Thursday, June 28, 2012

Pain Relief for racers at Bayfield Race Week!

My colleague, BeckySue, and I are providing massage for the racers during Bayfield Race Week 2012 in Bayfield, WI. As a pain relief specialist I want to know how I can best help them. To answer my own questions, I thought about what kinds of pain people who sail might have. I thought more and I tried to mimic some of the repetitive actions used in sailing to get more ideas. I researched pain associated with sailing. I even interviewed someone from the Wayzata Yacht Club.

What I found out was that most people have pain between their shoulder and their neck. Many have forearm pain in an area that we massage therapists call the "wad of three," (For more information about forearm pain, please read my blog post entitled Tour De Cycling Anatomy). Still others have low back pain and knee pain.
There is a famous quote by Ida Rolf, a founder of the structural integration types of bodywork. It goes: "Where you think it is, it ain't." I want to relieve pain by correcting postural malalignment, breaking up adhesions, restoring muscles to a more normal resting length and freeing nerves that may be entraped by soft-tissue.

When Bayfield Race Week racers come to me for their massage, I will provide a brief but solid assessment: Is one shoulder higher or lower? More anterior? Do they stand with a forward bend?When they stand, do I see the back of the hands? These types of observations give me clues about the kind of pain they may be experiencing.  For example, if I see a high shoulder on the right, I can lengthen the muscles that elevate the shoulder. On the low side, I can restore the shoulder depressors to a more normal resting length. Similarily if I see a lot of the back of their hands, I know that the "medial rotators of the humerus" will need some TLC. If they bend forward when standing, I can lengthen the muscles that flex the hips, thereby taking some strain off the muscles that are stuck check reining the spinal flexion.


So... you might be wondering what does all of this mean to the Bayfield Race Week racers, in English?  It means that I use Precision Neuromuscular Therapy techniques to address structural shifts, restore muscles to a more normal resting length, relieve trigger points that can refer pain, and free nerve entrapments. People LOVE the way they feel when they are closer to neutral balance alignment and the work feels GREATwhile it is being performed!

Thanks for reading and have a remarkable, pain-free Bayfield Race Week!

Gina McCafferty, LMT
Pain Relief Specialist

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