourself. I hinted at barefoot training a few times here. I’m sorry, I cannot and will not write you a thesis on why it’s the best thing in the universe, because I don’t believe it is. However, I think it’s played a significant role in keeping me injury free. You see, I’ve spent half of my life doing challenging skills (flips, twists, kicks) barefoot. Every practice session for these skills involved me warming up my toes, feet, and ankles with deliberate movements. If you compare my feet with all the other members of my family, they’re remarkably different and more healthy. I have very muscular, proportional, robust feet. I’ll never have to see a podiatrist in my life because I’ve trained barefoot a lot in my life. Why don’t I train barefoot all the time? Because shoes look cool sometimes, and I enjoy wearing them and using them for many things. It’s not all or nothing here! Some barefoot training will help you and benefit you; you don’t have to be a cultish convert to reap the benefits of the “foot-building” aspect of barefoot training! What does this have to do with injury prevention? The feet are at the bottom. Everything stands on top of them. If you have good control of your feet, OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 83 that control will run up the entire chain and allow you to evade danger more readily. Good feet protect you. Good feet are, in part, developed through training barefoot and deliberately training your feet. Shoulders! Wow. I have not said a word about them yet! The thing is I have big, muscular, strong shoulders and have never had a shoulder injury… except for the time that I crashed a wall flip on my neck and shoulder. OUCH! Other than that trauma, my shoulders have been healthy. Why? For one, a strong and developed back protects your shoulders. Bro science? Actually, it’s just I’m too lazy to science you. Just do some heavy rows and build your back muscles for crying out loud. Seated rows, dumbbell rows, bent over rows, do them all. I’ve had a boner for deadlifts since I was 17, and it resulted in my back becoming my most developed muscle group. Aside from that, I didn’t like bench pressing until my late twenties. Bad benching, or too much benching, will likely wreck your shoulders. I’ve done neither. My bench form has been fine, and I do it sometimes. My best bench as of writing this is 420 lbs (190 kgs). The bench press has never been a big priority for me. It has been the biggest let down in terms of building chest muscle (it hasn’t built any chest muscle for me, I’ve needed entirely different exercises to do that), and it hasn’t had any carryover to my athletics. I enjoy benching, though. That’s why I do it. I’ve probably spent less time benching compared to the next guy, but have a higher bench than most people. Why? One reason is that I love overhead barbell pressing, and that has carried over to my bench press. The overhead press was the lift that essentially built my shoulders, yet many people don’t do it 84 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES because they think it’s an unhealthy lift for the shoulder joint. Those people probably don’t do enough rows! They probably don’t practice mobility exercises for the upper body either: swings, stretches, rotations, etc. I stretch my shoulders a lot! I always have. This is the anecdotal advice I can give regarding any pursuit of building shoulders and preventing problems: stretch them a lot, strengthen and build slabs of back muscles, and don’t do too much of any particular pressing movement (vary it up). Hopefully, there is some truth in there. That’s plenty about the mechanisms of sports injuries. What about supplements and dietary choices that may help with recovery from injury? I’ve done enough google searching and trial to tell you that it’s not all that exciting. Just eat an antiinflammatory diet and supplement with anti-inflammatory substances like fish oil, turmeric powder, and greens powders. Don’t expect a miracle: you’re not going to start drinking onion juice or some other nonsense and recover in 3 days. In contrast to this, something I do find exciting is the prospect of exploring the supplements and dietary choices that prevent injury from happening! Don’t you think it would be better to take something or eat something that keeps you from getting injured in the first place? Let’s talk about caffeine. Caffeine improves reaction time, speed, stamina, mood, and focus. Improving these things enhances performance. Is that enhancement risky? You could make the analogy that training while enhanced by caffeine is a similar risk to overclocking a computer’s CPU (increases performance but also increases the risk of crashing via overheating). I believe it’s incorrect. I OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 85 think caffeine can reduce your risk of injury because of the enhancement it provides. How? It’s how you train under the influence of caffeine that shifts the risk ratio in your favor. The best way to train on stimulants like caffeine for safety (and probably progress) is not to give in to the temptation to take advantage of their powers by training longer. It’s not the stimulants that increase your risk of accident, it’s training too long. Even if you think you’re being wasteful of the stimulant’s powers, just cap your training time. Stopping short when you’re geeked up on a stimulant cocktail is one of the hardest things to discipline yourself to do. Maybe, just maybe, you really should just stop. It makes it easier to stop short on stimulants if you use a little less. 100 mg vs. 200 mg of caffeine, for example. Half a scoop of pre-workout vs. a full scoop. Consider mixed training sessions if it’s difficult to practice restraint when you’re stimulated. For example, combine upper body pressing, hand balancing, stamina work, flexibility training (extreme splits!), etc. all into one workout. Not all forms of training carry the same risk of injury. When stimulated, you can train a higher volume of the safe, boring things that could inevitably fortify your body against future injury. Shin exercises anyone? This discussion assumes you have a problem with having too much energy in the first place! That’s a good problem to have, and it’s possibly unrelatable to the majority of people older than 26 years. I’m essentially telling you not to spend all the money you make if you have a windfall! High energy states are often like jackpots and windfalls: you’re lucky when you get them. 86 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES A more common problem is training when you’re tired and uncoordinated, disconnected, and unmotivated. In these situations, your body has thrown on the brakes. You’re unlikely to hurt yourself because you can’t do anything hard enough actually to cause damage. Unless it’s something like parkour where you trip and fall or miss a ledge when you jump! There are many forms of training, speaking in absolutes here is difficult please cut me some slack! The real trick isn’t to learn to train when you feel like crap, it’s not to feel like crap in the first place! Prevention is key. Sleep well, reduce stress, diagnose your eating weaknesses, and organize your training better. Stimulants are a temporary solution to the problem of feeling crappy, but they can worsen the condition in the long run. “Borrowed energy” is a term I’ve heard, it’s about 50% true. I know guys who intake over a gram of caffeine a day, and they have less energy than some of my caffeine free friends. (yes, caffeine-free humans do exist, and they’re weird). Some of my caffeine free friends would make better progress if they used caffeine strategically one day a week or a few days a month. Those could potentially be the days they could use it to protect themselves from injury by heightening their senses. There is a lot of giving and taking here on this particular subject because it’s complicated. Yes, ultimately, I’m advocating for strategic caffeine use to prevent accidents when training to those who tolerate the substance well. There are a lot of other substances to consider in this discussion;. However, consideration of the nuances of caffeine use would adequately prepare you for decisions regarding the others because they’re governed by the same logic. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 87 Getting good at overcoming injuries is an art. On the one hand, you have good mindset practices. On the other hand, you have intelligent, workable concrete practices. Don’t forget, none of this works if you don’t CARE. Hopefully, there is something in this part of the book that has excited you. This isn’t everything I can say, because there are things I can say that I’m not thinking to say. For what it is worth, I think deep down, you have some ideas on the right thing to do regarding any injury you may have. Good luck. Don’t forget: Google Search is your friend. Check out the next section with interviews from all-star athletes from wildly different fields! 88 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES APPENDIX II: INTERVIEWS I talked to the elite from a variety of training backgrounds about injuries and transcribed those conversations into text. I kept many of the “uh” “like” “so” “you know” types of verbal ticks in the text for fun. Read fast and hear their voices in your head! These are all conversational! And look for similarities in what they shared, it’s intriguing! Enjoy. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 91 DEVON LARRATT PROFESSIONAL ARM WRESTLER Devon Larratt on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBcMvaSRmSh3362bzvOBerw Devon Larratt on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/devlarratt/ Background: Devon and I became fast friends after our first time working together in January 2019. This conversation we had was after breakfast at my house. Sam, my wife, as a practicing Physician Assistant in Psychiatry at the time, couldn’t help but jump into the conversation. Things got weird, but this conversation offers something unique from an injury discussion perspective. Devon: The body’s lazy. And the best way to make it heal is really with constant reminders because you get an injury and right away, stuff happens, you send inflammation to the area and… the thing is, we all kind of understand that scarring is very far from perfect. Scarring is from what we understand, very random. And really, the main things that I’ve had to heal that like required any amount of work was connective structures… musculature heals without any real change to what most athletes do all the time. You might have to go a bit easier for a while, but the muscles heal… it’s like being sore – OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 93 Jujimufu: Like a ligament tear? Yeah? Devon: Yeah that’s more serious. Tendonitis is the beginning of all this and then you have the tears, and I feel like it’s really about understanding the threshold of pain that is good versus bad, and continuing to work through that progressively. So like, you know, you hurt your elbow when you’re arm wrestling. Like every single armwrestler in the world can tell you the story. And what so many people do, and what I did initially, that’s wrong, is leave it alone. And I think that this is not optimal. I really think that your body takes an injury, throws a bunch of stuff at it to glue it down and then you go back to living your life. Jujimufu: Yeah. Devon: But if you really want it to be good, you have to seek out the pain in your body. And your body’s pretty good at letting you know when you’re doing too much. Like if I find that pain and if I really stimulate it, it’s going to get sharp. And that’s clearly too much Sam: No. Jujimufu: Do you think most people know the difference? Sam: No. Jujimufu: Because I mean, it’s intuitive to me to know like, okay, this is like uncomfortable pain. Sam: No. Jujimufu: Like this is injury and this is… Devon: Well, I dunno. I mean I hear Sam saying, no. 94 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Sam: No they do not know. Jujimufu: Sam, are you…? Sam, are you part of this interview? Come in here. Sam: No, I’m telling you as a health care provider. Devon: People don’t know? Sam: No! They say my life is horrible. I want to kill myself or I can’t do anything because I’m in pain. Everybody is in pain. Devon: Everybody’s in pain. Yeah. Sam: It’s just a matter of mindset cause If you look at it culturally, it’s different, right? But then it’s like, “Oh, I need this medicated.” “Oh, I can’t do this,” and it just presents itself as an excuse, but people don’t know what’s an acceptable range of pain and when it’s actually pathologic. Devon: Right, right, right. Sam: And then is it just a mental manifestation of their depression? Devon: Yeah. Yeah. The scale of pain is very interesting. Sam: Yes. Devon: So, it’s true. Some people don’t want any pain in their life at all. Sam: Right. And then you have to give them a wake up call, like, oh, you know, that stress and anxiety and the pain, all that. I can’t medicate that shit away. Like unless you’re dead. And when I was talking to people on my unit, uh, no, you probably OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 95 remained suicidal if that’s the case. Devon: Yeah, yeah. It’s like a part of your balance. Sam: Right. And so it’s a matter of being able to manage it, and they aren’t aware of their bodies the way athletes are. Devon: It’s very interesting to me, this whole subject because my brother, unfortunately he’s passed away, but my brother was part of the very small percentage of the population and he was a body modifier. He was the editor for one of the original body modification communities in the world. Anyways, so I talked to him a lot about this kind of subject and what he told me was pain, reception and interpretation is actually formed In Utero. So you actually are born with your pain interpretation intact. Like, so when you were a child, there’s a spectrum and he said, so much of it has to do with testosterone In Utero. The more test, for whatever reason, it changes the way your brain works. He said in some cases it goes so far… And in his community, this is where a lot of the people sit where they actually had those wires kind of very different, where pain actually feels good to them. Like it’s actually the more pain they feel, it’s actually crossed so that it feels good. So they do all sorts of self mutilation because to them it’s interpreted as… and, and I feel like there’s a spectrum there. So I, in my biased opinion, this is unhealthy and not productive to, you know, getting the goals that you’re after in life. Like, I don’t think hurting yourself is typically what most people do to achieve what they’re trying to do. Sam: I wonder how much of this is learned. Devon: That’s the thing, right? And he told me that he thought that it was from In Utero. And the reason he told me this is 96 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES because primarily, um, the distribution of the people that he worked with, the only people who are really crazy into pain are men. Like, 0.2% of women are into this. Like if you’re a woman who’s into pain, you’re a complete outlier, like complete. But men, it’s actually much more common. So he theorized that it was testosterone based In Utero. And then on top of that he said that the populations that he saw it most predominant in were very high performing men, like CEO’s of companies, doctors, lawyers, well educated, well performing, high salary. These guys are very commonly into pain. Sam: So, do you know what you’re also outlining right now? Devon: No. Sam: So then, you have mostly men, mostly high achieving. In the professions you name. There’s a higher incidence of anti social personality disorders. Being a psychopath. Devon: Well this is all together. Jujimufu: Crazy. Sam: And often with those people, their brain structure, especially their executive function is altered. If you look at it on a functional MRI, they don’t process things the same way. And so they’re always adrenaline seeking because what we would see as exciting, they don’t get anything from that. So again, that’s a different threshold. Devon: Yeah, exactly. Devon: I think when you come to the health and wellness perspective you really have to have that very accurate. So you OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 97 really have to figure out what’s too much, what causes damage and what stimulates. And I think from an athletic performance perspective, you got to have that really in tuned. I think that for me, anything that um, becomes sharp or like, I feel like it’s doing more damage, um, is for me a deterrent. And when I find the pain and kind of try and get comfortable with it and continue to push, you know, what I’m comfortable with… This is the path for healing for me. And so much of it is movement based, progressive resistance based, until I get to a point where it’s very hard to find the pain. Like I can hurt myself anytime I want in any part in my body if I do something completely ridiculous. But once, I get to that level, then I’m really not dealing with an injury anymore. You know, that’s been the course for basically my entire life - get hurt, and continue to work with the pain until it disappears. Jujimufu: Yeah. You don’t ever just sit there. Devon: No. You just continue to find the pain, work with it, work with it... And it’s all about movement, it’s all about increasing the circulation to the tissue that’s damaged. The best way to do this in my mind is through movement. Jujimufu: Yeah. Devon: Yeah. Jujimufu: Yeah. Devon: Yeah. Jujimufu: Sounds awesome. I mean blood is the best healing thing. Right? It’s increasing blood flow. It’s like this cause it’s transporting nutrients. It’s exporting waste products. Basically, expediting the process. 98 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Devon: The plan is already in every single tissue. In your body. It just needs the resources to execute. Jujimufu: and movement is the execution, Devon: movement facilitates nutrition. And removal of, you know, crud. Devon: And it lays it down, right? It turns the scar into aligned tissue, which is better. Sam: I mean, with some procedures you rely on the scar tissue for structure. Again, that’s some orthopedic procedures, but other times you want to break up the scar tissue, and that’s most cases. But again, people are afraid. They don’t know about pain tolerance. A lot of people aren’t athletic. And they don’t know what’s normal and what’s not normal. So they’re just going to avoid all pain. Devon: Right. And that’s not good. Well for what we’re trying to do. Sam: And it’s hard to educate people on pain. Especially when there is that mental component there too, where it’s taking away my quality of life. But again, you have to switch that. Like living at a 4 out of 10 of pain. You can go get a fucking job. You don’t have to be on disability. Devon: No. Sam: So, I dealt with that a lot on my unit too. “I’m in pain.” Okay. “And I’m seeking out disability.” Okay. “And Yeah, I’m suicidal too.” What do you want? “Oh, you know I just can’t do things.” You’re doing everything here. You’re more functional than, you know, that 74-year-old person who has dementia. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 99 MAGNUS MIDTBØ PROFESSIONAL ROCK CLIMBER Magnus Midtbo on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_gSotrFVZ_PiAxo3fTQVuQ Magnus Midtbo on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/magmidt/ Background: Magnus competed in rock climbing for 20 years before retiring to focus on his YouTube channel (where he still focuses on climbing challenges and other athletics!) Magnus seems always to be ok. He never complains. And he doesn’t age. Has he ever been injured? Apparently not. I don’t know of any other athlete with his experience and caliber that can say the same. Jujimufu: All right, let’s talk. Magnus: Ah yea yea. Jujimufu: Alright Magnus, so you’ve been climbing for 20 years. Super competitive. Magnus: Super competitive lol. Jujimufu: You retired a couple of years ago to focus on your YouTube channel and your businesses and your gyms and buying a bunch of cows and moving up in northern Norway. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 101 Magnus: Haha! That’s my future plans. Haha. Jujimufu: That’s your future plans. Right. But you’ve never hurt yourself training? Magnus: No. Jujimufu: Whhhhhy?!! How is that even possible? Magnus: Yeah. I don’t know. I don’t really have a good answer. I guess it’s genetic. Most of it probably. Um, because obviously I’ve trained really hard all of my life. I also think it’s because I haven’t taken any longer breaks. Like the people I talk to who have been injured, they usually injure themselves after a long break. Jujimufu: Well how long is a long break? Magnus: Like two, three weeks. Jujimufu: Two or three weeks? Magnus: Yeah, without training because they still have a lot of that power and they pull too hard, and then something happens. And, I do think I’m good at listening to my body also, because if I feel that something is hurting a little bit, I stop. Another thing people say when they get injured, they often say they get this sign, and then they choose to ignore it and then it happens. It’s like a little warning. The body sends you a little warning first. Jujimufu: Those are the things that I’ve found that it took me having experience to figure out when to listen to them. I’ve injured myself with those warnings, and now I’ll get some of the same warnings and be like, ”I know what this actually means now.” So, it’s interesting you say that because I have a 102 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES feeling a lot of people just don’t have the experience to know what those warnings mean when they happen. But! YOU know when to listen. So! When… When you get those warning signs during the workout, for example, you’re on the wall, climbing and something just doesn’t feel right, and your gut intuition is telling you no. What do you do? Magnus: I just pack my stuff and leave. Jujimufu: You pack your stuff and leave? Magnus: Even if I’ve only been at the gym for 30 minutes. I think that is a problem people have. Like a lot of people will feel guilty. Like, “Oh I only have 30 minutes. I’m going to continue a little longer. My body should take this.” But um, I mean as soon as I feel something I.. I don’t continue. It’s also about not feeling 100%. I sometimes push it, I feel tired and everything, but if I feel pain at a certain place, like especially the fingers or elbows, I stop. Cause that would be the worst injury for me. Jujimufu: A finger or elbow injury? Magnus: Yeah, or shoulder. Jujimufu: I don’t even know what a finger injury would feel like coming on. Magnus: Or I can rip a pulley or something and that’s.. ahhh! Jujimufu: Hahaha. Magnus: Yeah. That hurts. You can’t! Then you’re out of the game. Jujimufu: Oh my gosh. Yeah. