Showing posts with label Laurie Denomme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laurie Denomme. Show all posts

Friday, May 25, 2012

Friday


First thing for the day was a fun master class with Mushi Harush, a trainer from Israel. Let's Have a Ball 2 used a children's playball, somewhat underinflated, as buoyant resistance. Movements with the ball varied from under to above water so there was relief from the pressure of holding it. We used the balls on our own; we used the balls in pairs. It was great fun, not least when somebody's ball would escape from under the water.









Then a workshop called Boomer Balance Basics & Beyond with Steph Toogood.
Not sure why "boomer" was part of the title, except that it begins with a B. The material really was more relevant to the elder elderly: how to design water exercise to enhance static and dynamic balance. In addition to emphasis on great posture, a balance workout emphasizes movements that reinforce the Activities of Daily Living. Squats use the muscles for sitting and lifting, lunges help with reaching and general stability, arms moving diagonally across the body mimic the fastening of a car seat belt. Steph recommended the book Bending the Aging Curve by Joseph Signorile as a good guide to the land version of this increasingly important area of exercise.

On to Laurie Denomme's Chair Repair: Aquatic Exercise for Seated Occupations.

This workshop was a natural companion to the balance one. Almost all of us sit too much. Many of us sit for hours and hours every day at a desk, in meetings, at the wheel of a vehicle, on the couch after work. Our muscles get imbalanced, contracted in the chest, weak in the back; hip flexors flexed too much, "gluteal amnesia" (Ruth Sova's phrase) at the back. Besides striving for ergonomically correct work stations and taking standing and stretch breaks, we can lessen the impact of our 9-to-5 position with good strategies for exercise. Mobility of the  hips, pelvis, spine, and scapula are essential, and movements should be driven from the top down and the bottom up. Core strength, basically. PNF is useful here, and remembering to move in all 3 planes.

Laurie's workout had some partner work with noodles, things I'd done before, but DUH! why did it never occur to me to cross the noodles between the partners? Diagonals! Great!

Last workshop of the day was Pauline Ivens' Choreography for the Core.
Are you beginning to sense a theme here? The core, the core, the core. It's not just that it's a fitness fad. (Well, it is, but for good reason.) A strong core provides the stable foundation for all movement. And Pauline emphasized that supine crunches are getting frowned upon in the physical therapy world. The curl is not a functional position; it targets only the rectus abdominus and shortens rather than strengthens it to support the elongated spine. Repetitive lumbar spinal flexion even puts the discs at risk. Much better to move the spine as a complete unit, to use multiple muscles to brace and resist turbulence, imbalance, and instability, which is what we need a strong and functional core for on land and in the water anyway. Pauline had a great cross-country ski move astride the noodle with one hand grasping the noodle in the front and the other at the back. With hands tied up this way you have to rely on core strength to balance.

Friday evening was the big Puttin' on the Ritz dinner and whoop-de-do. I confess I was so pooped I left after dinner and skipped the whoop-de-do.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Thursday

If I am indeed the wet ptarmigan, then I have surely come home here in Florida. Wet ptarmigan, soggy ptarmigan, moist ptarmigan, humid ptarmigan, waterlogged ptarmigan, mildewed ptarmigan, take your pick. It has rained here every day. Not all day, but some portion of it. Add to that being in and out of swimming pools up to 5 times a day, and some of my gear never dries out. The air feels so humid sometimes, it seems like you could pour it out of a cup or squeeze a handful and get a drink.  Paper feels like limp rags; the electronics on my room door lock pooped out today from the moisture. Not complaining, mind you, but it certainly is a drastic change from Alaska.



