About
 18 months ago, I made a couple of bad moves at judo practice and messed
 up my right knee pretty well..  It was quite painful at the time, but I
 didn’t realize how much damage I had done.  When I finally gave in and 
had an MRI done, I found out I had completely torn my anterior cruciate 
ligament (ACL).  At that point, the only real option was ACL 
reconstruction surgery.  The surgery was at the end of April, and it 
really messed up my writing routine, among other things.  I have 
discovered that budo training, post-op rehab and writing have a lot in 
common.  All the habits I have for good budo, regular practice, review 
of what is working and what isn’t, conscious repetition, and getting an 
outside perspective are all critical to successful, steady, ongoing 
improvement.
All
 those lessons from judo and iaido are applied regularly to my post-op 
rehab.  The week after my surgery, the doctor and the physical therapist
 gave me a set of exercises, stretching and icing to do 3-5 times a day.
  There were exercises for regaining the flexibility  in my knee and 
starting on the long slog to get the strength back in my leg.  The first
 time I tried to bend my knee, I was sweating from the effortn by the 
time I got it to 15 degrees.  And the simple exercises to tense the 
quadriceps in my leg were amazingly frustrating.  I could will the 
muscle to contract all I wanted, but it just laid there.
Over
 a few weeks of doing all the exercises the physical therapists could 
think up, I eventually got enough strength back that I could go back to 
the dojo and start doing some simple standing training in iaido.  This 
is when I started getting some interesting lessons.  Things which had 
been quite fundamental for me, that I didn’t even think about doing 
anymore, had become nearly impossible. Just walking properly required 
all of my focus.   I have no idea what was happening with my sword when I
 was trying to simply walk and swing the sword at the same time.  My 
concentration was so heavily invested in simply trying to walk smoothly 
and with strong movement that there was no awareness left over for 
whatever it was my hands were doing with the sword.   I am sure I was 
swinging it, but I have no clear memories of it.  I’m not sure I want to
 know what I was actually doing.  I’m quite sure it was horrible, and I 
don’t need independent confirmation.
Eventually,
 I got wise and stopped trying to swing the sword and just focused on 
basic walking and footwork.  My feet needed a lot of work.  After the 
surgery, the knee swelled up like a grapefruit that had lost a bar 
fight, but I was expecting that.  The really difficult adjustment was to
 how weak my leg had become.  The leg muscles atrophied almost 
immediately, and even now are a little more than half their pre-surgery 
strength.  
The
 sudden disappearance of the strength in my legs has given me an instant
 appreciation for many of the difficulties my beginning students go 
through.  The leg muscles are used in a rather unusual way in iaido, 
especially in the suwari waza sets.  The body has to be absolutely 
stable and solid, with the movements smooth and fluid. I’ve been doing 
this long enough that I don’t remember how I felt when I started, but I 
can see my own struggles with trying to get my legs to do good iaido now
 whenever I look at beginners.  One of their biggest issues is simply 
that their body doesn’t have the strength in the right areas to support 
what they are trying to do.    
I’ve
 long been a fond of breaking apart iaido kata to find simple sets of 
movements that students can focus on to build the strength and stability
 in some of the unusual positions that we deal with in iaido.  My 
current condition is teaching me just how really useful and important 
this is for students.   One of the simplest things we do in iaido is sit
 down into, and get up from, seiza.  This is even more basic than how we
 hold the sword.  There are thousands of ways to get into seiza that are
 clumsy and off-balance with posture so weak a two year old could easily
 knock you over.    There is only one way that is the strongest and most
 stable based on the human bodies structure: back straight, quadriceps 
screaming with the effort of holding you up and supporting you while you
 look relaxed as you lower yourself into, or rise from, seiza.  I often 
have students just practice the movement from seiza rising up until the 
legs and torso are a straight line, and then going back down, keeping 
the back straight the entire time..  Now I am doing the same thing, 
because my quads really don’t like this movement anymore.   Another one 
they don’t like is the lunge-like movement at the end of some suwari 
kata where we drop down to one knee, and then come back up.  So my 
students and I are doing both of these as a warm-ups / calisthenics to 
strengthen the legs and practice doing the basic movement correctly 
without having to worry about what to do with the sword or anything 
else.
I
 am finding it really helpful for me, and I hope my students will as 
well.  I am reteaching my body to do fundamental movements on its own, 
without having to be directed by my mind.  I am drilling these basic 
movements in my hotel room, and using them as a warm-up when I do full 
iaido keiko.  By warming up with them, I am getting my body used to 
doing the motions correctly, so when I move on and do the kata, I can 
focus on other aspects while my body does these motions correctly on its
 own.
The
 motions are fundamental, and the more I isolate them and focus on 
getting them smooth and strong in isolation, the easier I am finding it 
to do them properly when I go back to the kata and do them in 
conjunction with everything else that is happening in the kata.  My legs
 are still recovering, but already I can feel the improvements in 
strength and control.  I have always thought of the techniques and kata 
as the basics in budo practice, but now I am looking at the kata with an
 eye towards isolating even more basic movements and drilling them.
If
 I can come up with simple drills students can do at home without little
 no equipment, I think beginning students will be able to improve much 
more quickly, and get more out of their training.  Instead of developing
 the strength in their legs and hips during class, they can work on 
developing the essential strength away from keiko.  
A
 few simple exercises that can help them develop the strength to move 
smoothly and effectively quickly, will also enable them to start 
smoothing out other common problems faster as well.  Integrating the 
complex and wholly unnatural movements required for suwari waza  is 
difficult.  There is nothing natural about gliding over the floor with 
one knee up and the other down while swinging a sword around.  My new 
goal is to isolate basic movements that can be practiced outside the 
dojo in a hotel room (since I’m spending a lot of time in hotel rooms 
for work) that students can drill until they become habitually correct, 
so we can spend our training time together working on integrating the 
movements and then go on to more mind-bending things like rhythm.
1 comment:
Great information! Of course physical therapy is best solution to recover properly after knee surgery. We can increase joint strength and flexibility by the cure.back and neck pain bergen county , low back pain bergen county
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