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 103 Magnus: There are a lot of injuries in climbing not related to falling and stuff, but just like too much strain on the… especially the fingers and elbows and stuff. I mean, it’s weird, you’d think that I’d be injured by now, but I’m not. But now I’m aging, I’m kind of old now, so I guess at some point I will be injured. But, uh, so far so good! Jujimufu: Wow. That’s incredible. Uh, when you get those, uh, warning signs and you pack your bag and leave. What’s your plan the next day? Magnus: The next day I will just rest. I mean, ideally, I would just stretch or do something else, like go for a run or something. And I would probably do that now, but back in the days when I was specializing, I wouldn’t use any other muscles than I really needed to. Like if I went on a run and I felt happy the next day, I would eat more and, uh, and also my leg muscles would feel tired: I didn’t feel like it helped me in a way. So yeah, usually I just rest now. Yeah. Jujimufu: And then maybe when you came back after a day of rest, you wouldn’t get that warning sign again? Magnus: Yeah, it would be gone, and I would maybe climb a little bit easier. But, in the heat of the moment you try a certain boulder, you’ve closed on it and, and that’s when it’s not easy to take a break if you feel something. Because you just want to finish that project, you’ve tried it 10 times, you think you’ve got it next time, even though it hurts a little bit, you just want to get it. Like you just want to do it! You know? But, um, yeah. So, I think that’s the key. And I mean, I’m probably a little bit lucky the way I’m built and stuff. 104 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Magnus: I know some people get injured really fast. And it’s also about how early I started, I’ve been climbing nonstop since I was 10 years old. I think that was also part of the reason, and also the fact that like, I’ve done a lot of antagonist training, for a climber at least. So like pushups and all that stuff. I’m more all rounded than the normal climber. Jujimufu: Oh, you balance things out a little bit? Magnus: I tried to, at least a lot of climbers get that… what’s it called when the shoulders? *Magnus motions rounded forward shoulders* Uh, in like that bad posture. Yeah. Jujimufu: In weightlifting a lot of the guys who just focus on bench pressing, because it’s the most popular lift in the gym, won’t work their back muscles because they can’t actually see their back in the mirror. You can see your chest and your arms so you’re going to work them and look at yourself in the mirror, and get a good feeling from it. But then your shoulders round forward, your rotator cuffs are, are a little bit endangered. You’re going to possibly blow a pec, who knows. But I’ve always done a lot of back work cause I guess I fell in love with deadlifting. It’s the best back exercise from weightlifting in my opinion. It built me a huge back and it’s protected my shoulders and chest a lot when I started moving towards doing the beach muscle lifts and stuff. So yeah, being a well rounded rock climber… Magnus: I think that helps. Especially elbows and shoulders. Part of me thinks that like, if I’m lighter, I’m less exposed to injuries. But at the same time, you would just climb on smaller more difficult holes. I don’t know. Jujimufu: You would just be climbing more because you’re lighter OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 105 and then you can just, yeah. You negate that benefit. Yeah. Magnus: And you won’t eat as much volume. I think it’s a combination of things and I think, uh, that’s usually what it is. You know, it’s not always so black and white. Jujimufu: I think it’s an art, but it sounds like you’ve mastered it. With your intuition and experience, and you can even chalk up some of it to luck. It’s very, uh, yeah, what’s the word? It’s uh … respectable of you to not just be like, “Oh, I’m the best, and I’ve never hurt myself because I know what I’m doing.” Instead you’re like, “Yeah, some of it’s just luck,” but damn dude, like not all of it is luck for 20 years. I think for a competitive rock climber; you’re doing something right. Magnus: Yeah. It’s just, I feel like a lot of people don’t have the answers, so they try to just come up with something that sounds good. Yeah. I’d rather just like, be honest about it because I don’t really know what it is, you know? And, uh, yeah. It’s probably a combination of different things. Jujimufu: Yeah. That’s great. Hehehehe. 106 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES JOHN WAYNE PARR PROFESSIONAL MUAY THAI FIGHTER John Wayne Parr on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/johnwayneparr John Wayne Parr on Twitter https://www.twitter.com/johnwayneparr Background: I found John because I did a search for the top Instagram accounts that were following me. I noticed he was at the top of that list. I checked him out and HOLY CRAP!!! At the time this book was written, John’s Muay Thai fighting record is 132 fights, with 99 wins. That means he wins 75% of his matches. He’s been fighting most of his life, and he’s currently 43 years old. And he still fights! John has a one of a kind experience with injuries. (Note: This was transcribed over a phone conversation and John’s Australian accent was difficult for me to suss out his exact wording in combination with the audio quality. Apologies.) John: Usually after a fight you just get that body soreness. Your thighs get kicked in. Um, yeah, your forearms from blocking kicks, uh, we also get a lot of cuts from fighting with the elbows. In my career I’ve had 335 stitches in the face from fighting with elbows. Jujimufu: Wow. Now, uh, those types of cuts and bruises and stuff, I’d imagine that’s one type of pain and ache and stuff. But OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 107 what happens if you like tear a hamstring or you are getting, you know, kicked and you break some ribs and stuff? What’s your approach to recover from things like that? John: Yeah, so ribs are a tough one cause you can be out for three months just from the pain. Then having to get the confidence to slowly wade back into training again. And until you’re like, going back at it 100%, that fear of getting back into the ring after having a rib broken, the last thing you want to do is rebreak it and go through all that pain again. So yeah, not rushing coming back to training too early. And just being careful about overexerting those first few weeks back. Jujimufu: Yeah. Yeah. I read uh, I was doing some research on you online. I read that your worst injury was a, uh, that you got hit in the eye socket with an elbow and it John: Yeaaaaah. Yeah, it broke in two places. Jujimufu: And it’s something like that? When you say like a worst injury, like was that something that held you back for a long time, or have you had like, any chronic injuries? A knee thing or an elbow thing that just wouldn’t go away for a long period of time? John: In the long term I’ve been very fortunate to be very, very, very blessed to be injury free the majority of my career. I don’t have anything that I can really say that holds me back. Every morning I still wake up, I run 12 km’s in the morning. I train some more in the afternoon. My knees are good, my hips are good. Uh, yeah. Everything. Everything’s good. Yeah, it’s crazy. Yeah. Other people try and keep up with me for a month or so, and then their bodies will start breaking down. I have been rather 108 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES fortunate. So, yeah. I’ve been fortunate to keep it up for the last 30 years. It’s been crazy. John: And with the eye socket. It felt like… In the ring. I got caught against the ropes and he threw an elbow, and I instantly felt like someone had stuck a hot chisel through my cheek bone. I took a knee, and the referees started counting, and I looked up and he said, “I’m not going to bother counting anymore.” I was done. I went to the changing room. One of my best friends is a doctor. He gave me some painkillers and they didn’t even touch the sides. So we went straight to the hospital and then, um, we checked in and as we were waiting to get called up, I dropped my keys. I went to pick my keys up and then, um, blood started coming out of both my nostrils. And as soon as the nurse noticed that they said, “All right, you’re going straight to the emergency room.” Then they took an X-ray of my face and found two broken bones in the eye socket. So um, I ended up staying in the hospital for four days and I was, uh, on the borderline of operating or not operating. When you break your eye socket, sometimes the eye sinks into the back of your head. You have different perceptions of your vision. So, yes, and borderline. And then you get to hold one eye, and they show you something red, and then hold the other eye and it’s a different color red. And they operate immediately in cases of detachment. Jujimufu: This is so crazy, man. The other people I’m interviewing in this book are like you know, static strength athletes. And this is just like something, yeah. None of the other people can relate to. This is just completely a different planet you’re coming from. This is great. Uh, John: Yeah. So, and we were very lucky to fight. In Muay Thai you OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 109 have eight different weapons. You have your kicks, your knees, your elbows and punches so if something’s sore, say you have a sore shin, you just use the other seven weapons until that shin becomes good and then you start using it again. Jujimufu: Oh, so you just work around it this way. John: Cause we’re living from fight the fight. We don’t have an opportunity to have time off. You always got to maintain your fitness, you always gotta be strong and if the phone rings, you gotta be ready to fight. Tomorrow. Cause you’re living off your fights, it’s the only thing you’re surviving on. It’s mandatory that you be ready to fight at anytime. Yeah. So many times like uh, let’s say you get a cut in training five days before your fight. So, you get it to stop. Then you’ll take the stitches out an hour before the weigh in so they don’t see the cut, and you try and pretend that everything’s okay and um, if they hit it and that reopens the cut, you just ignore it and just keep fighting until the bell. Cause winning is more important than a little bit of blood. Jujimufu: Yeah. Yeah. Oh, just one thing I’m curious about though. I mean you said that you’re very fortunate in that you’ve been pretty, uh, like injury free in terms of like hurting yourself training and stuff. Now the fight stuff is different. You know, you walk into the ring, get cut up and bruised up. But you know, I don’t really feel when people tell me that they’re fortunate about anything, that it’s just luck. You’re doing some stuff, right, man. Yeah. Like, do you think there’s anything that you’re doing that has just been like a guardian angel on your shoulder over the years? That’s just kind of protected you? 110 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES John: I think it’s because I haven’t stopped since I was11 years old. I’ve pretty much trained almost every day. Uh, I think if I stopped, then come back, and try, maybe the body would have a different reaction. I don’t even think about my age until someone asks me how old I am. I’m just doing my normal routine, getting up, running, putting my pads on, doing bag work and perspiring and I don’t have time to think about my age. I’m having too much fun to worry about getting old. And then when someone does ask me my age, it’s like “Ah shit, that’s right, I’m the old guy now, this sucks.” And um, yeah. And then I’m fighting all the young guys in their mid twenties, early twenties. And it’s like “Dammit.” It’s good though, because people appreciate it on the social media zoo. “Oh yeah. Oh, you are a role model for all of us older fellows, and you’re showing us that even when we’re a certain age that we don’t have to stop. We can keep going and keep living the dream.” Jujimufu: Yeah, man, you’re, you’re a pretty scary person. I got to tell you, John: