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Rolfing® and Pilates: Dynamic duo for low back pain
Mark Powell
I SPEAK FROM
EXPERIENCE about lower back pain. From the age of 11 until about
26, I suffered from chronic lower back "outages" and the
small army of healthcare professionals who cracked, zapped, rubbed,
x-rayed, and medicated my lower back could do nothing to help me.
Finally, about nine years ago, a now-colleague of mine, Wayne Henningsgaard,
did a series of Rolfing sessions that totally eliminated my back
problems for over eight years, an experience which eventually inspired
me to become a Rolfer® myself.
After those
eight years, I began to have occasional back problems again. Typically,
I would have to do some fairly extreme athletic hyjinx to re-injure
my back (I also teach PE part-time) but, nevertheless, I received
the lesson: Our healing will always require our own responsibility.
For lower back pain, one of our responsibilities usually has to
do with strengthening. A Rolfer’s hands can lengthen, soften,
and differentiate a client’s tissues; they cannot strengthen
muscles that are weak or flaccid. That requires exercise, but not
just any exercise: Where lower back pain is concerned, strengthening
must be especially smart, elegant, and highly specific.
I’ve
always given my clients yoga postures to practice and sent them
to yoga classes. I’ll continue to do this, because yoga is
a powerful adjunct to the Rolfing work. But I’ve recently
come across a unique exercise system which is based upon a deep,
balanced strengthening of the core of the body, the trunk, and all
of the muscles associated with the lower back. This system is called
Pilates.
The
Pilates Method
The Pilates Method is a comprehensive and systematic approach to
changing and supporting body structure and function. It is located
at the intersection of physical fitness and physical therapy, being
both a diagnostic and a prescriptive system. The Method employs
specialized equipment that uses springs as resistance. The springs
expand and contract like your muscles. This creates a strong but
long and lean muscle fiber, as opposed to the bulky muscle fibers
which typically result from weights. The Pilates exercises emphasize
awareness, sophisticated integration of movement and balance, and
functional strength. Amazingly, the movements simultaneously strengthen
and stretch the body, where more conventional strengthening methods
shorten tissues. The exercises strengthen the core muscles that
support movement as well as focusing on precise alignment and correct
body mechanics. In the Pilates Method, the focus is on using the
entire body in an integrated fashion through strengthening, stretching,
and movement re-education.
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The
Rolfing Method of Structural Integration
In Rolfing, the goal is to create deep, comprehensive order, alignment,
and integration of the body in gravity. Rolfing quite literally
changes your shape, sometimes dramatically. Instead of exercises,
Rolfers use their hands to carefully soften, stretch, and lengthen
the soft tissues of the body (muscles, tendons, ligaments, and fascia)
in a highly specific and systematic way, restoring ease, alignment,
and "order" to the body. People feel lighter, more balanced,
energized, more grounded. They are longer and more upright. They
experience greater range of motion, fuller breathing, and usually
any pains they have are at least significantly reduced. Quite often
they are eliminated.
Pilates
and Rolfing together
Rolfing and Pilates achieve complementary goals by different means--one
through exercise and one through bodywork. Both systems design your
program based on a visual analysis of your structure. Both systems
emphasize differentiation of body parts (i.e. raising your arms
up over your head should not require bulging neck muscles, and so
on) and learning to move from the core (our deep, intrinsic muscles).
Both systems are re-educating movement patterns. Both are creating
balance and stability while simultaneously increasing mobility--fluid,
graceful, and continuous movement. Because of these and other points
of overlap, a Pilates instructor named Dylan Skybrook and I are
working together more and more frequently, referring people back
and fourth. The results for these clients have been excellent. For
an example, let’s look at a staggeringly simplified snapshot
of how Rolfing and Pilates might address low back pain, specifically
low back pain which is caused by hyper lordosis, the exaggerated
lumbar (low back) curve, a very common pattern.
Rolfing
response
There are many elements involved in this pattern, and whatever I
change in the pelvis will necessitate changes throughout the structure-above
and below. Nevertheless, restricting my discussion to the "local"
pelvic scene, some of the first muscles I would look at as "likely
suspects" in the forward tilted pelvis (which usually, though
not always, accompanies hyper-lordosis), would be the muscles involved
in hip flexion and the layered webworks of connective tissue which
enwrap them. I’ll also assess the activity of the hamstrings
and the rotator muscles, which can restrict both the hip joints
and the sacrum.
"Freeing
the pelvis" also usually involves addressing the various lower
back muscles and the strong ligaments which hold the sacrum in place
(the sacrum is the triangular bone at the base of your spine; the
point of the triangle being your tailbone).
Very slowly
and mindfully, I will work with these tissues; sometimes softening
and stretching, sometimes "ungluing" a structure which
has become stuck and undifferentiated from its neighbor, sometimes
just sinking in deeply, letting the hard, tough tissues "melt"
and invite me in. It is all about pacing, rhythm, and sensitively
listening to the tissues. (In other words, no, Rolfing does not
hurt!) The result is that the pelvis can soften down and back, compression
on the lumbar vertebrae is eased, and length spans through the lower
back. The legs feel loose and free and spacious in the hip joints.
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Pilates
response
Maybe you can imagine how this pattern-anterior pelvis with an exaggerated
lower back curve-also "spills" the stomach and viscera
forward, creating the appearance of more "tummy" than
you truly have. Then imagine how a new and potent sense of abdominal
support would transform the whole situation.
This Pilates
does like no other system I know of! The Pilates work strengthens
the deepest layers of the abdominals, creating a dynamic sense of
support for the whole torso. We’re not talking about crunches
and sit-ups that merely shorten the front of the body, but rather
a powerful strengthening of the entire "corset" of muscles
around and throughout the torso. The result is an exceptional quality
of pelvic stabilization.
In addition,
due to the uniqueness of the Pilates Method, it is simultaneously
re-educating movement, such that our movement begins to come from
our core. Pilates work is ultimately about fluid and fluent, graceful
movement.
Both Rolfing
and the Pilates Method address low back pain (stemming from an exaggerated
low back curve or a panoply of other causes) in many more ways than
this article allows. I hope I’ve made it abundantly clear
that addressing low back pain is just one very small aspect of both
Rolfing and Pilates. Both are tremendously rich, elegant, and fully
elaborated systems for creating dynamic change, grace, and freedom
in the body. Often, either one by itself will clean up lower back
problems. Together, they are uncommonly potent.
Mark Powell
is a certified Rolfer practicing in the Uptown/Kenwood area of South
Minneapolis, 612-872-6055. Dylan Skybrook is a certified Pilates
instructor and the owner of Momentum Pilates Studio, 612-870-2944.
Their offices are a block apart.
1999
P.O. Box 897
Stillwater, MN 55082
© 1999 Twin Cities WELLNESS newspaper.
All rights reserved.
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