For almost 2 years I've been having back pain. It took me about 9
months to figure out that it was from cycling (I blamed various things
at first, like my mattress).
I went to a physio who gave me some exercises. I hated them because
doing them correctly was really tricky. I noticed that one of them was
like lying on the floor and pretending to swim, so I just started
swimming for real instead. Swimming and better posture at work mostly
fixed the upper back pain but I continued to have lower back pain. As
a result, I could only cycle 2 or 3 days per week.
A few months ago, I went back to the physio to do a bike-fit, thinking
that if I sat differently on the bike, it would fix my back. He said
that the bike wasn't the problem. He told me that my lower back was
lacking flexibility, that the vertebrae were locked and that I needed
to stretch. He gave me different exercises for my lower back. These
were not as hateful as the previous set but they were still annoying.
Then a friend told me about
Sworkit, an app that makes it easy to do
exercises casually, whenever you have some time. It comes with a bunch
of set routines, with videos of how to do each exercise and you can do
5 minutes at a time, with 30 seconds for each exercise. Inside the
Stretching secton I found "Back Stengthening". For the first while
there was a bit of clicking and popping in the lower back as things
freed up. After about a week of doing these 2-3 times per day, I was
back cycling every day without pain!
That's a fantastic result for me. I had been worried that I would have
to give up cycling. Taking the train is a little slower but reasonably
comfortable but I fear what would happen to me with free lunches and
no exercise. So splashed out the $1 for the Sworkit Pro to say thanks.
I learned two things from this.
- Stretching matters. I've cycled everywhere for almost 30 years but
I'm still a fairly casual cyclist. I try not to break a sweat (not
possible in Japanese summertime!) and I just go at a comfortable
speed. I have never warmed up before getting on the bike and I still
don't but at some point during the day it's good to stretch
properly. Perhaps that's just getting old.
- The mediocre thing you do regularly is way more effective than the
perfect thing you never do. The stretches in Sworkit were not tailored
to my problem but the app makes it fun and easy enough that I do them
2-3 times per day. The tailored exercises were annoying enough that I
was only doing them once every 2-3 days. I've had the same experience
with Japanese. The manga that I enjoy reading is clearly inferior to
the textbook that I never open from some abstract language learning
point of view but in practice, you can only learn from the things you
do, not the things you don't.