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Thread: Pain!
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02-22-2009, 06:18 PM #16
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02-22-2009, 08:37 PM #17MouseGuest
Generally I'm pain free all things considered. Occasionally I'll feel a twinge on my right patella. When I do I just stop the workout and go home. I'm not interested in working through pain at this stage. It's usually gone by the next workout.
That said I have had chronic and recurring tendonitis in my right forearm since my early 20s. It was so bad at one point that I couldn't directly train bis for over a year. Well it's starting to come back again although this feels a bit different. More in the elbow. At it's worst I feel like I can't fully straighten my arm out and lifting something like a heavy frying pan becomes nearly impossible. So far it doesn't prevent me from doing most exercises I normally do although I have been going a bit lighter on bis and tris to try and prevent further irritating it. I'm going to start icing it as well.
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02-22-2009, 08:51 PM #18
I have chronic ankle pain due to being overweight most of my life and doing months of treadmill work to drop weight last year. Not much seems to work so far, especially taking time off which makes it worse and even more stiff. I have tried naproxen for a while and had an injection of cortisone last year (that hurt like a mo'fo) but those were only short term solutions.
Occassionally my wrists are stiff (like today). But I chalk most of this up to being fat for years and out of shape. I am sure hoping this will change this year as the rest of the fat comes off.
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02-22-2009, 10:45 PM #19
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02-27-2009, 11:07 AM #20
Thanks, Esplendido, for bringing up this issue. I am so glad I'm not the only one who feels like an 80-year-old getting out of bed every morning!!
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02-27-2009, 11:12 AM #21
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02-27-2009, 11:24 AM #22
Now children! Behave!
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02-28-2009, 07:03 AM #23
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02-28-2009, 07:29 AM #24
I experienced neck pain constantly for over 20 years. Tried everything nothing helped. Next option was surgery to insert 2 steel rods either side of spine in neck. Permanent limited mobility. Started weight training against doctors orders no pain for over 3 years now. Funy thing is after 20 years living with it, it's the absence of pain that is noticable.
I suffered with bad knees for years. Doctors orders no contact sports no running no lifting heavy weights. Started to get hip pain in late 30s because I was walking incorrectly to compensate for knee pain. Started weight training against doctors orders. No more pain. and now I run 5km 5 days a week. That would have left me a hobbling mess for a week a few years ago.
So even though I get the odd tendon pain and my shoulder goes out for a week or two every now and again and I get joint pian occasionaly (usualy when I don't train correctly). I'm never stopping lifting. NEVER.
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03-12-2009, 05:27 AM #25
I'm 42 next week and been lifting for 24yrs. My competitive powerliftng days saw me with knee problems, but since moving on to the more forgiving bodybuilding diciplines, my aches and pains have subsided. I've torn my right pec and ripped my clavicle clean off my sternum and had various other injuries over the years but training one major bodypart each day means I don't rush my workouts and get sloppy.
Peaking for a masters comp right now (12wks out) and welcome doms when I get it and dissapointed if I don't. I train heavy but with what I consider to be good form and I believe this is what keeps me healthy.
I pray that I'm not tempting fate here!!!
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03-12-2009, 01:01 PM #26
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I have a torn rotator cuff, and no ACL in my right knee. The best combination of supplements that I have used to attenuate the pain is a combo of Glucosamine/Chondrotin and Cissus.
Usually the recommended daily amount of 1500-2000mg of Glucosamine/Chondrotin is the maint level.
When I noticed a difference is when I started taking 4000mg of Glucosamine/Chondrotin daily.
Combined with CISSUS I have definitely noticed fluid improvements in my ROM, and a lot less pain.
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03-12-2009, 01:43 PM #27
I'm 2 weeks from the end of my bulk and the beginning of precontest diet. I've beaten the hell out of my body to get it as big as I could (285lbs) and leaner at that weight than ever before in a bulk.
I crawl out of bed, my knees sore from the heavy leg work I've finally been able to do after 4 years of coddling. My left shoulder has a deep ache in it....not a rotator cuff injury, but something is strained and it hurts after chest and shoulder workouts.
I've really grown in my triceps, pushing down nearly 200lbs for reps on the pushdown machine, but my left triceps, the one I tore off and had reattched at the end of '06, is sore in a strange way. It hurts a little on the forearm side of the elbow but the triceps feels like it is strung too tight when I work it. I've been very careful with strict moves so as not to tear it again.....a career-ending injury if it happens according to my Ortho Dr.
I've worked my biceps hard, too.....to the point where their insertion at the shoulder is painful on the negative movement of heavy benches.....a very strange sensation because you really don't realize how many sympathetic muscles are used on the bench until they hurt. I require a lift-off on the bench with weight over 365 to avoid much of the pain in the biceps.
I cramped in every muscle except calves during and after workouts while bulking. I took potassium, calcium, sodium, magnesium supplements all the way, but the AAS protocol still allowed the cramping. The worst was lower ab cramps, which I'd get immediately following very heavy triceps pushdowns. My lats would cramp during the day when I pushed myself out of chairs. People looked at me strangely when they'd see my face screw up in pain at those moments.
But it's all been worth it! I'm bigger than I've ever been, stronger than I've ever been, and am finally growing legs to compliment my upper body. I'd be very happy if I could come in at 250, but would be happy with 245, even though that would still be too light for my height in an open class. In the 50-over, I'll be a monster.
My arms reached 20 1/2", the biggest they've ever been and I hope to keep them at 20" cut.....still somewhat light for my frame.
My real pride, however, are the changes Laurel has made in her physique! She'll be lucky to stay a lightweight....probably going to be a middle weight at 5'-2". She has a similar story to the above, but I'll let her tell it!Last edited by esplendido; 03-12-2009 at 01:48 PM.
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03-12-2009, 04:12 PM #28
This past year I've had 3 surgeries - foot, gums (impacted my diet for a few weeks) and shoulder scoping, spread out across the whole year, so I've had to adjust my training based on what I can support while the injured item is recovering. I've been very lucky to never have actually DONE something to myself while lifting. I've aggravated things and have a bucketful of tendonitis & bursitis, but the recovery time has forced me to get creative w/ my lifting, but also gives me a chance to focus on certain parts. E.g. after my foot surgery I couldn't do any body-supported lifts but started relying more on things like the Smith and a Power Squat rack, lowering my weights, up the reps and increasing the range to full ROM / ATF. When I had my shoulder surgery, I had to lay off bar-supported exercises or anything that required holding onto a machine for support. But I had several weeks to do things that relied on alternating legs - alt leg press, alt leg extension, etc. This has given me a lot of time to build up both knees joint strength (where I've got a pile of bursitis & my patellas don't track quick correctly over the joint), and I've got some nice quad growth. Now that my shoulder has healed, I'm also taking the same approach for tri growth.
"Pain" is good in the sense that it tells you where there are problems, and also forces you to work around things or find different ways to do things. In particular, I've had to step away from the LIFT BIG approach, and focus on more refined & tight moves.
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03-12-2009, 04:39 PM #29
As if you needed more size, Sassy!
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03-12-2009, 04:44 PM #30
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