Getting rid of lower back pain
How to loosen your back up
Imagine a magic pill.
Imagine that, while suffering with your back, somebody offered you a pill that would take your pain away and let you carry on as normal. Would you take it?
You would, wouldn't you? Who wouldn't?
But what if you knew that taking it meant that, next time, your back would go much sooner — and that the pain would then be a lot worse? Would you still take the pill?
Hmm, maybe not, but what's the alternative?
The alternative is to loosen your back up
so that it feels easier all the time and doesn't keep on twanging on you.
“How do I do that”?
You do it by hugging a cushion
Take a cushion or a pillow and fold it as much as you can. Then hold it firmly against your belly, directly over your belly-button. Hold it with both arms, as though you were embracing it.
Start hugging the cushion while standing up. Later, you can sit down if you want — or walk around.
As you're standing, hugging the cushion to your belly, imagine your upper body curving over it. Continue by imagining the sides of your belly also coming around the cushion on both sides. Then add your hips: imagine your hips coming gently forwards underneath, stretching around the cushion.
It's as though you were intending to engulf, to completely surround the cushion
But what's the point of that?
The point is this: doing it will allow your back gradually to loosen up. Why would hugging a cushion do that?
Here's why. If you try to stretch your back, it doesn't work. There's a reason for that. Even while you try to stretch your back, the pain (and the fear of more pain) causes you to stiffen and clench. The more you try to stretch, the more the pain makes you tighten up. The process becomes self-defeating and you just end up with even more pain.
How do you defeat a self-defeating process?
By out-witting it. Pretend you're doing something else altogether. When you hug the cushion as I'm asking you to, you will be stretching your back muscles.
Stretching your back muscles is exactly what they need and, because you're not trying to stretch them, the pain won't stop you doing it. (If the pain does stop you, it means that you've stopped hugging the cushion and started trying to stretch your back. Don't do that: just hug the cushion.)
20 minutes later, you'll find yourself a whole lot looser and in much less pain.
So that's the first step. What else do you need to do?
Step 2: Lying down
If I asked you to lie down at first, you probably wouldn't be able to. It would be too painful. So you need to hug the cushion first.
When you've hugged the cushion, go and lie down on the floor. If you need help, you'll find it in the action plan at the end of this article.
The third thing you will need to do to make sure this process works (and stays working) is to understand pain.
Step 3: Understanding pain
When you understand pain better, you can interpret what it's telling you correctly and react more appropriately. Otherwise, you end up fighting the pain — and that just makes you tight as a tick.
When a certain movement always hurts, approach it differently. Instead of bracing yourself against the pain, accept that the movement will hurt and just move anyway.
When you do, when you just move without bracing against the pain, you do indeed get the sharp stab of pain that you expected — but then it's gone. The rest of that movement is surprisingly easy.
This is a difficult subject so I've devoted a whole article to it. You'll find the link to it in the action plan at the bottom of this article.
The fourth step for getting rid of lower back pain is learning to use your heels.
Step 4: Using your heels
When you're progressing nicely with the above, there's another very useful (but more difficult) thing you can do: you can learn to use your heels more.
Why use your heels more? The tightness in people's backs is made a lot worse by how they stand and sit. Almost everyone stands and sits leaning backwards. That takes weight off their heels. They usually don't think they're leaning backwards but they are.
Learning to use your heels more will help you correct that. As you do, your back will lengthen and widen. It will begin to free up nicely. You can't imagine how wonderful that feels until you've actually experienced it.
I've written a whole article on learning how to use your heels more. It's called: “How to be ‘in the zone’ when working at your desk”. Read it and do what it says. The link is at the bottom of this article.
Is there anything else?
Those four steps (hugging a cushion, lying down, understanding pain and using your heels) should keep you busy — but there's more to come. This will include:
- Where is your head joined to your body? Learn how to stop bending your neck to move your head.
- How to stop straining and bending your back when you reach for something. Learn where your hip joints are. (Did you know that almost everyone believes their hip joints are about eight inches higher than they really are)?
Look out for this information in future articles. If you're not already receiving these articles by e-mail, then go here to request them.
Do it now and make sure you don't miss those articles.
If you have any questions, e-mail me.
Never again will you need to wish for that magic pill.
Action Plan
Now it's time to put what you've just read into practice. Ideally start now. If you can't, start as soon as you can.
Here's your four-part action plan –
1. Hug a cushion
(see above to remind you what to do).
2. Practice your lying down
There's a best way to lie down. It's called semi-supine.
Just lying down on the floor any old way is good.
Lying down in semi-supine is much more effective.
I've written a series of six articles that explain how to do semi-supine. Read the first article — and then lie down in the way it tells you to.
Here's the first article on semi-supine.
Is lying down painful? You can find how to deal with the pain here
Don't bother with the other articles just yet (but make sure you come back to them some time soon). The full series is here.
3. Understand what your pain is telling you
Read the article on understanding pain. A crystal clear understanding of what pain is about is essential, so don't skip this step.
4. Use your heels
The “in the zone” article tells you how. Find it here.
My upcoming book, “Lazy Tension”, will also provide illustrations and video demonstrations on DVD.
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