The best thing you can do to prevent injury is to lift freeweights. Strong bodies have insane tolerance. If you can lift 1000 pounds total in the deadlift, squat, and bench press you can take A LOT of abuse.
With all due respect, I completely disagree. That is one way to push the body in to further pain, injury and dysfunction.
Addressing the root of the problem is the ONLY way to address the pain.
I applaud everyone's willingness to discuss where and what this problem stems from and how to address it. However, no one is taking into account the body's ability to adapt to a dysfunction in the first place. (I'm going to address environmental influence here, something NO ONE considers when assessing health) I'll keep the terms simplistic
Culprit: Adaptation to a lifestyle of sitting
If you have spent ANY long period of time sitting in your life, you're bound to have tightened hip flexors therefore forward drop of the hips (anterior shift). This leads to lower back pain, over use of the quadriceps even during movements that require other muscles like the butt (glute max) to do their job. Leads to tightened rectus ab, leads to rounded thoracic, leads to inward rotation of shoulders and on and on. WE ALL HAVE IT as long as you're not still a native of your tribe untouched by society living in the jungle
Exacerbate this by adding load or weight to further ingrain this dysfunction, and further exacerbate it by standing in a forwardly slumped position while riding, and you'll have issues galore! I know I do!!
Its a given that the body's anatomy and biology is not designed to be 'fixed' to a machine to propel us. Therefore, how can the dynamics of a human musculature system adapt to the static standing position of 'surf' especially under load! Take the back flip position, it is also static under load. Take any position on a ski, you apply load to a body position that is not functional from a biologically and anatomical perspective.
The body adapts, by going into dysfunction given the context of its anatomy, and you have a recipe for injury.
So NO, in that context adding weight and lifting 10x more than you're used to will not help you train for your sport. Its logical to say it would, but taking into account these dysfunctions due to our environment, and dysfunctions that the sport itself causes, can only lead to more pain and dysfunction. So sit-ups, planks, shoulder presses. . . NONE of that will help you get back to neutral. It only builds upon the problem you have in the first place. Address the source first, then add functional movement, NOT just exercises that isolate parts of the body to make them strong. Body works in INTEGRATION to get its strength. Efficiently drawing upon the musculature systems already in place will build their strength through neuro association.
Conclusion: Myofascial Release of restricted areas, and corrective exercise based on transverse planar movements (functional) to get the body back to a neutral state is the only way to truly relieve the body of pain caused by these dysfunctions.
check out a quick clip of addressing hand dysfunction and see how it ties in. arm pump, overuse injury, and carpal tunnel syndrome are RARELY addressed with myofascial release, and furthermore have NEVER been looked at in conjunction to INTEGRATION to the rest of the body. But when you see how hip dysfunction plays into shoulder dysfunction, you'll see how a seemingly simple overuse issue might be fixed easier.
Check out working with specific surf riding dysfunction. . .
As a rider myself, I have put these methods into practice and not only learned a lot about the human body by doing so, but I have addressed pain issues, as well as strength and endurance issues because of it. In the end it will come down to a question of personal morals. Is it worth putting my body into a dysfunctional state to ride this way? What steps can I take to keep my body as pain free and functional as I can while engaging in this sport?
I hope this helps.
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