Haaaaaa! I’m a good guy! Jujimufu: No really. If I, if I was a 20 year old, and had to step into the ring with you, I’d be like, “Ah shit. I better put on a different mindset here because this guy’s a different animal.” It’s incredible. Your fight record is nuts. You’ve won three out of four… three out of four fights you’ve ever fought, you’ve won. That’s… for the amount of fights that you’ve fought too! Like, that’s a ton of fights. That’s crazy. John: It’s crazy. Right? Uh, I remember getting the opportunity to make the title when I was 19, it was just life changing from OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 111 the moment I arrived because of the times. It’s not just a sport. It’s a job. It’s a way of life, and it’s accepted by the community too. If you’re a fighter, it’s highly respected. There’s fights on TV nearly every night. And then there was a newspaper that came out every single day. It told you who fought last night and who’s fighting tonight. What the odds are. How their training preparations been. What their last fights were like. Just like the horse races. It’s business where people are going to the stadium only to bet, they’re fulltime gamblers, they don’t have to work any other jobs besides going to the Muay Thai. And betting on the fights. So, it’s just an insane community. It’s uh, so much fun. Jujimufu: Yeah. Well, uh, this is good. Thank you so much for your time. That was awesome. You‘re crazy man. John: Hey thank you for the call. It’s very cool to be invited. I appreciate it. 112 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES ANTOINE VAILLANT PROFESSIONAL BODYBUILDER Antoine Vaillant on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/antoinev87 Antoine Vaillant on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/AntoineVai Background: Antoine and I have been friends since 2002! His injury occurred when I was close to finishing this book. I noticed Antoine had adopted some sort of superhuman outlook towards recovery. This conversation occurred 7 weeks after Antoine injured his RIGHT bicep. Antoine: Okay. Well, my injury happened about two weeks before the 2019 New York Pro show, which I was trying to jump in by surprise. I was moving something on the ground… I wasn’t even training. And I tried to jerk it thinking it would move, that it would slide. But because they were sheets of metal, it was bendy up and down. But left to right, it wasn’t moving. So, I kind of like grabbed it like a natural stone kind of thing, and I jerked it to the left and my right bicep… I just heard the velcro sound and held my arm. I was like, “Oh my God,” I knew what it was right away. I look up my arm and it was separated. It went up a little bit cause a few fibers were left on the bone, it was a full tear off the bone. The next day I went to see the doctor to get an ultrasound, but OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 113 then he said I have too much muscle. I had to get the MRI in Buffalo, NY in the states cause you could pay 500 bucks and you get it right away. So then 10 days later, I got the surgery done. So, I have this plan here to follow after the surgery and they said the first two weeks I had to wear a sling, I couldn’t do anything, but I was using my fingers a little bit to like, you know, with scissors to cut the meat and stuff in the kitchen. Antoine: Week 2 to 6 I had a brace, and every week I increased the range of motion. So, at the six week point I started training isometrics. But, this training is made for normal people and I’m a bodybuilder, I think I regenerate a little bit faster. Um, I just started doing yesterday non-bicep involved exercises with the injured arm. For example light (tricep) push downs, like bilateral, and things like that. S I really listen to my body, I started putting some blood in there, trying to get a pump in the muscles around the bicep, and I was doing some grip stuff with the little ball and finger extensions all the way from two weeks post op to right now. And um, I think it does help. And it can be tricky, because the doctor says don’t move it, don’t do anything, Blah Blah Blah. Antoine: But it’s like counterproductive, because if you treat your arm like it’s a crippled arm, you’re going to have a crippled arm! If you listen to your body, and start to move it without it hurting and being very careful, you’re going to be able to get the range of motion back very fast. I got my range of motion maybe in half the time I was supposed to, just to give you an idea. And, um, so, I’m at that part now in my recovery for that. And the hardest thing really was too, um, was more the mental part, cause I was two weeks out from the bodybuilding show! And then all those years of training and the crazy diet, there’s all the minutes of cardio towards that goal and BAM! It’s been 114 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES taken away. So, a lot of people say, “How did you deal with? You deal with it so well?” Antoine: Well, if you look at it like that… you don’t plan injuries, right? But once it happens, you cannot change anything about it. So, you can accept the situation and be like, “What can I do right now to make the best out of this?” Because, well, what can I learn from this? And what can I do? How can I make this a good thing? So, I started making more videos showing the process of the recovery. I’ve also kept my training pretty intense. For the legs, I doubled up the leg training and I kept training my left side also, which people think it’s kind of weird sometimes, but the reason why I’m doing that is because nature likes things symmetrical. So, there’s a crossover of gains kind of thing. Antoine: So, just to put it very simple, I’m not sure if it’s exactly like this, but if you gain one inch on the left arm, even if you don’t train the right, the right is gonna gain a fifth of an inch: 20% crossover. So, by training with my whole left side, my right side is holding onto more muscle because the body’s like, “Well, if there’s still a lot of work we have to do, might as well keep more muscle. Right?” So, my right arm at the smallest, uh, was 18.5 inches, and my left was 21 inches. Just to give you an idea. But my chest is very similar. My back is very similar to what it was. My shoulder a little bit less. It’s not too bad. Antoine: My recovery is gonna be really good. I train the left side because of that reason. Also, I upped my cardio. What I’m doing now is I’m preparing my body so when it’s time to start training hardcore again, my heart is going to be like, ready. I’m going to have better cardio, my legs are going to be huge, my left side will have helped my right side to keep up, also I can train to OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 115 burn calories and stay active. And also! I just love training. So, I just keep training. I could be in the gym every day still. I upped my cardio more than the contest prep! So, I tried to just, “What can I do to make this good and what’s the best that I can do?” because… when you have an injury or anything in life. I guess the best that you can do… Is your best! Antoine: That’s all. So, if you’re doing your best right now, the rest is up for grabs. The rest is out of your control. I think my recovery is going very fast because I stayed positive and I’m doing everything I can to make it recover fast… with patience of course, and smarts. And um, that’s the way I’m dealing with it right now. I think it’s going well, but I’m trying to think of some things that I could’ve done better. I don’t think so. And the thing is, if you dwell on it and you’re like sitting at home, “Oh I’m not going to train my left side, and what’s the point of going to the gym?” Well you’re going to be so far back. Right now, the only thing that my body has to do, is gain a few grams or pounds of muscle. Antoine: How many pounds are there in the right arm? I don’t know, like, let’s say I have to gain a pound and a half. A pound and a half versus if I was to stop training and would have to gain 25 pounds! It’s like, way easier for the body to gain just a pound and a half! So, if you have an injury, if you can still move, you can still train. As long as I’m gonna move, I’m gonna train. So that’s pretty much my mindset with this right now. I’m doing my best and I already have a show in mind, which is next year. The same ones, the New York Pro and the Toronto Pro. Can I be ready before that? We’ll see. But um, I actually think that because I’ve been training less heavy overall, my body is actually resting on the non-injured side also. So, when it’s time to rev it back up, when I’m all healthy again, I’m going to be even better. 116 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Antoine: I’m actually seeing this like, “Okay, this happened. Is there a reason why this happened? I’m going to learn something from it.” And I’m just gonna keep the same training mentality as I had before with regarding training. And I’m keeping my diet on point, maybe 85%. The other thing that you know is harder, is I’m so hungry. Um, I’m eating more food than I’m supposed to a little bit. But regarding the injury, I don’t think it matters that much. You know, maybe you just need to try to avoid the foods that create inflammation. Things like that. But yeah, if you eat healthy it’s not really a problem. I gain a lot of weight very fast and I was watery for a little while because of the rebound before the show. But now I’m like, uh, at a healthy weight of 299 pounds. Jujimufu: HAHAHAHA! A healthy weight of 299 lbs?! Antoine: Yeah, that’s my homeostasis weight I think. You know, when your body wants to go somewhere? My body wants to be 300 pounds for some reason. I’m not forcing myself to go up. I’ve actually increasing my cardio and trying to go down a little bit and my body is just staying there. So, I think that’s my healthy weight right now. Jujimufu: Yeah, that’s uhh… I can remember a couple of years ago talking to you and, uh, we were joking about you going over 300 pounds when you were 280 pounds. You were like, “Maybe I should do it? Maybe. Maybe I should go above 300.” And now you’ve been like 312 lbs? Was that your heaviest? Antoine: Yeah. My heaviest weight was last winter. One time I went to bed at like 315 lbs. Jujimufu: Yeah, you’ve, uh, you’ve totally gone beyond 300 lbs now, so yeah. