Chances are you’ve never looked at the soles of your shoes unless you needed to wipe dog poop off them, but they can tell you so much about your walk and about when it’s time to buy new shoes! An out-of-town client who I’ll call C, and who I hadn’t seen in years, came in recently with recent hip pain that didn’t have an obvious cause - until we looked at their shoes. Check these out.
Read moreMore Resilient Than You Can Imagine
I’ve got bilateral hip dysplasia. I’ve written some about it here, and I’m very open about it with my clients. In early 2019, I decided to get pelvic x-rays taken for the first time since about 2004 for tracking purposes. Today I remembered to get a copy of the images for myself, and want to share a little about what they show and mean.
Read moreDominant vs. Non-Dominant Hand: 2 Mini-Lessons
Do you get hand cramps or forearm cramps in your dominant hand? Do you wish you were a little more ambidextrous? You are not alone. A couple of weeks ago in class, someone asked if we could look at the differences between our dominant and non-dominant hands, so last week, we did a lesson that explored how to decrease constantly held tension in our dominant hand and arm and how to increase coordination in our non-dominant hand. It was a huge hit, and is easy to do in most settings, so I'll share part of it here, along with part of a related lesson.
Read moreThe Myth of Symmetry
There are very few things in nature that are truly symmetrical. Plants don't grow straight up towards the sky with leaves sticking out symmetrically all over the place; they grow efficiently, towards the light, which is not always up, and their leaf growth pattern matches the direction. Even a redwood or pine tree, though it grows straight up, is not symmetrical.
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