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Martial Arts InjuriesDiscuss how to deal with martial arts injuries and illnesses here
Largly by reducing the volume and increasing the intensity you can get the same cardio benifits and improve your anaerobic fitness at the same time, whilst avoiding overuse injurey like tendonitus and shinsplints. Say for example, instead of running 5 miles, run hard one way for 1 mile, break and run hard back. Try to improve on your time everytime you run. Even though the force if each stride is marginally greater this way the volume is so much lower that the rate of bone degradation is minamal. With this method though, you wouldn't be running as many times a week either, giving your bones more time to recover.
I suggest if possible something like walking to the field and then doing the hard running when you get there. Road is ok but.. grass is that much better. And the cow dodging should help you kick it up a notch. Plus a brisk walk is a pretty good general warm up.
Largly by reducing the volume and increasing the intensity you can get the same cardio benifits and improve your anaerobic fitness at the same time, whilst avoiding overuse injurey like tendonitus and shinsplints. Say for example, instead of running 5 miles, run hard one way for 1 mile, break and run hard back. Try to improve on your time everytime you run. Even though the force if each stride is marginally greater this way the volume is so much lower that the rate of bone degradation is minamal. With this method though, you wouldn't be running as many times a week either, giving your bones more time to recover.
Of course your dog might not like that idea eh
That is a really good answer + rep
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A shin to the chin is as real as it gets!!!
I hate to jump on the injury bandwagon, but I'm almost certain now that I have shin splints. The Tang Soo Do seems to bring it on most of the time. The problem is I think they're all better but next time I try and do any sort of martial art activity they begin to hurt again.
The other thing is I have to walk up and down a hill every day to the university campus, and the path I use is rough, hard and uneven.
If I 'work though' the splints by gradually and gently conditioning them, will this get rid of the problem?
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Ah, Steven Seagull, I bet nobody's thought of that before.