Hyper mobile?
I maintain that a sign of a good training
course is that it stimulates a change in thought patterns. Last week I was
blown away by Yin Yoga, I still am. However there are other aspects of the
training provided by The Yoga People which have really impressed me, and if I
ever design a training programme, I will ‘borrow’ this practical session.
The area of study is functional anatomy,
and we spent a considerable amount of time comparing the differences as well as
the similarities in the shape and construction of the pelvis, using the 30
people in the room as a study population.
This little bit of research revealed an
interesting and blindingly obvious result,
EVERYONE IS DIFFERENT.
The purpose of this study is to bring home
the importance that, as everyone is unique in pelvic shape and form, and unique
in movement history and use, and individual in every other way, it is
impossible that one pose, movement or asana (it is yoga) can be achieved in the
same way for everyone- obvious isn’t it. So why do trainings and teachers, even
with huge amounts of experience insist that a pose is only correct (I hate that
term) if it looks perfect? Why do teachers force legs wider, turn hips square,
push bodies down, make forceful adjustments to achieve the perfect (who defines
perfect?) shape, and why is achieving that perfect shape so important. I
suspect it’s aesthetics, it looks beautiful, and ease and grace are often used
to describe someone who has a perfect practice, all very judgmental and not
very yogic!!
I’m not really knocking yoga, but I am
critisising teaching that places clients, who are ‘naturally’ bendy ahead of
the ones who struggle to long sit or drop into splits. How many clients have
tried yoga only to be disillusioned because they are not ‘doing it right’ can’t
bind or do inversions or have to use a block! It seems to me that some yoga
classes are full of people who do not need more flexibility, how many
participants know the original reason why yoga asana were performed? Great for
the Pilates teachers out there, our classes are full of failed yoga
participants who think yoga is not for them, but I think it is sad that many
miss out on other aspects of yoga, in it’s widest definition.
Why this little rant? Well the functional
anatomy observation session made it easy to see that huge ranges of movement of
the femur in the hip socket is only available to some, the rest are not
hindered by short muscles but by the shape of their bones. Some cannot go
further into a wide legged position, internal or externally rotated because of
compression, literally the bone of the pelvis hitting the bone of the femur. No
amount of stretching can change this situation. No amount of manual adjustment
can make it better unless breaking a bone is thought appropriate.
In the arts, where range of movement is
important, such as ballet, Xray’s of the pelvis are used to check out the shape
and depth of the hip sockets, no amount of stretching can significantly change
basic bone structure without injury and the dancers with inadequate pelvis
shapes are not offered places at ballet school, ballet however is all about aesthetics.
This is important to know in all movement
disciplines, a simple change in angle can facilitate a huge difference in Range
of Movement, being pedantic about foot position or pelvis direction is not
serving the client and may create unnecessary pain or injury both physically
and mentally.
The question is; when is a huge range of
movement due to a lack of compression (the skeleton restricting the movement)
and when is it due to joint hyper mobility syndrome. I often hear people
describe themselves as hyper mobile because they have a huge range of movement,
is this really the case?
Joint Hyper mobility syndrome is not to be
admired or wished for, it is caused by genetic defects affecting the encoding
of collagen( Beighton et al.1999, Bird.2005, Grahame.2009) anyone who has this
syndrome is susceptible to trauma/overuse injuries. It is a complex condition,
with a wide range of clinical features:
- · Neurophysiological
- · Musculaoskeletal
- · Skin
- · Cardiopulmonary (asthma)
- · Chronic pain
- · Gastro- intestinal dysmotility
- · Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome.
- · Etc…..
Hyper mobility can be inherited, easily
tested for, using the Beighton Scale and currently there is no cure, so
management of the syndrome is the only option. The spectrum of the disease is
from being bendy with generalised joint hyper mobility to not being able to
walk because the joints are too floppy to stand up.
It is a connective tissue issue, Collagen
is one of the components of Fascia or connective tissue, and Fascia is
ubiquitous in the human body, if there is an issue with this tissue it will
affect the whole fascial network, hence the huge range of possible clinical
features. For many hyper mobility can be an asset but it comes with risk of injury.
I think that we all have areas of our body
which exhibit an ease or flexibility in the joint, often they are the site of
chronic injury, this can be caused by so many factors, I see very few truly hyper
mobile people, Pilates being one of the management options available to this
population.
Fascia is plastic in nature, think about
pushing your finger into a plastic bag, the resulting blister will not return
back to the original shape, if too much pressure is applied the plastic will
break. If ligaments are forcefully stretched they will break, or the resultant
stretch ‘blister’ will not return to its original length. Fascia can survive
the melting stretch as the tissue creeps back to it’s original length, however
whilst it is creeping back it is vulnerable to injury.
So next time someone tells you they are hyper
mobile, check if it is caused by lack of compression or by a connective tissue
issue. It may be that the lack of compression creating a huge range of movement
(a cause of pride in many) is masking an imbalance. Simply by adding variations
in movement vectors/angles or bending a limb will provide more space for
movement or elicit a stretch where it was not felt before.
November 2016
Thanks to The yoga People and Dr Jane
Simmonds.