Sunday, September 21, 2014

Flexible Bodies or Flexible Minds: Less down time for runners




No matter what your age, level of experience, or current fitness level is wouldn’t you like to experience less downtime as a runner or hiker?  Though our ages may vary across a wide spectrum, and our structure may be unique, there is a common factor that we all possess, a common resource that we all have.  It is the brain. We can use both the conscious and unconscious processes of the brain to improve. Perhaps you follow the commonly recommended ideas about stretching and strengthening. Simply doing static or even dynamic stretching cannot improve your skill level. Only by increasing your awareness of the details of what you are actually doing, can you engage the learning process and use your best resource, your own brain and nervous system, to help you keep going in the long term. 

“I desire not flexible bodies, but flexible minds” – M. Feldenkrais

 Here are some tips:

1.  Put your feet on the ground. Whether you are a walker or a runner, you can only improve through experience.

2.  You move as an entire system, not a collection of parts. Notice the terrain above. It is rather rocky. It is not only the feet that must adapt to unusual terrain or circumstances but the entire body from head to foot. Stand on two feet and leaving your feet where they are begin to turn a little to the left and the right as if to look over your shoulder. Notice that there is movement from the foot to the head. Everything moves. Sometimes when you run, shift your attention back and forth between one part, say your feet, and your entire movement pattern. Shift back and forth between the part and the whole. Make this a habit on some of your runs, what does a shift in the use of the arms do to the entire pattern?  What does a shift in one part do to the overall sensation of ease? How do you feel the next day and how does your feeling relate to the details of what you were doing, to the tiny experiment you did. Keep learning.

     3.  Who are you? Know yourself.  Are you older, younger, taller, shorter, heavier , lighter, a speed athlete, an endurance athlete, currently rested, currently exhausted, injured or frequently injured, healthy, competitive, stressed, male , female, weekend warrior, consistent trainer. What is your current attitude toward running, toward life?  Be honest with yourself.
 

     4.  Know the difference between long and short term goals.  Do not sacrifice long term goals for shorter term ones. Look at the big picture.

      5.  Learn the word incremental.  Changes often occur and need to occur much more slowly and consistently than we think. Keep moving forward but do it incrementally with awareness. Sometimes the starting point is to visualize the movement you want and then only begin to do it a little at a time. 

      6.  Know that the more you know and can feel what you are doing, the more you can use the environment of running and walking as a way of healing instead of something to be laid off from while you heal or as a medium to injure yourself.  Running and walking provide good circulation and good strengthening and learning environments after an overuse injury but only if you know what you are doing, only if you know what to change.
 
S     7.  See a Feldenkrais practitioner for Awareness Through Movement® lessons and Functional Integration® lessons. 

       8.  Contact Transcendent Running with questions and to schedule sessions at:  scottrun400@yahoo.com
      Download our e-book at  www.transcendent-running.com
      Get Started working with Scott at:  www.transcendent-running.com/get-started
      or call Scott at 541-536-4821.