Practice Makes Perfect...Or Does It?
At some point in your life has someone ever told you that in order to get better at something you had to...
...keep practicing it over and over because practice makes perfect?
Maybe it was a...
- teacher
- parent
- coach
- personal trainer
...or maybe you even said it yourself to someone.
When it comes to fitness and training our body to move better and become stronger this is not always a true statement.
The human body is designed to move in patterns, never in isolation.
Think of squatting down to pick up that $20 bill you dropped and you don’t want it to get away...
...or if you are a sports player do you stand still and only move one muscle at a time to move in the game?
The answer is of course not! So why would we ever train that way?
In order to improve or reach your fitness goals regardless of your age and no matter if it’s...
- recovering from an injury
- losing weight
- getting those rock hard abs
- being able to run a road race
- Improving your athletic ability
- Or just being able to bend down without being in pain
...you need to train using good body movement.
Unfortunately, the human body will not always move in the correct pattern.
Habitual movement patterns, an imbalance of muscular strength or an injury will change the way we move and usually never for the better.
The body will compensate to get a job done by using any muscle necessary without us even knowing it.
Take for example someone who twists their ankle or throws out their back.
The pain created by this injury causes us to move differently, usually with a limp.
The body rewires this new movement pattern and now keeps this pattern even when the injury has healed and you are no longer in pain.
We have to consciously change the movement pattern back to “normal” and get the correct muscles to engage while we move.
We use these patterns even when doing simple tasks like
- The laundry
- Driving our car
- Taking the dog for a walk
- Or typing on the computer
If we don’t correct these patterns we are setting ourselves up for more pain and injuries in our future.
Now if we start an exercise program using these poor movement patterns you may actually be making things worse for your body.
To quote an expert regarding spinal injuries and diseases, Stuart McGill, PhD.,
“Practice does not make perfect, it makes permanent.”
So, if we keep exercising incorrectly, we are making those poor movement patterns our permanent patterns which may result in injury.
Whether one day your back aches, knee hurts or you can no longer raise your arm over your head because your shoulder hurts.
You may think you are getting stronger and faster when in reality you are setting yourself up for disaster.
Say for example when you first learned how to type on a keyboard you had to first learn how to set up your fingers correctly over the keys.
Then from there you keep practicing and practicing your keystrokes so you can become better and much faster.
Then comes the day you can type 75 WPM. WOW, awesome!
However, little did you know you have had your fingers over the wrong keys and even though you can type really fast your emails look like this
...tlse tlshe thlllee ckhith kyjfhggh. HUH?
So start off on the right foot and learn to move correctly and then practice, practice, practice.
The best way to do this is to start working with a fitness expert...
Even if you have been training for a long time it never hurts to get yourself evaluated to see where you can make improvements.
You CAN teach an old dog new tricks, so no matter how long you have been using the wrong movement patterns you can still teach your body to move the correct way.
The Fitness Coaches at EFC are a great resource for this so you can always contact us to set up an appointment whether you are a member or non-member for an evaluation and get yourself moving in the right direction. - Jenn Cook