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 117 Antoine: I could be 330 lbs if I want to… but like, right now, it’s kind of pointless. I think I’d rather stay 300 and just, uh, work on quality. Jujimufu: And stay healthy. And then, uh, when you get closer to your contest, then you can start to tax your system some more? Antoine: Yeah. Exactly. I was 260 lbs when the injury happened. I was shredded. I was like, I was ready to like fucking win some shows. And I think next time I’m gonna be heavier, I’ll be better. And um, in my whole 16 years of training, this is the first injury I had that was just kind of bad like this. It wasn’t even during training. I think, oh, I think I’m going to talk about the mistake I made and why the injury happened. Jujimufu: Yeah. Yeah. I was actually wondering why? How did it happen? Like, you know, I can’t imagine other people just going and trying to move something and tearing their bicep like that. I mean, how? What actually caused it? Antoine: I think because, um, I was so dry already (dehydrated). And because one thing I was doing was, during the night when I was waking up, I was not drinking water. I was trying to not drink water because in the morning, I wanted to weigh myself and have the lowest weight possible. Cause I like to have a consistent weigh in. Like, I don’t want to influence my weight accidentally. I wanted to send my real, dry weight to Dorian (Dorian Hamilton, Antoine’s coach) every morning to see real body fat changes, and to have no water. Right? So, because I would be training after one meal, I probably didn’t have enough water in my body. I was probably training dehydrated and um, maybe that was one of the factors why it happened two weeks out. 118 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Antoine: Uh, you’re not supposed to move shit off the ground like that. There was something in my way, and I wanted to move it. And that day I didn’t warm up as well either right before the workout. I think maybe that, combined with the fact that I was super dry, cause when you’re leaning out like that before a show, there’s no fluid and liquid in the tendons in the muscle. It’s like you’re dehydrated, right? And because I was not drinking during the night, and there was no time in the morning to really rehydrate, I was probably even more dehydrated. So, I think that’s maybe a reason why. To prevent that in the future, I actually got a new water system. The water distillery thing. So, it evaporates the water into the filter then it comes out and I add my own little minerals. Haha. Jujimufu: Yeah yeah yeah I saw it. Antoine: I’m doing that right now, so next time I’m going to drink, I’m probably gonna weigh the water or like measure the water. Every time I wake up, I’m going to drink two cups during the night. So I stay hydrated during the night. And if I do it from the start of my contest prep, I will always ensure the same amount of water intake every night and maybe I will always train after two meals. So, now I have more carbs and will train with more water in me to prevent problems. And I will not move any fucking shit off the ground. Even if there’s an old lady with her groceries who needs help, she can go fuck herself. Jujimufu: LOL Antoine: I’m not lifting anything but the weights in the proper form, right? So uh, that’s what I’m gonna do to prevent this next time. But you can’t really be in control of it 100%. You could OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 119 walk on down the street, get clipped by a fucking car and then you’re injured. You’re gonna have to deal with it. And uh, so the best thing you can do when an injury happens is, like, okay, accept it. Cry if you gotta cry. And then be like, “What can I do to fix it?” And come back fast, and efficiently. So, um, that’s what I have to say right now. Jujimufu: Yeah, that’s perfect. Antoine: Oh, good. There you go. Jujimufu: Thank you. Yeah! 120 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES MARTINS LICIS PROFESSIONAL STRONGMAN Martins Licis on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/martinslicis Martins Licis on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/user/MartinsLicis Background: The first time I met Martins was at a fitness expo many years ago. He was a giant, happy man that wanted to show me his back lever (a gymnastics move). I was so impressed, surely at his weight, this feat of strength was some kind of world record!? We kept bumping into each other and became great friends and this year he won his first World’s Strongest Man title! Martins Licis is the World’s Strongest Man 2019! Martins: I pride myself for staying injury free for so long. And, it’s only when the weights got ridiculous leading up to World’s Strongest Man and post World’s Strongest Man that I just started accumulating injuries, especially cause I had a huge spike in strength over the last few years. But one thing I really believe about injuries is: of course, preventing them. Which is making sure that you can keep all your imbalances and deficiencies in check. Because I feel lifting in any motion with imbalance or deficiency somewhere along the chain being used, and of course, you know, you can lift in a way that won’t be ideal and OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 121 hurt yourself. But when I do injure myself…. For example, I tore my pec. The doctors told me I would be in a sling for about six weeks or more and I wouldn’t be able to lift with that arm for about half of a year. So, of course I wasn’t going to have that! Because I’m a professional strongman. Jujimufu: Hahaha! Martins: (laughing) Martins: So, after about one week of being in a sling, I just started to do little circles with my elbows, not like big... And I’m literally talking about one to two-inch diameters. Just rotations. Moving my elbow in little circles. Now, I’d do that CONSTANTLY throughout the day, otherwise my shoulder was just frozen. I had a pec reattached, so really, I couldn’t do much more than that. But what that did was, by continuously doing this all day long, it flushed a lot more blood into the area around the tendon. Of course, tendons don’t really have, um, blood vessels running through them. They get all their nutrients from a peripheral blood supply. So just by continuously moving my arm, I was able to flush a lot of blood into that area and that helped my pec heal much quicker. So, in about two weeks I was already taking my sling off and then straightening my arm. Martins: So, I was just practicing straightening my arm, moving my arm in circles just to heal that tendon, and to flush blood through there. And uh, then just over the next week or two I started working on it: really pushing the range of motion, but very slowly, making sure it did not hurt, whichever kind of ranges did not hurt. I would practice this. After three weeks, I was already lifting weights. Again: I was supposed to be in a sling, but 122 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES I’d only practice pulling motions with my right arm that was hurt just to, again, continue flushing blood in there and to activate whatever muscles. Even though I’m activating the antagonist of my pressing muscles, the pressing muscles still received some sort of impulse from even the pulling motions I did. Martins: My pressing started to come back. And I believe that much quicker! If I didn’t do those pulling motions, my pressing recovery would have suffered. But then, after about four weeks, I’d start doing very light pressing overhead. Literally just using my arm. No external weights. And slowly built up my strength using repetition ranges of about 15 to 20. But the moment I started to struggle, I would completely stop the motion. You know, I did that very carefully with a very slow pace, slow tempo, uh, keeping complete control of whatever pressing motions I was doing at all points. Martins: Four weeks out from my injury, I started doing very light dumbbell pressing work in all different angles and directions I possibly could, just to build up the dynamic range of motion in my, uh, in my shoulder joints, and also just to build up that tendon strength at every single angle I possibly could. And by also working within a tempo that is a slow pace during my repetitions, I was making sure that my muscles were activating equally during the entire range of motion rather than just getting that initial impulse from the beginning, and relying on momentum, which of course could tear apart the tendon that was just repaired. So, by working really slowly, I, um, put a lot less stress on the tendon, allowing it to heal better while building up that strength again. Jujimufu: So how long ago was this injury? OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 123 Martins: This was two years ago. (August 2017). Jujimufu: And it’s been a complete recovery? Martins: Yeah. So I mean, I’m using my arm perfectly fine. Jujimufu: Wow. That’s incredible. It’s uhhh, do you have any, uh, did you do anything else? I mean that just sounds like… very good. It just sounds like what you’re supposed to do that a lot of people don’t do when they’re trying to recover from an injury. Martins: I was OBSESSIVE. Jujimufu: Ohhhhh…. Martins: Certainly obsessive. The thing with any kind of tendon injuries is keeping motion on it. At least whatever motions that do not hurt: do them. And a lot of them, obsessively. Because tendons don’t receive a lot of blood flow. So, you basically have to push a lot of blood into them, whichever methods you can find. And I think motion is better than anything, because while you’re moving, you’re also practicing and, uh, lubricating the joints and ensuring that they don’t get frozen in any positions, so you can keep your range of motion versus if you go through other methods. Like, people will rely on hot, cold, for example, to flush blood into their body to heal an injury. That’s fine. But if you just purely rely on that, you’re promoting stiffness of joints. Jujimufu: I see yeah. Is there anything that you do in strongman that’s more dangerous than other things? Martins: Oh, interesting. Um, let me think about that. I think block pressing over head, I’ve never actually seen anyone injured from pressing blocks, but every single time I press a block over 124 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 300 lbs over my head… my life flashes before my eyes. One slip and there is this giant aluminum block falling on my face. Jujimufu: Yeahahaha! Martins: It’s so scary! Every single time. Jujimufu: It seems like, uh, when you get up to that level of strength, almost all that stuff gets scary because it’s so heavy. I mean, I can’t even imagine like the super yoke walk, you know? Martins: Yeah, for sure. Uh, that’s the other thing you know, when I’m doing Yoke carries, I don’t have deep hip sockets. Um, which is good for squatting, good for tire flips. Great for stones because I have great hip mobility compared to a lot of other big guys. But when I do yoke carries or anything brutally heavy like that because of my shallow hip sockets, I feel instability in those joints. So I have to be meticulously focused on uhhh… stabilizing my hips while I’m carrying a yoke. It’s like there’s this fine balance of trying to push that speed, and also making sure my hips don’t pop out. Jujimufu: Huh?! Pop out?! Like out of the socket? Martins: Oh yeah, for sure. I don’t know if it would happen, but that’s the sensation! That if I go a little bit faster, my legs are popping out. Jujimufu: Tsss!? I can’t even relate to this. This sounds so insane. Haha! Martins: Yeah. Then if it’s one of those things where it’s like, I even have like slight missteps, I just drop the weight immediately because it feels like my leg’s about to crank off. