Thumbs Can Show Tightness That Leads to Upper Back Pain
Friday, October 27, 2006
Healthline
Healthy body position should be a natural easy part of daily life, not something you stop work to do as an exercise.
Unhealthy body positioning is more ingrained in daily life than many people realize. How can you tell your own positioning? Watch other people. See how many spend all day rounding their shoulders forward over their work and steering wheel, then further round their shoulders to stretch by bending forward, and do the unnecesary stretch of bringing one arm across the front of their body, then exercise by bending forward for crunches and leg lifts. The result of all this chronic forward bending is overstretching the back muscles and tightening your anterior (front) muscles. Many patients who come to see me, even those who can touch their toes and put one foot behind their head are so tight that they can't comfortably stand or sit straight. This is not just a problem of looking bad. It affects the health of your joints and muscles.
The post Breasts Causing Upper Back Pain is a Myth explained how overstretched back muscles and tight anterior muscles can promote the "forward head" and bent forward position that causes so much muscle strain and damage to the discs and joints of the back, shoulder, and neck. Many people "do neck exercises" never understanding that the exercises do not solve the problem of the chest muscles being too tight, and do not address how to hold healthy position. They stretch, believing that stretching prevents sports injuries, or that it is for doing contortions, but never know that the point of healthy stretching is to restore normal resting length just to stand and move in everyday life. They stretch in ways that exacerbates the problem they started with - rounding forward.
Try this to see if you round your shoulders:
- Use the photo, upper left, for reference.
- While standing with arms loosely at your sides, glance down at your hands.
- Do your thumbs face each other, as in the photo, instead of facing forward? That shows that tightness in front of your chest has rotated your arms inward (round shoulders).
- Does it feel awkward and unnatural to pull shoulders back so that your thumbs face forward? The point is to make it comfortable to be right, not force good positioning, which makes more strain.
- Check your thumb positioning while standing comfortably.
- Do the pectoral stretch, taught in the post Fixing Upper Back and Neck Pain.
- Right after doing the pectoral stretch, drop your arms loosely by your sides and glance down at your thumbs again.
- If you did the pectoral stretch right, your thumbs should now be facing more forward because you fixed the tightness that rounds shoulders and rotates arms inward.
Recommended Book:
Related Fitness Fixer:
- How Doctors Use The Wall Stand
- Nice Neck Stretch
- Fixing Upper Back and Neck Pain
- Quick, Feel-Good Upper Back and Chest Stretch
- What Does Stretching Do?
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Read and contribute your own success stories of these methods. Before asking questions, see if your answers are already here - click labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, and the Fitness Fixer Index. For answers to personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions.
Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books. For feedback take a Class. Top students may apply to certify through DrBookspan.com/Academy.
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Photo © copyright Dr. Bookspan from the book Fix Your Own Pain Without Drugs or Surgery
Labels: arm, chest, disc, fix pain, hand, neck, posture, shoulder, stretch, upper back
1 Comments:
At Sunday, September 13, 2009 1:42:00 PM, Susie said…
Hi Julie, I have not seen arthritic necks referred to on your blog, so I'll start by saying I was diagonosed with degenerative disk disease several years ago at C3. I also have very tight, hard shoulder muscles and I get tension headaches on occasion that throb at the base of my head. This is worse on movement. Physio and massage therapy worked temporarily and your 3 basic stretches have helped somewhat but I'm looking for exercises to eliminate these often delibitating tension headaches. Can you offer some exercises that could help me or should I stay with the basic 3?
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