by yoni » Thu Jun 29, 2006 10:26 pm
Hey Tone,
If I can add something before you fly off to Asia... What Windhorse said about checking your technique could really help. Even if you're playing with good technique but slamming too hard and long, that can still mess up tendons. Dums can be tough, no doubt about it!
I was doing single rolls to death a couple years, trying to get the kind of speed and sustain Gio has, before I saw him and realized he was doing doubles much more than singles. The double takes long to learn but when it kicks in it takes less effort to sustain than the single, and maybe is easier on the wrists. Well, that technical plus helped my wrists in a big way.
But while tendons are still inflamed, rest is key. First and last time I had tendonitis was about 10 years ago, just before a tour to South America, and boy was I in a panic. My ex-wife sent me to a Russian healer guy who had me wrap my wrists in gauze soaked with Dead Sea mud and my own pee. Yuck! (I think I wrote of this here once, sorry to re-gross-out anyone). He also did some weird incantations and breathing over me, and I normally laugh at that kind of stuff, but I was desperate. Thankfully, I did heal quickly enough in time for the shows.
I don't know about far eastern religion, but maybe Thomas is on to something. Far eastern dietary practice, like macrobiotics, does make sense to me. It's based on eating simple foods local to your area, with more vegetable protein than animal protein. Diets of many societies still living close to nature would also be considered macrobiotic (an unfortunate word which sounds more like an illness or something). In Japan it's based on what they call law of the universe - yin and yang, which are expansion and contraction, and the balance we subconsciously strive for between the two. Swelling, or inflammation, as in tendonitis, is considered a yin condition, caused by too much yin in diet - stuff like sugar, alcohol, too much spice, and other things that cause expansion... as opposed to things like salt, which cause a contracting effect on the body. Cold also has a yang (contractive) effect on us, thus also good for reducing swelling.
So maybe all that salt in the Dead Sea mud helped my wrists at the time, but who knows? Probably a combination of things can help. I have found raw garlic to help "clean the blood" some. But my girlfriend isn't too crazy about it.
I remember tendonitis and I feel for you bro! It will probably clear up soon, though.
All the best,
Yoni
Edited By yoni on 1151653365