Hi,
I injured my back in early february of this year and got diagnosed with scoliosis
and a protruding disc in the L5 S1 lumbar spine area about two weeks ago. I found your book about a week before I was diagnosed and I started with lessons one and two with immediate results. I even stopped taking the anti-inflammatory and muscle relaxant I was prescribed the day after I started the exercises because I hardly felt any pain and that is still the case. For about a week now I have felt discomfort
in my lower back while stretchlying and I feel as if though my lower back is swaywed and I might be anteverting my pelvis too much. Is that possible? Thanks.
I injured my back in early february of this year and got diagnosed with scoliosis
and a protruding disc in the L5 S1 lumbar spine area about two weeks ago. I found your book about a week before I was diagnosed and I started with lessons one and two with immediate results. I even stopped taking the anti-inflammatory and muscle relaxant I was prescribed the day after I started the exercises because I hardly felt any pain and that is still the case. For about a week now I have felt discomfort
in my lower back while stretchlying and I feel as if though my lower back is swaywed and I might be anteverting my pelvis too much. Is that possible? Thanks.
9 hours 37 min ago
09/10/2008 - 8:36pm
14 years 4 months ago
07/21/2010 - 12:51pm
8 months 2 weeks ago
08/01/2010 - 1:35pm
9 hours 37 min ago
09/10/2008 - 8:36pm
A pillow under the knees does allow the psoas to adjust to a shorter resting length (just like prolonged sitting does), but I make this recommendation anyway for the following reasons. Most people have short psoas muscles to begin with - the pillow under the knees simply accommodates for the shortened muscles. If you persist in using the pillow under the knees and do nothing else to stretch the psoas, you are perpetuating the short psoas problem, but if you do away with the pillow, your tight psoas is likely to cause your back to sway and compromise your discs / nerves / muscles / blood flow around the spine. My recommendation is to use a pillow (or two or three or...) under the knees if that feels comfortable, make a mental note that you need to stretch your psoas, and do so by learning to walk with the heels remaining on the ground in the rear (push-off) leg for an extended time. This way you get a psoas stretch with every step you take, you don't have to worry about shortening your psoas, and your night's sleep is not disturbed by distortion in the spine caused by a tight psoas.