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The injuries are mounting
Posted by dheun
5/8/2009  7:18:00 AM
Those of us who enjoy watching Dancing With the Stars or similar competitions are noticing that several celebrities or pros are suffering injuries. This is to be expected in any sport or art form that uses the body, particularly the knees and legs, so extensively.
I have two questions. First, does anyone think these celebrities are getting thrown into something way over their heads, in terms of the training regimen for this competition?
And second, as I get longer in the tooth, I see friends in their late 50s and early 60s having hips and knees replaced and such. I am noticing more soreness in those regions, of course, but remain intact pretty well. Is there anything that can be done to alleviate some of this, and keep these old wheels rolling along?

Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by kaiara
5/8/2009  10:02:00 AM
I'm not a competitor but having come from injuries in other activities, I found the combination of a chiropractor, a trainer at the gym, and plenty of ice went a long way to helping me continue to dance without recourse to knee replacement. So far it is working, with the addition of a nice stretchy brace for support while dancing, and a couple of diet changes which decreased my body's tendency to inflammation.

I've a friend who recently replaced both knees and it seems to have been a good choice so that he could keep on dancing.

What channel has Dancing with the Stars?
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by belleofyourball
5/8/2009  8:23:00 PM
Dancing with the stars is ABC.

I also spend lots of time with my chiro...he usually asks what I did, rolls his eyes at me and puts it all back. My pro also gets massages and hits the chiro once a week.

(ps a brookstone foot deal the irub I think its called...traps your feet and rubs...so worth the money)

Good luck!!
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by kaiara
5/9/2009  5:43:00 AM
I'm very fortunate that my chiro also dances, swing I believe is her thing, but it means she really gets me and why I keep doing ballroom.
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by Cyd
5/8/2009  8:53:00 PM
Kaiara. In Australia Channel 7 has Dancing With The Stars.
Injuries. I watch this International couple and the warm up they do before a lesson. They spend at least 45 minutes dancing apart before coming together. Even then for another half hour they dance a very subdued and extremely slow set of steps. Which brings me to a senior in his age group, a National Champion, with his partner went into the first three of a Natural and never danced again.
Anybody who enters a Studio a few minutes before their lesson is asking for trouble, any age young or older.
Has anybody noticed that the tennis player Nadal wears a band under each knee. Being that he runs like a hare i would say they are there as a safe guard.. Also how many do you see wearing a thing around their thigh and playing.
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by terence2
5/9/2009  12:33:00 AM
There is no hard and fast rule ( apparently ).. Ive been dancing and teaching ( over 50yrs teaching and add 15 as a student ) never warmed up , never had a problem. A famous world champion ( 8 times ) was asked the same Q.. he said he never warmed up before comps or shows..

Now, I,m not advocating no warm up, most people do need a" stretch ".. i just never have found the need.
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by dheun
5/9/2009  8:50:00 AM
I'm very much like you, Terence, which is why I asked the question. I've been lucky so far, but can tell my legs are a little more tired and a little more sore with each passing year. I don't warm up much either, but I think I am going to make sure I at least stretch my Achilles tendon some and loosen up the back, and do some knee bends or something -- to make sure everything is working the way it is supposed to.
My dancing is strictly hobby and moonlighting as instructor, but I do it a lot. My regular job is at a desk for the most part, and unfortunately that is like a prison sentence. There were some good ideas on this post about some of those stretch bands and muscle supports.
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by kaiara
5/9/2009  4:57:00 PM
Sports medicine is now recommending a warm up that is more general than the stretching. My hubby always did at least a mile (sometimes he would do five miles) walk at a brisk pace to warm up and loosen all his muscles before he did anything athletic--like running with the university track team (no injuries ever)--and I find I am less sore if I have done some warm-up walking. Stretching is good if you have something particularly tight, but the studies indicate that most athletes stretch too far and increase the odds of injury.

If I remember where I found the article I will post it as it has really helped me.
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by dheun
5/10/2009  4:53:00 PM
Kaiara, I totally agree, because walking and yoga are probably my two most prominent exercises. I swear by yoga, as it took care of some back problems I had about five years ago. I am a freelance sports writer and when I had to cover a game, I would be sitting on a hard seat or even bleachers sometimes, for a couple of hours or more. I could barely walk after an assignment. But I started doing yoga, and it must have stretched out some muscles or something that was pinching in my back. After a year of yoga, I could sit through three straight basketball games and not feel a thing. And I am certain that the yoga made my core stronger for dancing at the same time.
Re: The injuries are mounting
Posted by kaiara
5/11/2009  2:53:00 PM
My grandmother always pushed vegetables, fresh fruits, organic, and walking MILES a day. Preferably waist deep in the surf.

She is 99, turns 100 this November.

At her 90th birthday party, she drank wine, ditched her shoes and hose, and danced with every man at the party, flirted with every single guy there, danced until her grandkids were begging her to give it up and let us all go home to sleep.

She got up the next morning chipper and energetic!

I find a good brisk walk does more to limber me up and relax anything that is stiff than anything else I do--and it works for both dancing and singing.


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