Up again with the birds (who were themselves pretty soggy, as it rained right up to starting time) to attend Karen Westfall's Liquid Force workshop. The Big Idea was to use the resistance of the water as effectively as possible.  It was strange to see Ms Westfall in person after being the consumer of so many of her videos. It surprised me that she's so small. From the way she moves in her videos, I had thought she was really tall.  Tall or small, she's a real powerhouse, and gave us a pool session that emphasized core strength and hard work while remaining mostly anchored to the floor. Often it involved a brief hesitation at the end of a move in order to lose momentum before starting the next. Karen has some great phrases for cueing--to keep your elbows in to the waist "close your armpits." To encourage long arm and leg moves, "keep your hands away from the shoulders; keep your feet away from the hips." The hesitations were called "freeze frame" or "snapshots".  Arms and legs often worked in opposition to create more turbulence and thereby more resistance. One interesting idea of Karen's is that drag equipment such as gloves and paddle bars should not be reserved entirely for raising the intensity of the fit participants. Drag equipment on the less fit can enable them to feel the force of the water and help them feel what they need to do when they move.



Next was A Different Slant on Aquafitness with Teri Mitchell. Teri says that muscles are often in diagonal lines on our bodies, yet when exercising we usually move at right angles as if we were in a box. This workshop was a focus on diagonal and spiral movement, using the ideas of PNF, Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation (how's that for a mouthful of syllables designed to make you sound like a hot-shot?) Diagonal movement is typical of many Activities of Daily Living (ADL's to the people who evaluate you for placement in assisted living or the nursing home). Fastening a car seat belt, for instance, washing a window, or reaching for the phone. As our bodies age, it is important to maintain our ability to move on the diagonal, and to move in ways where an extremity crosses the midline of the body. One of these PNF moves is what Teri calls the "curtsey kick", where the foot, let's say the right foot, starts out behind and to the left of center. The kick moves it from the back to the right front corner, from 8 to 1 o'clock if you think of yourself at the center of a clock face.


Hidro Argentina was a fun masterclass given by an instructor from, you guessed it, Argentina. Cristina Barcala speaks very little English, but she managed by sheer charisma and stupendous acting skills to not only convey the instructions for her workout, but to get the class to work in pairs, then in 3's, in lines, in halves, and for the grand finale, half the class was in the center of the pool doing something stationary while the other half swirled around it traveling and making turbulence. Incredible! 

Next up was Connie Jasinkas Teaching Deep/Shallow Combo Courses. When teaching in a pool with both deep and shallow water, we can end up either intentionally or unintentionally with people in both depths. This can feel frustrating, because some moves work well or are impossible in one side or the other. Connie showed how to teach both depths at once by clear cueing and by tailoring the version of each move to water depth, for instance having shallow people do a pendulum while deep people do a single leg side lift. Connie had a move for the deep (or suspended) that I'd never seen before. She called it a "tripod jack", although its action was hip rotation rather than the ab/adduction of the traditional jack. Legs are under the body with feet together and knees apart. Knees move together and apart while the feet stay the same and the core struggles to keep the trunk stable. Also in this class I got to try water horse flotation in the deep for the first time. Use the link to see what it is if you don't know what I'm talking about. I found it a whole lot better that straddling a noodle, because nothing could get in the way of your arm action and there was much less risk of falling off.

Is this seeming like a long day to you? It certainly was in person! And it's not nearly done yet!


Ruth Sova was next with Working on the Rehab Side. Thankfully, this was dry land only--I was feeling a bit prune-y after so many immersions. There was an overview of aquatic therapy and rehabilitation, some legal terms and considerations, client and facility considerations. There was a quick trip through some of the most common formats and techniques. They're listed here and linked to further information, should you care to know more:
The rest was Q&A from the varied perspectives of the audience. Some of us were Physical Therapists, some personal trainers, some plain old water aerobics teachers who have students prehabbing before orthopedic surgery or who are back in the water afterward to finish up and maintain their recovery.

One last class--a half hour Stretch Fusion Rejuvenation in the pool with Laurie Denomme. This was just the right thing after such a long exhausting day.

And one more little curiosity before I'm done. At one point I was wandering past a pool and saw this:
Can you tell what it is in the water? Sharks? Robots? Aliens? None of the above. It's a pool full of aquatic stationary bikes! Here they are fishing one out to put away:
Just the ticket, I guess, if you don't like getting all hot and sweaty in your spinning class!