chuckstervandam
Member
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2010
- Messages
- 50
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 6
this is for josh or anybody else who wants to take a stab, poke, or glide into it!
ok, this is my first time asking/posting something like this, and as a student in clinic still, i'm not sure if i'll be explaining this right (considering i'm a total newbie and on and on...)
so i have a client that has specifically returned to see me, and has booked out for weeks ahead with me, as well. this is very exciting for me! but i'm not sure if i know what i'm doing!
here is the situation/condition:
my client wants work only on her upper back and neck, and particularly wants focused work on her right shoulder/neck.
she has been coming to the clinic regularly (before i ever started) and has constant issues with her right shoulder being tight, and just from simply looking it is extremely elevated. i've seen her twice, and the second time seemed was more elevated and restricted/tight than the first.
she is very active and does water aerobics most (if not all) mornings. i found out after last session that she has a condition on the right metatarsal of her second toe that prevents her from putting any pressure on it. i only discovered this condition because i suggested that she could roll some tennis or raquet balls under her feet to loosen up the fascia and perhaps in some way impact it's spread all the way up even to her neck. i didn't say it would cure anything, but i was trying to find some way that would at least provide some temporary loosening for her throughout the week while i dig/research to try to find some kind of way to work with her that might provide better results. she has not listed this foot/toe condition on her intake form anywhere! then after i found this out, she told me that her doctor has told her she needs to stretch her "ankle ligament" by doing calf stretches off of a stair, but that she can't do it on the injured foot because the pain of any pressure on it makes such a move unrealistic for her. i had also suggested that perhaps sometime she'd like me to work on her feet during a session. just the thought of that foot being touched made her cringe. so it causes her considerable pain.
my first thought was that something was going on in her pelvis. when i was warming up her back i tried to evaluate her pelvis and the levels of her psis. i actually could not find any imbalance there, but i might not be knowing exactly what to look for. my thumbs on each side of the psis seemed to be at the same level? is that how i'd check that? gosh, i just feel like i'm fumbling in the dark!
so i proceeded with the massage and worked on her traps, rhomboids, levator scapula, supraspinatus, and teres minor area posteriorly and then in supine i worked SCM and scalenes and also did some holds/tension on the suboccipitals.
also, prone and supine i did some trapezius stretches where i lunged forward from standing behind her head to stretch the shoulders down.
i didn't do a lot of ROM with her arm/shoulder. i feel like i need more learning when it comes to stretches to really know what i'm doing.
ok, so at the end of the massage her right shoulder was less elevated, but i know for a fact that i'm not getting to the root cause of her discomfort and imbalance. and that's frustrating! i want to have a clue and this has been ongoing for this lady!
my gut feeling says that it's a structural issue that needs to be addressed first, possibly by a chiropractor or somebody who does structural massage work stuff like rolfing type stuff or something.
in addition, this client has repeatedly stated verbally and in writing, "You can't hurt me!" and wants a lottttt of pressure. I found a huge knot/TP in her trapezius and as i tried to address it she would not give me a number on a 1-10 pain scale!!! she just said she didn't care how much it hurt and that it didn't matter, she just wanted the pain to go away. i can't seem to get across the idea that her muscle tissue might not agree with her thinking and that it possibly will not release in that way, by me digging to the death.
and i am not the type of therapist with this sort of approach, so it bothers me to inflict pain with out any sort of gauge from the client. does this make sense? it concerns me, and i don't think it would be right for me to just dig into her trouble spots like this, and i don't think it would be effective anyway.
i try to incorporate really warming of the fascia and myofascial stretches (the extremely limited amount i know of anyway, at this point)
it seems like this client's issues should be something fairly approachable and resolvable from a muscular/structural POV, but as a student my knowledge is on a severe learning curve, lol. so here it is, presenting it to the masters! my intuition/gut tells me there's possibly more going on at an emotional level though that might require some time before body/mind are in agreement here?
