Owie Snap, shoulders are so painful! Hope you feel better soon.![]()
Owie Snap, shoulders are so painful! Hope you feel better soon.![]()
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Stretchy bands are no slouch workout! I've had PT twice for shoulder issues. The thing that looks like a ski that you shake in different directions-hurts! The therapist didn't make me do it again. I don't rake or vacuum. That's what teenage kids are for.
Sorry about your PsychoTherapist.They certainly know how to jab the spots that cause the most horrendous pain. Good luck surviving it all. Maybe you might want to not hurt yourself again, and avoid them all together.
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You have my sympathy. I'm also doing PT, but for achilles tendonitis. All the others who are being treated at the same time seem to have shoulder problems. I'm the only foot/ankle/leg in my time slot. Having done the rotator cuff round several years ago, I could only grimace when I saw your photo of the dreaded "towel" stretch. How I remember the pain when I did that.
The good part is when I did PT for my shoulder I could not raise my arm much above 90o from my body. NOW I have full range of motion, pain free.
I'm hoping for the same result on my achilles. I've been doing my homework and icing it religiously and it is getting better - s l o w l y. At least now I've graduated to being able to ride my bike again.
There was a good article about the whole PT experience in the NY Times a couple weeks ago - this link still seems to work:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/17/he...er=rss&emc=rss
Physical Therapy and the Camaraderie of Healing
I first had physical therapy at 27, after I slipped on an icy Montreal sidewalk and tore the ligaments in my left ankle. I had it again at 42 and 43, after surgery on my right and left knees, and most recently I've had it on both shoulders.
My orthopedist likes to say surgery is half the battle. If so, it's the easy half.
The slow and repetitive work of physical therapy often starts the next day, and for an injury like a tear in an anterior cruciate ligament, it can take up to six months. Before you've done it, it's hard to imagine anything is going to take so long and hurt so much
(go to the link for the rest of the article.)
Snap,
You have my deepest sympathies. I did PT for a frozen shoulder last year for 2 months, and got 90-95% of my range of motion back. And now a year later, it still hurts, and I've lost range of motion. My shoulder hates me. Right shoulder is getting left shoulder in on it too.![]()
I once asked my PT if he was channelling his medieval ancestors who used to work in torture chambers? He said he was glad he didn't have to wear the leather hood any more.
All I can tell you is take pain killers before you go to therapy. And it will get better.
Beth