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 125 Jujimufu: I guess you don’t really have these problems until you get up to a certain body weight? Martins: IT’S TRUE! This is completely true! To me it feels like there’s a barrier above anything about 900 pounds. Suddenly I am uhhh, every single time I’m like hugging my legs, telling them, giving them good little stories of affirmation, telling them that it’s going to be okay. Jujimufu: We’ve flown other strongmen to my place before to train and it seems like a lot of them have problems with like, dehydration, and on airplanes and stuff like that. Like, their fluid levels, electrolyte levels… You ever have any problems with that type of stuff? Does that affect you? Martins: You can even remember when I flew out to go train with you, I was dehydrated and you had me swallow a bunch of basically electrolyte pills, salt packets, and chug a bunch of water. And then about 30 minutes later I was feeling totally fine. And the thing is I’m always drinking, and I’m always trying to get those electrolytes in. But it’s sneaky because uh, it’s very easy to not get enough. Jujimufu: It’s gotten harder since you’ve gotten heavier? Martins: Yes, very much so. Jujimufu: Jesus. Okay. Wow. Um, well now that you just won the World’s Strongest Man, I guess you gotta win it again, right? Martins: That’s the plan. Jujimufu: So, are you going to do anything different or just continue doing the same plan? 126 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Martins: Very much so the same. But I think I could add somethings. For recovery for example, I want to try PRP on my knees cause I think I have a slight meniscus tear in my left knee. I’m yet to get an MRI. I’ve just been living the last year in denial. I have not seen a doctor or gotten the MRI, but uh, yeah, there’s a little pain in the left knee that I want to get checked out. And possibly get PRP or whatever is needed for that to make sure I could last another four years. At this point my goal is to go until I’m 33 years old. I’m about to turn 29, so I’m giving myself four more years. Jujimufu: Are you more or less worried about injuring yourself now that you’ve gotten this far? Do you feel like all these years of training have kind of gotten you to a point where you feel really stable with your body and your performance? Martins: Ummm. Hm! Every single time I lift something heavy there is that thought that crosses my mind. I’m definitely getting more confident; I’m getting more confident with the weights I have already lifted. What I am cautious with, is pushing my strengths to a new level. So sometimes I’m maintaining, I don’t have too much worry. My body is pretty used to the motions. And I could pretty much lift almost anything painlessly that I’ve already lifted. But it’s when I’m trying to hit a new record on a deadlift, or a new record on an overhead event, that those fears really creep back in. Jujimufu: Okay. So, like a 400 pound block press overhead? Martins: Oh gosh, oh no, no, no. That’s like, that’s something that’ll keep me up at night! OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 127 HAFÞÓR JÚLÍUS BJÖRNSSON PROFESSIONAL STRONGMAN Hafþór Björnsson on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thorbjornsson/ Hafþór Björnsson on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEeUUmYprI6qZ7SqkIJiDMA/ Thor’s website: http://www.hafthorbjornsson.com Background: Thor is a legendary strongman and, he’s the biggest human I’ve ever stood next to. He also played the character The Mountain on Game of Thrones. His Strongman record is outstanding, and he owns the title of World’s Strongest Man 2018. He invited us to his house for breakfast, and we recorded a podcast after; This was a portion of the conversation we had on Tom Boyden’s podcast: OK PODCAST on YouTube. This was episode #3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNYWIZku1xE Thor: Working 18 hours a day, I have done that in the past. There’s not many days like that, but I have. Then I’m not training the day after. I’m sleeping or resting. I just have to rest. There’s no way I’m training after 18 hours of filming. So I try to, for example, work my training schedule around that, you know? I find the days I’m not working as long in the schedule, then we are training on those days. If I’m filming for 18 hours, there’s no OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 129 way I’m training after that. Jujimufu: So, do you get into those situations knowing that you’re gonna be filming for 18 hours, or is it just kind of sprung upon you? Thor: Usually I know… But there are days that, maybe, filming drags out. Or maybe it didn’t go as smoothly as they wanted to, or they want to film something extra. Jujimufu: I’m kind of curious, you’re talking about consistency. When do you know when to go with the flow? Like “Damn, I just was on the set for 18 hours. I better like, hang it up for the night, recover and rest my body.” And when do you go, “Okay, well it doesn’t matter, I have to get this training session in.” I mean, how do you make those decisions? Thor: I listen to my body a lot, how my body feels. If I feel like I need an extra day… Sleep is very important to me. If I haven’t slept enough, then we’re not training, that’s just a principle. Lack of sleep can increase the risk of injury. And I don’t want to get injured. If you get injured, then you’re away from training for how long? Like how many weeks? You don’t even know. Depends on how bad the injury is. So, I always make sure that I’m well hydrated, well fed, and well rested before training. Jujimufu: It’s just lowering the risk. Thor: Yeah, lowering the risk. And I think that’s a huge key why I haven’t been getting injured in the last couple of years. Because I always take care of my body. I take care, I always have good nutrition in my body, and I’m well rested. So yeah, my body is just ready to attack the weights. 130 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Thor: Cause that’s the key. Stay injury free so we can just keep on training better and better. Tom: So, this is going into both injury and recovery. Is injury on your mind all the time? Because your body is your tool, you know, it’s your livelihood. Do you have that just on your mind at all times? Preventing that? Or is it something that you just try to focus doing the positive things to prevent it? Thor: Yeah, I try to think about the positive to not get injured. But yeah, it’s always in the back of my head. I’m always careful, you know. But um, you have to know the limit. You have to know how far you are able to push yourself. And you have to know when to take a step back and say this is enough. I have to make sure I don’t get injured. That’s something that people just have to figure out on their own. It is very hard to teach. Tom: That’s experiential. Um, then the training environments, I mean, a big thing about injuries and recovery is training environments. I mean, the World’s Strongest Man is in climates completely different than Iceland. Botswana, Manila, all these places. And you’re going to Dubai, it’s a very, very different climate. How do you transition training to Dubai, and do you have to do different things because of the heat and the dryness compared to Iceland? Thor: Yeah. That’s where experience kicks in as well. I’ve trained in those environments many times before. And I know how to react, and what I usually do when the time difference is huge and the weather is a lot different, you know. I arrive usually a week before competition just to get used to it. Get used to the heat, whatever it is, so I’m ready when the competition starts. And I’ve OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 131 competed almost everywhere in the world. So, I’m usually very quick to adapt to the changes. But the biggest thing I could do is arrive quicker. I don’t arrive just a day before, or two days before. I arrive usually five days before. Tom: Okay. And you’ll do that for any event? Thor: Yeah, any big event I do that for. 132 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES STEFI COHEN PROFESSIONAL POWERLIFTER Stefi Cohen on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/steficohen/ Stefi Cohen on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMoe2ZnSFIFcayGVv__xFEA Hayden Bowe on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hayden.bowe www.hybridperformancemethod.com Background: At the time of writing this, Stefi has 22 All-Time World Records in Powerlifting. She and her significant other, Hayden, run a very successful training business called Hybrid Performance Method (Look like a bodybuilder, lift like a powerlifter, move like a weightlifter). I cooked Stefi and Hayden a nice and healthy dinner and then ambushed them with a request to talk about training injuries. LOL! They gave me so much more of their time than I expected. Stefi is an exercise physiologist and doctor of physical therapy. Enjoy this comprehensive and educated perspective of training injuries. Jujimufu: Okay guys, I want to talk to you about injuries. Stefi: Sure. I mean, injuries are THE limiting factor for athletes. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 133 It’s like if you can’t train for a long time, then you will never get as good as you can get. So, in powerlifting specifically, it’s particularly true because you don’t get good at power lifting with a couple of years of training, or three years of training. You get good at powerlifting with more than five years, and it’s such a brutal sport in such repetitive movements. If you have a back injury and you can’t squat, then what are you going to do? Versus like other sports that you can get around those injuries a lot easier. In power lifting, if you have an injury… back or knee or shoulder, then that completely eliminates one third of what you can do, and then you can’t compete because you need that part of your body to compete. Stefi: So, I think a common element in the best power lifters is that they can train for a long, long time. So like Ed Coan, how many years did he do powerlifting for, 30 years or something like that? So that’s what gets you good. Being able to compete for a long time and being able to stay on your feet. Every time that you have an injury, then that sets you back how long? Who knows? Depends on the injury. If you’re set back by three months, then you have those three months to come back PLUS another three months to get 1% better. So, if you can save yourself that injury altogether, then that’s when you’re really going to see yourself making progress. When it comes to injuries, um, there’s five things that I kind of identified that are really, really important to take into consideration when you have an injury, regardless of which injury you have. Stefi: The first one, and actually it’s going to be six then because this is a new one that I thought about. Jujimufu: Oh, just now?! 134 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Stefi: Like recently cause… Jujimufu: Oh sick… Stefi: Yeah. So, the first one is self-diagnosing. Well, obviously the Internet is great as a place to find information. But if you’re not a qualified medical professional, you’re not going to understand the full picture, and you’re going to kind of get to conclusions that are maybe not the right one for your particular case. You’re diagnosing yourself, and then you are looking up the diagnosis on the Internet, and then you are looking at symptoms, recovery time, and maybe it doesn’t apply to you. Right? Hayden: WebMD tells you everything is cancer. Stefi: Exactly. So, say you have some sort of like. rotator cuff injury or a back injury or an ankle injury, and you see that the recovery time is six weeks. Then people really count on those six weeks to get better. And then yeah, those six weeks pass, and they get back into it because the Internet said six weeks. But everyone heals at a different rate, and our bodies are not programmed like robots. We all heal at different rates. You can’t really take whatever the Internet says to heart, cause that’s not the way it happens. Jujimufu: But, you would probably agree that a lot of doctors estimate recovery times based on people that aren’t super athletes that recover super-fast. Stefi: Yeah, exactly, or you can heal faster. Jujimufu: Because every injury I’ve ever gotten, the doctor always overestimated the amount of time it would take for me to get back into it. