When I’m Not Blogging, I’m Tweeting

By: Loolwa Khazzoom, Founder, Dancing with Pain

January 26th, 2010 • Leave a Comment

Good Times, Crazy Times

So much is going on in my life right now! How can I find the time to write about it? Ironically, there are so many juicy stories piling up for my blog right now. But I have to keep my nose to the grind at the moment, with my upcoming movement classes, business launch and loan applications, article pitches and writing, and oh yeah, self-care. 

I know I’ve been a bad little blogger recently. But please know that when I don’t have time to blog, I still do tweet about the latest. So if you want to stay connected during my crazy spells, come on over to Twitter and follow my posts there!

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Move Safely with Pain

By: Heather Freeman, artist and blogger

January 26th, 2010 • 1 Comment

I used to be very grounded in my body. I was a dancer, an artist, with big expansive movements, carefree in my expectation that my body would do what it asked without complaint. The first thing people would comment on upon meeting me was the grace in my movements, despite having had very little formal dance training.

Then I was in a car accident, and everything changed. What I say below I offer not as any kind of an expert, but merely what I have learned in the last nineteen months as a person with chronic pain.

 It’s not been easy. I am nowhere near the kind of dance that Loolwa describes in her work (oh, how I wish I were in Southern California this week, so I could take her new class!). I spend most days curled in a comfy chair, trying to find mindlessly repetitive ways to distract myself from my screaming nerves. But in those odd moments between where the pain subsides, I can move, and have learned some things about how to move safely and with less pain.

Very small movements, or even just holding a position, can be as useful as large repetitive motions. Even just shifting your attention from one part of your body to another has an effect – for example, from one hip to the other and back as warmup for actually moving your hips, or to see if your hips can actually move that way today.

Trembling in a given position usually means that your core muscles, the ones you usually don’t notice, are working. These muscles are essential to support everything else, and can sometimes be worked without pain even when everything else is hurting.

Listen to your body. It will tell you when something is about to hurt, and that is when you should stop. The hard part is that especially if you have ever been able-bodied, chances are you have been socialized to believe that pain is something to be pushed through, conquered, beaten down.

When you have chronic pain, the opposite is true. It will do no good to inflict punishment upon yourself. Your pain is not the workout aches able-bodied people experience that tells them their muscles are getting stronger. If you listen to your body, and stop before your pain worsens, you are not being lazy or weak, but wise and adaptable.

Inward awareness is very difficult when you have chronic pain, but essential to cultivate. I practiced yoga and meditation regularly before my accident, but since then it is much harder, because all my mind wants to do is flee from the pain, cut itself off from the rogue nerve signals flooding it constantly.

And sometimes that’s what you need to do to survive, but there will be times when the channel is less clogged, and you will learn to filter. Even if only your left toe doesn’t hurt, you can focus on that, and over time it will get easier.

Variety in your movement can drown out low-level pain. Even before my accident I gravitated towards dance-related exercise – figure skating, belly dancing, yoga – because the artfulness of it distracted my brain from the monotony. Thinking “oh, what if I do *this*?” or immersing yourself in the music can, if nothing else, just get your mind off the pain for a while.

Mental exercise. When it really does hurt too much to move at all, you can do things in your head, regardless of whether you have ever been able to do them in real life! I like doing Olympic-level gymnastic and figure skating routines. I’ve gone skiing in my head, hang gliding, skydiving. This is also useful for calming a hyperactive brain before sleep.

This is HARD WORK. Even if all it looks like from the outside is you lying there, learning to negotiate the storm of pain signals and relearn everything about how your body works, controlling a new form of mind-body connection, all of this is very hard. The mere act of co- existing with pain takes energy. 99% of physical therapists and bodyworkers will have no idea what it is like.

Have faith in your own experience. Doctors, therapists, friends and family will all try to tell you how to deal with your condition. 

Everything from “just take it easy” to “just try harder” to “you’re just looking for attention.” (The keyword “just” is a great indicator of these malevolent vipers in helpful form.) They are not in your body, they don’t know what you feel, and they have no right to impose their opinions on you as a higher authority than your lived experience. You and you alone know what you feel, and what effect a given movement is likely to have on you. Trust yourself.

Heather Freeman is an artist living in Missouri. She blogs at The Living Artist, about her art, her experiences with chronic pain, and her work with online social justice communities. In her free (ha!) time, she chases after her three-year-old and despairs at the state of American politics.

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Slow Down: Cutting Back for Self-Care

By: Loolwa Khazzoom, Founder, Dancing with Pain

January 19th, 2010 • Leave a Comment

In my personal training session yesterday, we did some lower body work that retriggered this thigh-groin pain. I’m having trouble walking today. I was feeling rather panicked in the morning, not just becuase this setback poses challenges for making it to various meetings, but becuase setbacks just generally sap energy; and I have so much going on right now. Among other things…

  1. I’m working on a couple of article assignments with immediate turnaround deadlines.
  2. I have all kinds of documents to prepare for various business loan applications.
  3. I need to prepare logistics for my class series starting next week, and I need to promote the classes.
  4. I need to prepare for a radio interview tomorrow and follow up on other media interviews in the works.
  5. I have to take care of a number of personal administrative matters.

So I made a call to a friend, and with her help, I realized that I don’t have to do absolutely everything right now. I have since figured out what I definitely have to get done this week (which I am in the process of doing) and what would be great for me to do, but not necessary. Yes that means that I’ll be operating at 70% capacity in some matters, instead of 100% capacity. And yes that means that I will not progress as far and as fast as I would like to this week.

But it also means that I can focus on the most urgent matters and do solid work on them, without making myself stressed out and, therefore, exacerbating my pain. It also means that I will have the time to breathe and dance and rest and take care of my body. And in the long haul, that is the most effective and efficient decision I can possibly make.

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Dancing with Pain Class in Venice, CA This Sunday!

By: Loolwa Khazzoom, Founder, Dancing with Pain

January 19th, 2010 • 1 Comment

OMG I am so crazy excited about my So. Cal. class launch! The first class was a total success. Everyone reported significantly reduced pain levels and increased mobility by the end of class! If you live in the area, I invite you to sign up for the upcoming classese this Sunday and Wednesday, at the Electric Lodge in Venice, CA. You can find out all the details on the Dancing with Pain schedule page. These classes are $15 each or $30 for a series of three, and they are wheelchair accessible.

Please arrive early, to fill out new student paperwork, and please note that for the safety of participants, the class will be closed once method instruction begins, which is usually 15 minutes into the program.

People have informed me that Google Map directions suck, so click the “more” option for my homemade directions, along with info about the wheelchair lift. (more…)

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Dancing with Pain on The Aware Show, this Thursday at 1:00 pm

By: Loolwa Khazzoom, Founder, Dancing with Pain

January 18th, 2010 • 1 Comment

This Thursday, at 1:00 pm, I will be on The Aware Show (KPFK radio, 90.7 FM), talking about my journey dancing through pain and developing the Dancing with Pain method. I will be joined by David Simon, MD — CEO, medical director, and co-founder of the Chopra Center for Wellbeing.

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