StudioVeena.com › Forums › Discussions › Twisted grip injuries!
-
Twisted grip injuries!
Posted by Brumby on May 24, 2012 at 6:58 pmHey girls, I've been doing a ton of twisted grip, as I try to smooth the wrinkles out of my phoenix and twisted grip lift. But my elbows and shoulders are not appropriately conditioned, even though I"m strong enough.
I can feel an injury coming on. I'm getting soreness in my shoulders and my elbows. And they are losing mobility and popping and cracking when I am using them! What conditioning excersises do you recommend? I know I should just rest it, but all the moves I'm working on right now are pretty intense in this respect. Doing the aerial press, aerial reverse grab, TG lift, iron X, iguana. It's so frustrating to be limited in this way.
PoleMoves replied 12 years, 2 months ago 12 Members · 23 Replies -
23 Replies
-
How often are you practicing these? Are you giving your body enough rest in between? I would recommend at least a day, preferably two. Also, don’t do too many of them in one practice, and I wouldn’t try practicing all those tricks all in one practice either. Take your time and don’t overdo it.
-
i think it's pretty frustrating to have a move introduced and popularized that a lot of our bodies CANT and SHOULDNT do!!
if you are having issues with the grip and want to continue to condition for the move, use another grip– chinese/true/cupped, split, elbow, anything. give your joints a break!!!
-
-
are you FULLY warmed up before working on it? As with many moves, it's great to condition and work it from a descent, first.
Not that I do this move. https://www.studioveena.com/img/smilies/icon_cool.gif But those are truths across the board of course. Take it easy, girl.
-
Ha! I started the last thread chemgoddess linked to in her post. Update: I decided not to go on with TG because of the risk of injuring myself. It seems like I hear about more injuries caused by TG than by any other move other than falling.
-
I would say that the most "injurous" moves:
Split grip – wrist/forearm – typically introduced too early and too much weight being placed on lower arm
Inverts – back/rotor – again, too early and not enough control of the move
TG handspring/lift – shoulder/arm – anatomical issues….just because we *can* get our arm twisted that way does not mean that it *should*
Allegra – ribs – flexibility issues
-
speaking of the split grip…when does the bottom arm stop hurting? I don't even do full bracket grips (except the carousel spin) since I remember them hurting a ton but just doing advanced planks and side Vs cause an ache right after disengaging. And it's hard to know when to stop doing them since they only hurt afterwards. 🙂
-
if your bottom arm is hurting after a pank I'd be careful that you aren't hyperextending or rotating your elbow out as you hold the position. in a regular split grip the bottom arm should be doing minimal work as the engagement of the top arm/shoulder/back should be holding your body up and away from the pole.
-
I looked at the threads @chemgoddess1 linked to, but I still have questions – I'm not sure which moves the threads covered.
I use twisted grip for shoulder mounts, butterfly/extended and the move Felix does here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LmdA9bLabN0 at 2:58, but without spin and without going up – just the hold for now so that I get used to the position (what it's called?). I work several minutes every practice trying to hold it as much as I can on each side. I plan on getting my elbow grip ayesha from the pole, then twisted grip ayesha from the pole, then going up from this position into twisted grip ayesha like felix does.
Are these dangerous things to do with twisted grip?
-
ohhh hyperextending. I don't know how that didn't occur to me. loose joints run in the family. I'll pay attention to that, thanks amy!
-
anytime muroo!
lillybilly, without knowing your body, or where you are flexible/strong– generally doing the TG as an aerial transition out of an invert (into a butterfly, or ayesha) is not as hard on the joints as doing it from the ground as a mount. I'd be very, very careful about holding the TG stall from the ground as you point out in the video at 2:58 and i would recommend working the TG ayesha from an inside leg hang or layout/CAR before doing that TG stall from teh ground. however, you will have ot keep close tabs on how your body reacts to the work and how your joints in particular take to holding TG. if you have an instructor who is knowledgeable they should be able to correct your engagement and make sure that you're correctly using the msucles of the shoulder girdle and back to hold your weight in the position and not just hanging off the top arm.
TG is particularly dangerous, IMO, bc many studios teach the handspring FROM THE GROUND, with a KICK, before even teaching it as an aerial ayesha which makes just absolutely no sense. beyond that, i know very few people who have done extended work on reverse grabs, phoenixes, or TG lifts without having some rotator cuff/wrist issues at some point; very few bodies can handle it even if they are strong and we only have one body– it's simply not worth it to me. you are just not meant to bear weight on joints out of neutral the way that TG forces you to. and in my personal opinion, TG work is not nearly as impressive as true/chinese/cupped grip or even split grip in the same positions. i wrote a mini-rant on it here, that might make my particular concerns clearer: http://aerialamy.com/blog/2011/11/01/tuesday-tips-twisted-grip-handspring-from-the-ground/
-
I've read your post, it made things clearer, thanks!
I don't think twisted grip is more impressive than other grips – they all look the same to me as long as the overall arm position is similar https://www.studioveena.com/img/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif I just feel that it is a much more comfortable and safe grip than any other grip I tried. With this TG stall (?), for example, I can't hold it with split grip because my body keeps rotating sideways and hurting my bottom hand. TG somehow makes more sense because I can use my back muscles to stay in position.
I did have some wrist problems, but with my lower hand and they were unrelated to twisted grip – I used to have really weak wrists and experiences random pains before I started poling, but I found that if I practice just holding myself with split grip in the air, after a while my wrists get stronger and don't hurt anymore. I don't know if it makes sense https://www.studioveena.com/img/smilies/icon_e_confused.gif
That said, I will keep in mind what you wrote about shoulder engagement. We use twisted grip a lot in the studio, now that I think about it (there are some wonderful spins with TG!), and while it never gave any of us any trouble, I don't want to hurt myself.
By the way, is it even possible to do reverse grabs to phoenix with oher grips?
-
I flat out refuse to even attempt this move, it's not necessary and not even that nice looking, and I find a regular handspring where you go from upright to upside down much more impressive. And the big swinging kick to get into it some people do can't be good for you either….https://www.studioveena.com/img/smilies/icon_e_confused.gif
Log in to reply.