by MattSavinar » Thu 20 Dec 2007, 02:40:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '.') I have tried so hard to achieve this and that, but an injury always intervenes despite all caution. "buddhism."
You probably have severe postural distortions that predisposed you to injuries.
Even most - in fact the overwhelming majority - of people who work out religiously have severe distortions in their posture. That's why they always end up getting injured and then moving to progressively lower impact activities. The person gives up running, then starts bicycling. Then has to give that up for swimming or yoga. The person thinks "well I'm just getting older" or "I have bad luck and got injured." The reality is their bodies - even ones who are "fit" - are horribly out of kilter. Muscles that should be loose are tight (hip flexors) while muscles that should be firm are loose. (gluteals.)
Yoga is great at stretching but often the problem is under-activation of a related muscle group which is "unplugged" due to postural distortions. I, for instance, used to get hamstring pulls. Stretched the hell out of them but it never seem to make much more than a temporary difference. Then I learned the hammies often get pulled when the glutes aren't firing properly. This is very common in Westerners, including those who exercise a lot. Yoga does nothing for this and, in fact, would likely make the situation worse.
Read everything here:
http://www.ericcressey.com/articles.html
. . . and read some of the books by Egoscue.
As far as "self-improvement", most of modern self-improvement is aimed at either:
#1) getting you to buy stuff
#2) correcting problems created by modern living
I'd say this goes for most psychological self-improvement as well. When the majority of the population lives in places like this:
http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/pos ... geles.html
. . . you're going to get a lot of fucked up people who need "improvement".