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 135 Stefi: Yeah that’s common too. And that actually happened to me recently with a back injury. I was told that I was going to have to take 18 months off. Jujimufu: And how long did you take off? Stefi: A week. Jujimufu: FUCK, FUCK! ARE YOU SERIOUS? Stefi: A week – Jujimufu: 18 months is… what are you? And I thought you’re going to say like… a month… Stefi: I took a week off and within four weeks, I hit a world record squat. In training. Jujimufu: Oh, go to hell. Stefi: Exactly. Jujimufu: That’s nuts. Stefi: It can happen both ways, right? But at the end of the day, just understand that everybody’s different. And even a doctor tells you that you have some estimated recovery time, it could be less or it could be more. So, just keeping that in mind: this is the hardest one for athletes. Stop doing the thing that’s hurting you. Hardest one. Hardest one, cause you don’t want to stop doing whatever it is that you need to do in your sport. If throwing is your sport, you don’t want to stop throwing. If you have a back injury in powerlifting, you don’t want to stop squatting and deadlifting. Right? Cause you’re scared that you’re going to lose your gains. 136 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Stefi: But, the first thing is to stop doing the aggravating thing so that you can let your body heal, essentially. And I think most of the fear comes from regressing in your training. But those people don’t understand that, obviously. You’re gonna lose your strength? You might lose your strength... It doesn’t happen that fast. You’re not gonna forget how to snatch in a week or two, or a month. You’re not going to forget how to squat. You’re not going to get significantly weaker. Even if you do, it’s not going to take you the same amount of time that it took you to get that strong, to gain that strength back. Jujimufu: I got a math question for you. Stefi: Go ahead. Jujimufu: All right. Let’s say you don’t do the thing that’s hurting you, right? And right when you recognize there’s something wrong, you immediately don’t do that thing and you start training around it and try to make it better. Can you take that recovery time and make it a week, for example? Whereas if you keep trying to train through it, it could set you back by months? Stefi: Hundred percent. And that’s why I say it. Jujimufu: So, it can get exponentially worse. The more you try to train through a problem? Stefi: Absolutely. Jujimufu: So, it’s better to… fix it sooner… Stefi: As soon as our alarm goes off, you take a step back, you immediately stop doing what’s hurting you. The more you pick at it, the worse and worse… the deeper the cut and - OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 137 Jujimufu: It gets way, way worse. Stefi: Way worse. Hayden: You know what’s so funny, is that doctors take so much heat for telling people to take time off. Like, an athlete will go to the doctor and say, “Oh, my knee hurts when I do this.” And they’ll say, “Well, don’t do that.” And then the athlete will be like, “Pfff.” Stefi: “Don’t do that?! What do you know about training? !!!” Hayden: Right? How many times have you heard that? Right? It’s like, “Whoa.” It’s so obvious. Like, of course stop doing the thing that’s injured. You know, like how could you scoff at them for that? Stefi: Yeah! It’s hurting me to deadlift. Ummm, okay, how about you don’t deadlift for a little bit? And see what happens. Try to figure out why it’s happening in the first place. And avoid doing whatever movements have been bugging you. Jujimufu: Or, a lot of times they could just be changing the movement a little bit. Right? I mean, you could take a deadlift that is hurting you and be like, “What if I dead lift this way instead?” “Oh, it’s still good form.” Hayden: I just did that recently. Leading up to a meet I tore an oblique and I couldn’t, uh, do conventional deadlifts. I couldn’t even do one plate. Conventional. And I tried switching to sumo because it’s a way more upright position. I didn’t have to like, be hanging over the bar. And I wasn’t able to do my best obviously at the meet, but I still was able to do 606 lbs (275 kgs) with a sumo stance at the meet, instead of just 135 lbs. 138 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Jujimufu: Yeah. LOL. Okay. Well, mission accomplished. Stefi: The second thing is habituation. So, there’s a lot of relatively new pain science coming out about how pain always starts in the brain. And especially when you have chronic pain, it doesn’t always come from tissue damage. So, if you have an acute injury, you twist your ankle or like, I don’t know, you have a direct blow on your shoulder or whatever, something happens to your elbow when you’re arm wrestling and you feel pain, then that might actually be real pain, something got messed up. But, when you go months experiencing that pain, it doesn’t necessarily indicate that there’s actually an injury. The analogy that I like to use is um, a fire alarm, or not a fire alarm a, ummmm, a smoke detector. So, sometimes the smoke detector goes off when you’re cooking right? What does that really mean? There’s no real fire in your house. The smoke detector is just kind of more sensitive to whatever smoke is going on. So, it’s giving you a false alarm, there’s no fire. Jujimufu: So, you’re saying some pain receptors are more sensitive? Stefi: Yeah. Juimufu: So, there is a pain response for no reason? Stefi: That can absolutely happen, because like I said, pain starts in the brain. It’s a perceptual thing. Pain is a perceptual thing that can arise from emotions. Like, for example, um, if you’ve gotten injured doing a deadlift, right? And you actually messed up a ligament, or you messed up a disc, or whatever, and it took you a couple of weeks to recover. The pain goes away, whatever. You heal. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 139 Stefi: And then sometimes next year you bend over to deadlift, and the pain comes back. Nothing really happened to your disc this time. You get an MRI, it’s fine. But you still experienced the pain. It 100% can be tied to the emotional component of doing a deadlift and the perception that you have from doing that movement. Jujimufu: How do you fix that? Stefi: So, I’ll tell you, another cool, really cool example. There’s this researcher, Lorimer Moseley, and he talked a lot about that, that’s what he does the bulk of his research in. And he tells a story about one time that he was doing a hike in a mountain. He’s walking, he trips on something that catches his leg. He feels it, “Ah, that, that bothered my leg a little bit.” He keeps walking for like, 10 more minutes, and then all of a sudden he starts feeling faint. He’s feeling like he’s going to throw up, he passes out, wakes up in the hospital and they tell him that he got bit by a super poisonous snake. Stefi: But, he barely felt it, because in his brain that didn’t register as something that was dangerous. The second time, say two years later, he was in a very similar situation: taking a hike. He felt a branch poke him on the shin, and the pain response was completely different. Like it was extreme. He was grabbing his leg, and like fell on the floor and was crying and thought that something terrible had happened. But it was just a branch. When he inspected his leg, it was just a branch. So, it just goes to show how your brain can perceive different situations differently, and either amplify or diminish the pain signal depending on the emotional attachment and the perception of that particular situation. That’s called sensitization, which is what I was talking about: the smoke alarm. 140 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Stefi: Sensitization can do exactly that. Your brain perceives something, magnifies something, or diminishes something. The opposite of sensitization is habituation, and that’s pretty much trying to restore the normal way. Habituation is the answer to your question: “How do you fix that?” That’s just kind of trying to restore a normal response from your brain. And there’s different ways of doing that really, depending on the injury. But I’ll tell you… I’ll tell you how I did it for my lower back injury for example. Jujimufu: Was your lower back a smoke alarm? Stefi: Yeah. It was really bad. I went to four different people, it hurt so much, like I could barely walk. I went to four different people and I got four different diagnoses, and I was really frustrated because I didn’t know, and I’m a PT myself! So I had five different diagnoses then! I had one myself! Right? Jujimufu: Jesus, Stefi: Right. I had no idea what was going on and um, where was I going with this story? Oh yeah, this is sensational! Jujimufu: LOL Stefi: This injury kept recurring every year, it would come back and back and back. And one of the ways that I’ve been able to get past it, every time, and not only get past it but surpass whatever weights I’ve been lifting… You know, it’s a mental block: It’s your back, you need that a lot. Right? Jujimufu: It’s connected to everything. Stefi: Exactly. Juimufu: In my opinion back injuries are the worst injuries. OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 141 Stefi: Absolutely. There’s a very strong emotional component to back injuries, just because there’s a vital organ that goes through it. You know, you have your spinal cord, that’s there, you kinda need that. And it’s just kind of the base of everything. So, every time that I’ve had that injury, I’ve had to go through the psychological portion of dealing with the injury, which is even more important than the physical portion, because once it’s been long enough after the injury, you know for a fact that you’re healed. Based on physiological healing, your bones are healed, your ligaments are healed, your tendons, muscles are healed, but you’re still experiencing pain. Stefi: So that’s when, you know, all right, like I need to, in my mind get past this. For me, it was always bending forward. That hurt. I couldn’t touch my toes without being in excruciating pain. And it was extremely stiff. So, habituation exercises for your spine involve putting yourself in the position that you’re trying to restore without putting yourself in that position. That brings back the pain signal, the perception. For example, you can still perform spine flexion, but not only by bending forward. This was one of the exercises that I used to do for my back. (Stefi is sitting in a chair). So, you bring your legs up while you’re sitting down and then you point your head down, and then you point your toes down. That is spine flexion. But I’m not standing, I’m not bending over to pick up a barbell, so I don’t associate that as painful. So just kind of slowly exposing yourself to the movement that your body perceives as painful, to try to rewire your brain and tell your brain, “Hey, this position that I’m putting myself in is safe, there’s no reason why you should be turning on that pain alarm. There’s no reason why this should be painful. This is a safe position for you.” Essentially. 