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Popping joints/lax ligaments

Georgia
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05/21/2010 - 3:55pm
Popping joints/lax ligaments
Hi, I've been working on implementing the steps for a couple of weeks now and feel like I'm starting to sense my position and stay in it more automatically.  Some days my back has felt much better; other days I have had pain, perhaps because I'm trying to adjust to a different pillow, keeping my corset engaged, etc.    However, sometimes at night when I'm stretchlying, different bones in my back or sacrum pop.  I've been to a chiropractor off and on for years, so I thought perhaps my ligaments are stretched?  If this is the case, is there a way to tighten them so that I don't pop so much?  Thanks!
debjsd
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05/28/2010 - 3:03pm
I have also noticed this--so look forward to Esther's answer!
Nike
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05/11/2009 - 12:21pm
Hi, I have had this issue also...I took my chiropractor's advice and worked on strenghtening my muscles via weighlifting and pilates.  I do something called "super slow" which is heavy weights lifted slowly with a trainer on nautilus weight machines.  When my muscles are stronger, the ligaments/joints are less taxed and my overall integrity is better. I still pop and slip around when I'm tired, or when I don't exercise, but the issue is 90% resolved with minimal time at the gym.
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09/10/2008 - 8:36pm
Nike is absolutely right that strengthening your muscles, whether at a gym or doing another strengthening activity you enjoy, will stabilize your structure and reduce excessive popping and crunching. If you have lax ligaments, you especially want to have strong muscles. But your pops may be good pops. If two bones that have been jammed together finally ease apart, this creates a vacuum into which air rushes, creating a pop. In general, the pops that come with lengthening the spine gently are good pops. The pops that come with distorting the spine are harder to evaluate - these are better left to the expert bone crackers, the chiropractors. And in my opinion, you don't want to have those kind of pops repeated too often or you risk loosening your ligaments. If you find that your spine pops very frquently, whether from distorting it or from lengthening it, you need to ask yourself what you are doing or not doing) in between time. You don't want to jam, decompress, jam, decompress,..again, some additional strength can really help here.
Georgia
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05/21/2010 - 3:55pm
Thanks--I have noticed that since I've been using your steps, the popping has lessened so that is good!  :)
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It may just be that you are staying lengthened more consistently, so there isn't as much further lengthening to be had. I figure one lengthening pop per day at each vertebral level is fine. More is too much; less may mean, though not necessarily, that you are remaining compressed.
Robert.Cowham
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02/19/2013 - 2:57pm

Don't know if the popping is relevant, but I was amused when I first read this article:

http://blog.sethroberts.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/knuckle-cracking-for-50-years.pdf

Warned by relatives that knuckle cracking causes arthritis, Donald Unger decided to crack only the knuckles of his left hand. For 50 years he frequently cracked his left hand, never his right. Finally he wrote a letter to a scientific journal (in which he calls himself “the author”) pointing out that he did not have arthritis in either hand, supporting the conclusion of another study which studied a much smaller amount of knuckle cracking.

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