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FITNESS TIPS ON MAINTAINING HEALTHY SHOULDERS

  
  
  
  
Raise your arm.  Does your shoulder lift significantly upwards towards your ear at the same time?  Now raise both of your arms together.  Do your shoulders tend to round forward? If you answered yes to at least one of these questions, one of your upper back muscles – the “trapezius” to be specific” – isn’t working as it should. A lazy trapezius can cause your shoulders to tense over time so much that your neck begins to look shorter.
healthy sholders
Let me describe how your “trap” is supposed to work.  The trapezius moves your shoulders-blades up, in and down.  The lower part of your trap – the part that moves your shoulders down – is supposed to contact when you raise your arm, stabilizing your shoulder joint. The problem is, a lot of people’s lower traps don’t do this or, worse, their upper traps fire instead. These people seem to be lifting their arms and shoulders-blades as if they were one joint. This habit not only makes people look awkward. According to an intriguing study done in 2003, it can also injure their shoulders.
That year, a Belgian physical therapist named Ann Cools gathered together 69 athletes, both men and women, whose sports involved a lot of arm raising. These “overhand” athletes played volleyball, racquet ball, tennis or other ball sports or were swimmers. Thirty-nine of her subjects suffered from shoulder impingements, a painful condition that results in weakness and loss of range of motion. Shoulder impingement is the most common upper-back injury among athletes. Cools’ other thirty athletes were injury-free. 
Cools attached electrodes around the shoulders of these athletes, then told them to move their arms in different directions. Sometimes she used weight machines to add resistance to her subjects’ arm movements. She was careful to avoid any further injury to her subjects by instructing them to stop moving as soon as they felt any pain. 
Cools’ findings were unequivocal. There was a significant difference in how the two groups of athletes used their traps. When the healthy athletes raised their arms, their inner and lower “trap” muscles contracted almost immediately to keep their shoulders-blades in place. When the injured athletes raised their arms, their “traps” fired much later, too late to prevent the shoulder-blades from sliding out of place. 
In the Bar Method classes I teach, roughly about half of my students lift their shoulders and arms together. As often as possible I remind them to lower their shoulders, and when I can I give them a gentle tap on the tops of their shoulders. My students usually smile back at me when I remind them of their shoulder stance, aware that they look much better with a relaxed looking neck. Cools’ study shows that my efforts with these students also saves their shoulders from possible future injury.
If you are a Bar Method student and find that your shoulders tend to go up during arm raises, you can apply the tips from last week’s blog THE MIND BODY CONNECTION, BEAUTY AND THE BAR METHOD on relaxing the lower back to rewire your mind/body connection to your shoulders.  Using your shoulder muscles correctly and gracefully will make a big difference in the way you look and feel.
fitness tips 
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Comments

Thank you for the focus on shoulders. Doing alot of data entry, and holding the arms "akimbo" for many hours a week doing micro-surgery requires a lot of shoulder "energy". At 5'2", i vowed long ago never to "shrink"! The Bar Method really helps me look taller, and most importantly keeps my shoulder girdle healthy. Thank You!
Posted @ Wednesday, May 05, 2010 11:46 AM by Angela
When oh when will the new DVD's be ready?
Posted @ Saturday, May 08, 2010 10:49 AM by Dolly
Hi Dolly,  
There will be four new DVDs. Two advanced, one beginner and a pre-natal. They are being made in July and so should be out by early Fall.  
Best, Mimi
Posted @ Saturday, May 08, 2010 12:55 PM by Mimi Fleischman
Thanks Mimi, I'm really looking forward to ordering them! Love the Bar Method!
Posted @ Saturday, May 08, 2010 1:18 PM by Dolly
I would love to learn more about forearm tendonitis and Bar Method. I've thoroughly enjoyed my workouts for the last 9 months. Only recently have I developed forearm tendonitis and it makes me nervous to continue any of the arm workout. I've never had any arm issues in the past. I'm doing modifications, but would love to get back to the actual exercises. Thoughts?
Posted @ Tuesday, January 11, 2011 8:07 PM by Jennifer Reif
Hi Jennifer, thanks so much for your inquiry. Please read Burr's note below: 
 
"It's very rare for students to get your condition by taking class. I suggest that you see your doctor and discuss the possible causes of your condition and what treatment could help. If your doctor okays you to exercise, use no weights during class and do the pushups against the bar. Otherwise, stay away from any exercise that seems to aggravate your condition." Hope your tendonitis clears up soon. Best wishes, Burr"
Posted @ Wednesday, January 12, 2011 12:41 PM by Bar Method Headquarters
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