142 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES Jujimufu: Have you heard of Phantom limb pain? Stefi: Yeah. Jujimufu: The mirror box. Stefi: Yeah. Yeah. Jujimufu: Is that a treatment related to this. Stefi: Yeah. Um, yeah, similar to an extent. It is habituation. You’re telling your brain, “Hey, look, you know, there’s no arm, you shouldn’t be experiencing that pain.” Stefi: Whatever. It’s the same thing or similar. Jujimufu: I love how I asked you about this and you have all these notes on your phone. Stefi: YEAH! Yeah. And I think about this a lot. Jujimufu: This is great. Stefi: Okay. Uh, third or fourth, whatever, I lost track! Understanding that tissue adaptation takes time. And we briefly alluded to that at the beginning. Just understanding different healing times and understanding that most injuries, if not all, occur when the load that you’re applying to the tissues or your body exceeds the tissue tolerance or the tissue capacity. So, there is an equation that has two parts. You have the load, and then you have the tissue tolerance or the capacity. Obviously increasing the capacity of those tissues is going to be beneficial in the long run. Like when you’re getting back from that injury, understanding that the other part of the equation is the load. Load management is huge. Sometimes people get super hung up OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 143 on what the diagnosis of the particular injury is. But what it is, is not that important because most injuries, if not all, happened because the load was too much. Stefi: So, don’t get so hung up on what the name that the doctor wants to give it is, just focus on the solution to the problem and understand the essence, because they’re the same. The plan of care is usually the same for almost every injury. Jujimufu: So, you’re saying that you weren’t strong enough for the load, and now you’re weaker because you’re injured, and now you have to strengthen the area again? Is that true? Stefi: Yeah. The load that you were lifting or that you put your body through exceeded what the tissues could withstand. It doesn’t always have to be a weight thing either. Let’s say you’re a construction worker, you bend over, your maximum capacity or tolerance was 100 bend overs a day, and you did 101, so your back got messed up. It’s because you did too many reps. You know? There’s only so much that your ligaments, tendons, muscles, and spine can hold. Nothing is forever. Nothing is infinite. Something has to give at some point if you don’t keep increasing the tolerance of the tissue or manage your loads. So, it’s that two part equation that you always need to kind of have in balance. You can’t always lift at 100% right? That’s why you modulate your intensity week by week. If you want to keep lifting at 100%, 102%, 105% then you also have to strengthen not only your muscles, but also your tendons and your ligaments. Like, that’s why we do accessories, you know? And that’s why we do all the other things that we do. So thatJujimufu: Other goofy exercises that people don’t want to do because they’re boring, but if they actually want to be able to 144 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES do their 101%, 102%, 105%, 110% on their competitive liftsStefi: That has to go up. Jujimufu: If that’s their goal, that other stuff has to go up too. Stefi: It’s a 1 to 1 relationship, you increase the load, you increase your tissue capacity. Once one is out of whack, then you’re pretty much guaranteed to have an injury. So, there is a lot of talk on tissue capacity. Say if you go on Instagram or YouTube, there are so many different exercises that you should be doing for your knee health, whatever. What about load management?! Load management is huge! And not only in powerlifting, but in anything. And say arm wrestling, how many reps and sets are you doing? Like you can’t always do 100 reps, eh, what’s that called? Jujimufu: Arm Movement things against other people? Pfff haha! Stefi: Every week. Right? You gotta undulate that somehow. Sometimes you’re not going to do a hundred. Sometimes you’re only going to do 20, to let your body recover from them. Jujimufu: Sometimes you deload. It’s basic programming. Stefi: Exactly. Hayden: Yeah. Load in that sense is sort of like an all encompassing term. Stefi: Exactly. And then understanding why does the injury happen in the first place? So, you have the load, and then you have the tissue tolerance or the capacity, and in between there’s um, is what I call a margin of safety. That margin of safety gets really, really thin once you’ve had an injury. Or when, um, when you’re OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 145 in the acute phases of an injury, for example. You have almost no room for play. When you get further and further from the injury, you’re recovering, then that margin of safety gets longer. Jujimufu: You have to be careful right after an injury. Stefi: You gotta be very careful. You have a very small margin of safety, so maybe you used to do 4 sets of 10 in the leg press, whatever, if you’re trying to rehab your knee, you might only be able to get one set of six, and that’s okay for that portion of the other recovery process. Yeah. So, understand that the more acute the injury, the smaller the margin of safety. The further away you get from the injury, and the better you get at pain tolerance, the bigger that margin of safety. Jujimufu: But, even if it’s just one set of six with a very small margin of safety, that’s going to increase your margin of safety because that’s what you need. Stefi: Exactly. You have to go there! You can’t just avoid pain, you can’t just avoid movements forever. You have to put yourself in the positions of pain. So if it’s flexion, you have to put yourself in that position. Otherwise, you’re always going to fear it and the pain is always going to come back, and you also have to move, so that you can increase the tissue capacity and tolerance so that you can get back to increasing loads. Hayden: You also have a level of pain. Right? That’s acceptable in those areas. Stefi: Yeah. So, how do you choose whether or not you should do an exercise? You’d just use a mental pain threshold. Like a pain scale and… And obviously it’s subjective. It’s hard because 146 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES some people have bigger and smaller pain tolerances, but maybe this is the only way they’ve been able to kind of manage loads. So, you have a scale from 0 to 10, 10 being the most painful, 0 being no pain at all. As long as you stay below a 3, you’re good. Jujimufu: Yeah. Wow. Below a 3? Stefi: Below a 3. You should never be pushing past a 3 when you have an injury, Jujimufu: An acute injury. Stefi: Yeah. An acute injury. Jujimufu: Okay. Stefi: Exactly. There’s no reason to go higher. 3 is a good point where you should stop and avoid that moment that you’re doing. It’s not going to serve you any good past a 3. Jujimufu: That’s news to me. 3. I would have thought it was like a 5. I’m not arguing with it. Hayden: Hey. I was just telling her that my whole life was a 5 on the pain scale. 24 hours a day. It really took me having to take a step back and thinking about that stuff a lot more to get to the point where I’m at now, where I’m pretty much training pain free, 100% of the time. Stefi: And it was your best training cycle ever. Hayden: Yeah, totally. Yeah. Stefi: Then once you’ve done all of that, the best place to start is isometrics. It’s like the safest type of contraction. Once you OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 147 have an injury, what kind of exercises should you start doing: isometrics. That’s the answer for all of them. If you have Patellar tendonitis: isometrics, like a wall sit, for example. Maybe you have back pain: bird dog, dead bug, side plank, plank. Jujimufu: In isometric form? Stefi: Yeah. Jujimufu: You just, yeah, yeah. Have you done these and found that they work for you? Stefi: Absolutely. Yeah, so I mean, they work. We don’t understand a hundred percent why they work, but we do know that they help modulate pain because of something called exercise induced analgesia. Basically, isometrics activate certain receptors in the muscle that attenuates the pain signal in your brain temporarily. That’s huge if your back is hurting, and you can do an exercise and then be pain free for three, four hours. That’s huge. Then you do them again and you’re pain free for three more hours, and again and again and again. Those are exercises that you should be doing frequently, when you’re in that stage. Isometrics, and then eccentrics, that’s essentially like, the process. Jujimufu: Nice. Stefi: And then finally, just finding out what the root cause of it was. You know, some people might need to go see someone who’s a specialist in movement and try to see if there’s any movement corrections that need addressed. For most people at the highest level, there is no technique or movement correction they need to do. It was just either a freak accident or just one of those cases when the load exceeded the capacity. So, not all 148 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES cases need a movement correction, but if it’s a beginner, and they’re getting injured, and it’s frequently, like, getting injured: you bet that it’s something mechanical, something in their movement that’s not right. Jujimufu: Right. No, I like just the, uh, the technique is just not right that they’re doing, or if something’s putting them at risk that they’re doing. Stefi: I mean, think about it. I’ll give you an example. You have someone that, um, I don’t know, is leaning to the left in a squat and even like, it could be only a little bit, what’s that gonna do after a thousand reps? It’s like having a car that’s out of alignment. What’s that gonna do to the wheels? One wheel is going to get more worn out than the others. So, same thing in this case. You have a beginner lifter, and they keep getting hip pain, or they keep getting glute pain, back pain, or whatever it is, and then you look at their squat and they have a shift. You’re going to have to address the question “Why is a shift happening?” Okay. Is it limited hip mobility and is there something in the hip capsule that’s preventing it from going full flexion, full extension, or internal rotation, or whatever? Is it motor control? Are they just like, not proficient with a movement? Is it some sort of muscular imbalance from any muscular asymmetry from one leg to the other? Or what is the actual root cause of it that’s leading to the pain? Especially when someone gets injured frequently. Jujimufu: Yeah. It’s different from just going to see a doctor and seeing what happened. Like you said, you know…. Stefi: It doesn’t matter what happened, it doesn’t matter what the name of the injury is! What are the steps that you’re going OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES 149 to take, (the ones that I just addressed), and why did it happen in the first place? Those are the two questions that you should ask someone, or yourself. Not “What it is,” who cares what it is! What name you want to give it... I bet you go to five different people and you get five different answers. Or do you think an MRI is specific enough? Well, it’s not. Like, there’s this study I just read where they took the same person to… how many different MRIs? It was something ridiculous, like eight different MRI places and the sensitivity was like 30%, which is not good. Hayden: What does that mean. Explain that. Stefi: It means that the accuracy at which they were able to identify pathology in the MRI wasn’t accurate at all. Stefi: It was only 30% accurate. And it’s the same case when you go to a healthcare professional, you might get five different diagnoses, especially with musculoskeletal injuries. Like, we’re not identifying brain tumors, you know? It’s not black and white. It’s actually very gray. So it has to do with what the PT, Physio, or Chiro has seen in the past, and what they believe is true, what their experience with athletes is. It doesn’t have anything to do at that point with what the injury actually is. And it doesn’t matter anyway. Jujimufu: Okay. Well, there’s one reason why you should go to a doctor. To get painkillers. Stefi: Oh my gosh. Jujimufu: Hahahahaha! Jujimufu: That was awesome. Thank you so much, Stefi! 150 OVERCOME TRAINING INJURIES CONNECT WITH ME I hope you enjoyed this book! One key motivation I had in writing this book was to gift myself a reminder when I experience my own setbacks. This book is a great gift for anyone in your life who has recently experienced a training setback or otherwise. Check me out on the internet, you can find me in various places such as: www.jujimufu.com www.instagram.com/jujimufu www.youtube.com/jujimufu www.facebook.com/acrobolix Also, just run a Google Search for Jujimufu. Perhaps like this: https://www.google.com/search?q=jujimufu