Friday, 23 May 2014

Good advice.

Moving Beyond “No  Pain, No Gain”
 By Nancy Wozny and Rosie Gaynor

When you get injured, not dancing can be the smartest move.

On opening night of Coppélia last June, the light, sprightly Pacific Northwest Ballet powerhouse Kaori Nakamura tore a calf muscle midway through Act I. “I couldn’t point my foot,” she says. “It was so painful and numb.” During a moment offstage, the company director asked Nakamura the fateful question: Do you want to stop?

Every dancer gets injured at some point in her career, and the decision to pull out of a performance can be wrenching. But while dancers may be tempted, pushing through the pain can lead to a more serious injury that requires weeks of time off, months of physical therapy, possible surgery and even cause permanent damage. It’s a roll of the dice—and the risks are huge.

Even though they are aware of the consequences, many dancers choose to power through anyway. Eight weeks pregnant, Nakamura knew her next performance was a year away. “Of course I wanted to finish! I had worked so hard for this,” she says. She made it through the next two acts, but when the curtain went down, so did Nakamura. “I couldn’t walk,” she says. “I couldn’t even touch my calf, it was so painful.”

Pain, as Dr. William Hamilton, orthopedic consultant for New York City Ballet and American Ballet Theatre, points out, “is Mother Nature sending you the message that something is wrong, and that what you’re doing is keeping it from healing.”

But like any athlete, dancers deal with aches and pains almost daily. How do you recognize pain that is telling you to stop now? Traumatic pain like a snapped Achilles or ACL is obvious and impossible to ignore. “If you hear a pull, pop or the pain persists when you return to the activity, it needs to be evaluated,” says Dr. Patrick McCulloch, MD, an orthopedic surgeon with the Center for Performing Arts Medicine at The Methodist Hospital in Houston, TX. “Swelling and bruising are also signs that something is structurally wrong.” Slow-onset injuries are less startling, but can be just as dangerous to dance on. If it’s chronic pain that gradually worsens, “look for a certain sharpness and intensity of the symptoms that maybe you haven’t felt before,” says Boyd Bender, a physical therapist at PNB. “Another telltale sign is that this pain causes you to consciously compensate with another part of your body.”

Any pain that persists after 24 to 48 hours of rest, ice, compression, elevation and anti-inflammatories needs the help of a doctor. Dancers too often avoid seeking medical attention, afraid the doctor will put them on bed rest. But not getting a diagnosis is a dangerous choice. “Lower leg pain could just be shin splints—or it could be a stress fracture,” says McCulloch. Bender once worked with a dancer who refused to seek help for shin pains and eventually fractured his tibia, which required far more time off for surgery and healing. In a scary coda to the story, his tibia fractured again—onstage.

While talking to other dancers about symptoms and remedies can seem like a shortcut to a solution, your colleagues don’t necessarily have better information than you do. Plus, what works for someone else’s body might not work for yours. And dancers’ standard practices sometimes backfire. After consulting with a physical therapist on his back pain, for example, PNB principal Lucien Postlewaite discovered that the gently-stretch-it-when-it-hurts strategy “was actually the exact opposite of what I should have been doing; it was contributing to my injury!”

The paradox is that the very qualities it takes to be a dancer can turn against you here. The idea of persevering through pain is deeply ingrained in ballet culture—the show must go on, and self sacrifice is often romanticized, even considered heroic. Let’s face it: In order to gain the strength and flexibility needed to succeed in ballet, dancers endure tremendous discomfort, which they’re trained to ignore. But that same willingness to push yourself to the limit can end up affecting the longevity of your career.

To get back on your feet quickly, seek treatment as early as possible. “When you injure yourself, your body sort of turns on the healing switch,” says Hamilton. A change in your hormones results in “a great capacity for healing in the first month or so—if proper attention is given to the injury.” So, the sooner you rest up, the sooner you’ll be back onstage—and the longer you’re likely to be there.


Wednesday, 7 May 2014

A tip!

When to Foam Roll
 (Marissa Joseph, a personal trainer based in New York City and founder of Working Lines: Cross-Training for Professional Dancers (www.workinglines.org))
“There is almost no bad time to roll,” Joseph says. “If you had to pick one time for SMR*, however, I would tell you to roll out before class or rehearsal. SMR does a good job of promoting blood flow to the muscles you roll and irons out some of the kinks before a strenuous day’s work. Both effects are a vital part of preventing injury.”
Joseph adds that you should avoid SMR when your muscles are extremely sore. “Your muscles need time to heal when they are super sore, and foam rolling won’t help,” she says. “If your muscles are just a little sore, though, SMR is okay.”
*self-myofascial release (SMR)

Foam Rolling Works!
Joseph says she has had multiple success stories with clients who are dedicated with their foam rollers. Some have alleviated back, knee and foot pain.
Joseph says that foam rolling is imperative for athletes. And dancers are athletes! “It’s totally essential for health and should be done every day as part of your daily routine,” she says. “Even if you don’t feel you are particularly tight, I still recommend rolling. I couldn’t stress its importance enough.”
Read the article here.
Or read more on her personal blog here: www.workinglines.org

Saturday, 19 April 2014

Rest



"We do this every night as a habitual activity – it gets dark, we go to sleep… usually.