anyway, so thank you for reading! i hope any of this makes a bit of sense!
ok, this is my first time asking/posting something like this, and as a student in clinic still, i'm not sure if i'll be explaining this right (considering i'm a total newbie and on and on...)
so i have a client that has specifically returned to see me, and has booked out for weeks ahead with me, as well. this is very exciting for me! but i'm not sure if i know what i'm doing!
here is the situation/condition:
my client wants work only on her upper back and neck, and particularly wants focused work on her right shoulder/neck.
she has been coming to the clinic regularly (before i ever started) and has constant issues with her right shoulder being tight, and just from simply looking it is extremely elevated. i've seen her twice, and the second time seemed was more elevated and restricted/tight than the first.
she is very active and does water aerobics most (if not all) mornings. i found out after last session that she has a condition on the right metatarsal of her second toe that prevents her from putting any pressure on it. i only discovered this condition because i suggested that she could roll some tennis or raquet balls under her feet to loosen up the fascia and perhaps in some way impact it's spread all the way up even to her neck. i didn't say it would cure anything, but i was trying to find some way that would at least provide some temporary loosening for her throughout the week while i dig/research to try to find some kind of way to work with her that might provide better results. she has not listed this foot/toe condition on her intake form anywhere! then after i found this out, she told me that her doctor has told her she needs to stretch her "ankle ligament" by doing calf stretches off of a stair, but that she can't do it on the injured foot because the pain of any pressure on it makes such a move unrealistic for her. i had also suggested that perhaps sometime she'd like me to work on her feet during a session. just the thought of that foot being touched made her cringe. so it causes her considerable pain.
my first thought was that something was going on in her pelvis. when i was warming up her back i tried to evaluate her pelvis and the levels of her psis. i actually could not find any imbalance there, but i might not be knowing exactly what to look for. my thumbs on each side of the psis seemed to be at the same level? is that how i'd check that? gosh, i just feel like i'm fumbling in the dark!
so i proceeded with the massage and worked on her traps, rhomboids, levator scapula, supraspinatus, and teres minor area posteriorly and then in supine i worked SCM and scalenes and also did some holds/tension on the suboccipitals.
also, prone and supine i did some trapezius stretches where i lunged forward from standing behind her head to stretch the shoulders down.
i didn't do a lot of ROM with her arm/shoulder. i feel like i need more learning when it comes to stretches to really know what i'm doing.
ok, so at the end of the massage her right shoulder was less elevated, but i know for a fact that i'm not getting to the root cause of her discomfort and imbalance. and that's frustrating! i want to have a clue and this has been ongoing for this lady!
my gut feeling says that it's a structural issue that needs to be addressed first, possibly by a chiropractor or somebody who does structural massage work stuff like rolfing type stuff or something.
in addition, this client has repeatedly stated verbally and in writing, "You can't hurt me!" and wants a lottttt of pressure. I found a huge knot/TP in her trapezius and as i tried to address it she would not give me a number on a 1-10 pain scale!!! she just said she didn't care how much it hurt and that it didn't matter, she just wanted the pain to go away. i can't seem to get across the idea that her muscle tissue might not agree with her thinking and that it possibly will not release in that way, by me digging to the death.
and i am not the type of therapist with this sort of approach, so it bothers me to inflict pain with out any sort of gauge from the client. does this make sense? it concerns me, and i don't think it would be right for me to just dig into her trouble spots like this, and i don't think it would be effective anyway.
i try to incorporate really warming of the fascia and myofascial stretches (the extremely limited amount i know of anyway, at this point)
it seems like this client's issues should be something fairly approachable and resolvable from a muscular/structural POV, but as a student my knowledge is on a severe learning curve, lol. so here it is, presenting it to the masters! my intuition/gut tells me there's possibly more going on at an emotional level though that might require some time before body/mind are in agreement here?
anyway, so thank you for reading! i hope any of this makes a bit of sense!