Skip to main content

Exercise without Joint Pain


I've never understood why runners keep running until they wear out their knees. Or why dancers will dance until they have blisters on their feet.

Maybe it's good that I get too tired to run that far or dance that long. In spite of this blessing in disguise, I started getting knee pain from weightlifting. Since I didn't get knee pain during weightlifting sessions, it took me awhile to figure out what was causing it. Once I realized it was squats, I stopped doing them and felt better. However, my weightlifting routines became limited to what my joints, not my muscles, would bear, particularly for my lower body.

On the recommendation of a few bloggers I read (Dr. Michael Eades and Tom Naughton--see blog roll), I tried Slow Burn by Fred Hahn and Drs. Michael and Mary Dan Eades. The Drs. Eades explain in the beginning of the book why strength training is good for you (improved metabolism, stronger bones, more flexibility, less back pain and better athletic performance, among other things). From my own experience, I know that it improves athletic performance: once I started weightlifting several years ago, I was able to dance the way I wanted to, and an isometric neck exercise really helped my neck pain. However, I didn't see any difference in flexibility, and I still had occasional shoulder pain. As for stronger bones, as a small, white, thin-boned female, I hope they're right.

The workout itself involves slow, grueling movements with heavy weights or the weight of your own body. Think pushups that last 20 seconds each--and no propping yourself up on your arms. The sets are brief, though: just 90 seconds, it only feels longer. The goal is muscle failure: to do the exercise until you can no longer move the weight. As smart weightlifters say, muscle building happens fast or not at all. It's only been in the past few workouts that I've discovered the correct weights for this--and started feeling like I worked out.

So far, this has worked well for my upper body, but I'd probably have to go to a gym to use machines and larger weights to get the most benefit for my lower body. For example, the squats described in the book are difficult, but even going all the way down, I don't have muscle failure. (I do lindy, and I don't know of anything better to strengthen your quadriceps.) I don't even bother with the heel raises, since I could do them all day. The recommended crunches don't work for me (I'm short-waisted) so I do Navy Seal flutter kicks with my head off the floor instead. If a 118-pound woman can't get lower-body muscle failure with home equipment, I imagine that big, strong women and most men would have to use a gym to make this work.

The Slow Burn system requires a few pieces of equipment: a yoga mat, a towel, weights, a metronome and a timer. I downloaded a free timer from cnet.com and found a free online metronome at metronomeonline.com.

Did I mention this is a quick workout? It really does last only about 30 minutes per week. (Originally, I wrote that this is a once-a-week workout, but Fred Hahn has informed me that it's better to do it twice a week, or once a week if you are a very athletic person. See comments.)

Comments

Fred Hahn said…
Hi Lori - so glad you are giving Slow Burn a try. A few tips/hints/thoughts if I may...

My book has two workouts in it as you know - a home based program which you are trying and a gym program. You are absolutely right that most in shape men and women need to go to a gym to get the most out of any training system.

About the squats - if you notice the section on making the exercises harder I suggest using an extremely slow speed on both the lift and the lower - did you try that yet? What I should have added is a dumbbell or water jug Slow Burn squat. (I did for my kids book.)Try using either of these tools to add resistance to the squats. Just keep your toes in front of your knees at all times, head up, back arched. You could also try one-legged door knob squats! (Same for the heel raises.)

With crunches the length of your waist doesn't matter. Flutter kicks strengthen your hip flexors - not your rectus abdominus that much. These muscles main function is spinal flexion. Try the negative (lowering) only crunches. If done right, these will burn your abs out of your body! ;)

And we don't say once a week - we say thirty minutes a week. We recommend twice weekly training. There is one point in the book (an error) that says you only need to do this once a week but several other areas where we say twice. Twice is better UNLESS you are an very active athletic person. Then once will be better to allow for recovery.

And while dancing is wonderful, dancing will not keep your lower body from losing muscle mass as you age. As you mentioned above:

"From my own experience, I know that it improves athletic performance: once I started weightlifting several years ago, I was able to dance the way I wanted to..."

So if you love dancing, strength train so that you can continue into your later years! Feel VERY free to email me with any questions and thank you for reading my book and blogging about it VERY much. :)
S. Training said…
I have had severe back pain for one week and a half, laying in bed without being able to sit down, and tried everything from icing the hell out of it, and noninflammatory medication without success. Then I decided to go to the MD orthopedic "doctor", and after taking x rays he said I had a bulging disc, and that it either will fix on its own, or surgery. Then I tried your video thing, and POP, I am pain free. thanks.
Lori Miller said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Lori Miller said…
Fred, thanks for taking the time to visit my blog and write such a detailed, helpful response. I did the squats without a chair last night, and I'll try the one-legged squats during my next workout. I'm sure it will be a challenge. I'll also try the negative crunches, without the towel (putting a towel under my back makes my stomach--not abs--hurt).