Outside of “sleep” dancers/performers/movers seem to find the concept of rest relatively unimportant and seem to think that “pushing through it” will be fine.

First, lets change the word rest to recovery – this sounds a little more active and therefore more appealing/acceptable. The point of recovery is to allow your muscles, nervous, immune, mental systems to repaire and process the stresses that are constantly being placed on them by pushing your physical ability. As we all know, fatigue leads to injury – injury leads to no dancing.

You can start your recovery training (yes, view it as a part of you training) by taking 20 minutes out of your day to let your parasympathetic system come back into play, allowing you to become more ‘anabolic’ and repair any damage to your body.
This 20 minutes should be something really simple and relaxing – meditation in any of its forms being the most beneficial, but anything counts – reading a book, listening to your favorite music, enjoying a cup of tea etc. etc. just make sure that is all you are doing for 20 minutes. Let the stress fade away."


This is taken directly from the blog of Athletic Artist, a site well worth visiting. HERE!

Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Little tip

From Pointe Magazine:

Tip: Stretch Deeper 
Want to get a better stretch? Hop on the foam roller first. “Rolling helps to break up adhesions in the muscle,” says Sally Donaubauer, a physical therapist at the Harkness Center for Dance Injuries. “It can also help mobilize the fascia around the muscles.” When the fascia (the connective tissue that surrounds your muscles) is loosened up, you can go further, getting a more productive stretch.

Friday, 4 April 2014

Sunday, 30 March 2014

Stretching

This is the link to a well written (and not too long) article about stretching- static verus dynamic.

Static vs. Dynamic stretching by Taylor Tollison.
Recommended reading :)

Summary

Current research work detailed in Medicine & Science in Sport and Exercise 33(3), pp354-358 and Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, vol 15 (1): 98-101 suggests that the use of dynamic stretches - slow controlled movements through the full range of motion - are the most appropriate exercises for warming up. By contrast, static stretches are more appropriate for the cool down at the end of the session. 


Friday, 28 March 2014

New shoes


Here is an article from a dance magazine about new pointe shoes released recently  - just so you know what's going on  out there. If you are looking for new shoes, please try to go to a professional fitter.
Pointe shoe picks from Dance Spirit Magazine:
Whether it’s your first pair or your 50th, picking out the right pointe shoes can be difficult. Dance Spirit talked to Victoria Lyman, owner of Allegro Dance Boutique in Evanston and Barrington, IL—the Joffrey Academy of Dance’s shop of choice—to get the lowdown on the latest shoes. These picks are comfortable, flexible and quieter than ever before. Finding your perfect pointe shoe just got a little bit easier!
Lyman says: “Your feet are always changing, so it’s important to make sure you’re fitted for shoes regularly.”
S13097_DS_Gaynor_01Grishko—Nova
Box narrows slightly, making it a good choice for dancers with tapered toes
Made with a new glue that reduces sound




S13097_DS_Bloch_02Bloch Inc.—Hanna, S0109L
Lower heel means less bunched-up fabric on pointe
Soft shank helps you get all the way over your box





S13097_DS_Gaynor_01Gaynor Minden—Standard Pink Satin Sleek Heel
Elastic drawstring ties on the side of the foot, so it’s easy to hide
Lining wicks moisture and helps keep your shoes smelling fresh
Sleek heel and profile show off your pretty arches




S13097_DS_Sodanca_02Só Dança—Claudia, SD09
Softer shank lets you roll through demi-pointe more easily
Supportive wings
Wide platform helps with balance



S13097_DS_Sansha_01Sansha—La Pointe No.3
Pre-darned platform—the work’s done for you!
High vamps, high sides and medium support make this shoe a good fit for feet of moderate strength and flexibility.
Hard shank will last through countless relevés



S13097_DS_Mirella_01Mirella —Whisper, MS140
Plush lining + built-in toe pad = super-comfortable
Lightweight and quiet




S13097_DS_Capeizio_02Capezio —Studio Pointe, 1122
Available with a super-hard shank that’s good for dancers with strong feet
Elastic drawstrings and binding keep the shoe from slipping off your heel