Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Diagnosed with Degenerative Disk Disease and Depressed about it?

At the age of 42, after an MRI, I too was diagnosed with Degenerative Disk Disease. I also had two bulging and one herniated disk in my low back. I went home, crawled into bed and cried, convinced that my body was aging beyond repair, and it would be all downhill from there.

The Bad News
Yes, with a diagnosis of Degenerative Disc Disease maybe your neck or back hurts. Worse, you have a condition with the word “degenerative” in it and you despair of ever feeling better. You can’t even bend down to feed the cat without pain and stiffness. Maybe you don’t have any neck or back pain, rather your fingers or foot is numb. Or you have pain, numbness or tingling in your arms, or your buttocks, knee or calf. It’s been going on longer than you care to admit and nothing seems to make it better. 


The Good News
Yes, believe it or not, there is good news. You can get better. More likely than not, you can return to a completely pain-free life. With the right treatment and a few targeted exercises, you can restore flexibility to your neck and spine. You can become stronger than you’ve ever been. You will probably need to learn a few postural adaptations along the way, too.

The other good news is that this is a wake-up call while you are still fairly young. Once you learn new postural patterns, you can sit, stand and walk more effortlessly. With the appropriate Core strengthening exercises, you might find that not only do they make you feel better, you look better, too. Another plus is that with a stronger Core, you might discover that you have more energy.

Who Can Help?
A Physical Therapist with skills in McKenzie’s Techniques, Manual Mobilizations, Neural Glides, Yoga, Feldenkrais, Alexander or Pilates can help you. A Physical Therapist who has healed from her own neck or back pain -- and there are many of us out there -- has a unique perspective.

Don’t try to go it alone. Certain things that well-meaning friends or teachers think might help — like forward bends and intensive hamstring stretching — may make the situation worse. I would avoid twisting exercises until you know more about what’s going on in there. Backward bends, like sphinx and cobra poses help many people but make others worse. It might be best to avoid abdominal crunches or other heavy-duty abdominal exercises at first. There are many wonderful and effective Core strengtheners that involve little to no neck or spinal flexion.

Seek out a knowledgeable Physical Therapist who has experience in successfully treating chronic neck and back pain. Today might be the day you begin to heal and feel better.

Friday, January 7, 2011

What are your Intentions?

                                                                                                                           I did it my way.
                                                                                                                                Frank Sinatra


Why I prefer Intentions over New Year's Resolutions

Creating an intention is about finding out what I’d like to do or have happen in the New Year. It is a gentle process, one of tuning in and listening to the still small voice within. It’s a taking stock of where I am with my life today, and where I’d like to steer towards tomorrow. Am I heading in the desired direction? Do I want to tweak it here and there, or are we talking major changes here?

Resolutions connote differently. I RESOLVE TO sounds, well, like a legal document. Or the beginning of my Last Will and Testament. It’s a do or die proposition. It sounds authoritarian. Parental. Since I have issues with authority -- who doesn’t -- when faced with a directive like this, I tend not to listen. Or, if I’m in a particularly self-defeating mood, do the exact opposite. Besides, I don’t think that I ever kept even one New Year’s resolution. Have you?

Last year, my intention was to write morning pages* every day. It took me 4 or 5 months to get there. First I only wrote them at night once or twice a week. Then I started writing them more frequently, but still only at night. Maybe the late afternoon. For seven months now, because I want to, I write them just about every morning.

It took time to get here. I didn’t do it because I thought I should or because I obeyed an inner dictate. It came from a deeper, lighter place within. This process of daily writing grew into an activity I look forward to every morning. It grounds me deeply. It helps me to find the cheer and energy to face the day.

Check that one off the list.

This year my intentions are to meditate 10 minutes a day, and to write for this blog 10 minutes a day. Not publish, just write. Only 10 minutes. I’ve only been successful two days so far. It’s just something I want to do. I don’t have to.

Won't you join me?


*The concept of morning pages was developed by Julia Cameron in the Artists' Way.  Click on http://www.theartistsway.com/ to learn more.