A twice-a-week program makes more sense; I don't think most of us need a week to recover. The once-a-week assumption seems like a common misconception. Maybe we're all so used to long workouts that we assume 30 minutes can't equal more than one session.

Having studied several forms of social dance, belly dance and ballet, I agree that in general, you could dance to the break of day every weekend without seeing much muscle gain. But lindy (and possibly ballet) are exceptions. If you have a traditional bent-kneed, hips-out stance (not unlike doorknob squats), it will strengthen your quadriceps. See girl in photo I've added to the post.

My thighs were killing me when I started lindy lessons! Add a constant, gentle bounce that most social dances don't have, and your calves and feet gain some strength as well. As for glutes, I don't see many lindy hoppers with flat rear-ends.

Be that as it may, I still intend to do lower-body Slow Burn strength training, especially now that you've given me some good ideas. I'd love to still be dancing into my 90s, as Frankie Manning did (he's the guy in the overalls).

Thanks again for your helpful comments.
Lori Miller said…
S. Training, I don't know what the video thing is, but I'm glad you feel better.
Unknown said…
If you get joint pain after a workout, then a great remedy is to stretch after your workout for an extended amount of time. Focus on lengthening the hip muscles and make sure that you have adequate space for stretching, such as a mat or floor space. I also massage my hip joints as I stretch, which seems to help ease pain.

Popular posts from this blog

This Just In: Yogurt Doesn't Improve Health

A recent study from Spain finds "In comparison with people that did not eat yogurt, those who ate this dairy product regularly did not display any significant improvement in their score on the physical component of quality of life, and although there was a slight improvement mentally, this was not statistically significant," states López-García. Most yogurt is pretty much pudding with a little bacteria . Pudding is a sugar bomb. Hard to believe the stuff doesn't improve health outcomes, isn't it? But as usual, researchers are calling for...more research. "For future research more specific instruments must be used which may increase the probability of finding a potential benefit of this food."

Paleo Diet: Eating Differently from Everyone Else is Fine!

I've been seeing more and more articles by women (it's always women) whose heads have exploded trying to figure out life without yogurt and cupcakes. Oh, the shenanigans they get up to: bathroom problems from stuffing themselves with vegetables, paleo baked goods that don't taste the same as ones from the bakery, and especially the irresistible urge to eat "normally." The technical problems aren't hard to sort out: substitutes like baked goods will taste different because they are different, but an adjustment period of a few months will make those foods taste normal. And whatever you eat, don't stuff yourself. First, though, read a book by Loren Cordain or Mark Sisson to learn about the paleo diet before diving in. The articles I keep reading, though, have more to do with attitude: the urge to be exactly like everybody else or the urge to be helpless. If you're in the second category, I can't, by definition, help you. If you'd rather be Lu

Decongestant Ineffective; Vibration Plate Works

A common ingredient in many cold medicines has been shown so ineffective that the FDA recently proposed taking it off the market. The ingredient, phenylephrine, "failed to outperform placebo pills in patients with cold and allergy congestion," say researchers from the University of Florida. "The same researchers also challenged the drug's effectiveness in 2007, but the FDA allowed the products to remain on the market pending additional research," according to CNBC .  Mostly placebos. Photo from Pixabay . I can attest that phenylephrine doesn't work. Before I stopped eating wheat, I constantly had nasal and sinus congestion. I helped keep Sudafed in business when the active ingredient was pseudoephedrine, but I noticed the PE (phenylephrine) variety didn't work at all. The only other decongestants I've found helpful are guaifenesin (Mucinex) and spicy food. Mucinex is expensive because it works! (The cheaper store brands work just as well, though.) Su

Robert F. Kennedy shows up at the FDA

 

Palpitations Gone with Iron

Thanks to my internet friend Larcana, who alerted me to the connection between iron deficiency and palpitations, I doubled down on my iron supplements and, for good measure, washed them down with Emergen-C. It's a cold medicine with a mega-dose of vitamin C, plus B vitamins and minerals. I don't think vitamin C does anything for a cold (a friend bought the stuff and left it at my house the last time she visited), but vitamin C does help iron absorption. After doubling up on iron in the last three days, I feel back to normal. (I'd already been taking quite a bit of magnesium and potassium, so I probably had sufficient levels of those.) How did I get so low on iron? Maybe it was too many Quest bars instead of red meat when I had odd cravings during my dental infection recently. Maybe because it's too hard to find liver at the grocery store and I haven't eaten much of it lately. Maybe the antibiotics damaged my intestines . And apparently, I'm a heavy bleeder .