I was at the newish Tri-City Hospital Wellness Center today. This is in Carlsbad, CA and serves as a physical therapy and rehab center for patients along with being an 'open-to-the-public' club membership. It is a beautiful and upscale facility, not at all what I encounter in my life.
I was there to be evaluated by a physical therapist because I want nerve pain injection blocks in my neck to the right side of my cervical fusion.
But, the providers are not ready to okay this yet.
The physical therapist was excellent and took a long time with me. The exam room looked out over a 25 meter four-lane pool below us, so we talked swimming a bit. She is a more-than-recreational swimmer; she's mainly a pool swimmer but also does some ocean swimming too. As she examined my neck, discussed strengthening exercises, and showed me how to improve my neck strength to decrease future pain, she pointed out a woman below swimming with a mask and snorkel. She pointed a few different swimmers out and talked about how their necks, heads, and shoulders were moving or not. Her take-home lesson for me was to try the snorkel to cut down on the pressure and twisting of my neck.
She told me that the swimming was doing damage to my surgical neck fusion; this hadn't been pointed out to me before, but I believe her.
So, I will be looking in the garage for a snorkel to follow her instructions. Maybe I will get a new life in the water.
"The first time you quit is the last time you try."
I like the beaches and Pier in Oceanside, CA. I like to be out past the breakers year-round when my abilities permit.
Monday, April 15, 2013
Friday, April 5, 2013
Three Weeks Without Salt Water Ended Today.
I have not swum for three weeks. I never give you full disclosure on this blog but I say what I feel comfortable saying. Surfline has the water temp at 58-60 degrees. I actually wore a thin, full wetsuit and fins today. I was not physically up to swimming so I half-as*ed it. I lay on my back and kicked around the pier. Thirty-two minutes around. Clean water. Slight current to the north--left to right in the photos. Nice little swells out there--about 2 feet. The breaking waves were 3-4 feet on the south side and 2-3 feet on the north side.
I'm quite anxious about my neck status post fusion surgery 3 yrs & 8 months ago. My symptoms have returned big-time and that nerve pinching pain is something that makes you want to rip your head off. For a month or so I have been having bona-fide anxiety issues over my surgery, like was it done correctly? Is the one crooked screw a sign of a problem that occurred in surgery? Is the radiating that has increased into my right arm a sign of a need to re-do the operation? When I press on my neck, why does my other arm (left) experience the same radiating pain?
My lumbar back plan is to get more pain shots at an out-pt surgery center in 2 weeks. My diagnosis is facet joint arthritis in lumbar vertebrae. If interested you can look up facet joints on the internet and get the idea. My neck agony has the positive effect of making me suffer less with the low back issues. There's a sun behind the clouds.
I'm way off swimming. Sorry. For a good swim blog there's Rob Aquatics, Monterey Bay Kelp Krawlers, Lone Swimmer (by an Irishman), and others.
I'm getting some religion with my life of pain now: "The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want."
Or maybe, "The Lord is my safety kayaker, I shall not want."
Bye for now.
"The first time you quit is the last time you try."
Monday, April 1, 2013
Oceanside Hosts Half-Ironman Accenture 70.3
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Link to North County Times article
utsandiego
"The first time you quit is the last time you try."
Link to North County Times article
utsandiego
"The first time you quit is the last time you try."
Friday, March 22, 2013
A Day of Thought and A New Goal Chosen
Readers of this blog have a pretty good idea of my history of illness, injuries, wear & tear, and broken body parts. I actually began this blog about two and one-half years ago to put pressure on myself to use swimming as my tool to rehab from a serious neck surgery that put me out of work for four months.
I was extremely fortunate to get a federal job in a nice clinic pharmacy on Camp Pendleton, just as I was ending four months of disability and wondering where I would go and what I would do. The job was normal hours, Monday to Friday, and I was working for our Marine Corps warriors, their dependent family members, and recruits. I could sit down, take breaks, eat a lunch, and enjoy a friendly atmosphere. I had been stationed on the base as a Hospital Corpsman myself, attached to the Marines thirty years before, and it was like a homecoming to me and the vibrancy of the Marines and Sailors energized me.
In April of 2010, after work, I drove to the Oceanside Harbor and got into the water. I was afraid of injuring my neck and exerting myself. I just looked up my first post on this blog and it was October 2010. From my first tentative dip in the ocean in April 2010, I continued to go to the beach after work, very gradually making progress and healing and rehabilitating myself. No blog entries for my first six months of rehabilitation. Once I got to a stronger sense of wellbeing, I started the blog entries in October 2010. I worked the blog diligently to keep me focused--and it has worked for me.
I increased my distances, improved my times, and fought back against fear. To be sure I'm no swimmer, but I get by and thrive under rough and miserable ocean conditions.
Now I'll get to the reason for my post today. About a year and a half to two years ago, my lower back self-destructed on me. Decades-old lumbar fractures, disc injuries, and wear & tear hit me and I lived with severe pain & spasms, and experienced the discs that move out of whack and put you down on the floor instantly. Long story short--over time I couldn't stand up for more than about twenty minutes and I took daily pain medication. I lost my job based on my inability to meet the physical requirements of my position: extended periods of standing, bending, lifting, etc.
I have been out of work for eight months. I have spent a lot of time and effort trying to get treatment: x-rays, MRI's, epidural pain injections, pain medication, documentation for work and disability, etc. The civilian HMO health care system has been inadequate--to put it nicely. Thankfully I have care at VA facilities and I have had moderate success at the VA getting tests, treatment, TENS units, back braces, pain medications, counseling, and three different types of low back, spinal injections to try to decrease the pain.
Just within the past week I have gotten a big decrease in my lumbar pain after a series of injections two weeks ago. Thank goodness. I hope these effects persist and when they wear off I hope to get more injections.
Will this guy ever get to the point? My new goal is to strengthen and stabilize my low back through the gradual use of weights. My back is unstable and discs and nerves shuffle around back there causing big problems. I will take it easy and tentatively, hoping for increased strength without bringing on damage and recurrence of agony. I will continue to swim.
Just setting the goal out feels good mentally. Wish me luck. My blog will change a bit. My son has lots of training experience in boxing, muay thai, jiu-jitsu, weight training, and MMA training (mixed martial arts). He has me beginning with light weight in two exercises: the dead lift and the squat. Before I discussed this with him I did a little very-light lifting in the garage, wearing my back brace and his weight belt strap for back support.
My intermediate term goal is to rehab the back so that I can stand and hopefully get back to work part-time.
"The first time you quit is the last time you try."
I was extremely fortunate to get a federal job in a nice clinic pharmacy on Camp Pendleton, just as I was ending four months of disability and wondering where I would go and what I would do. The job was normal hours, Monday to Friday, and I was working for our Marine Corps warriors, their dependent family members, and recruits. I could sit down, take breaks, eat a lunch, and enjoy a friendly atmosphere. I had been stationed on the base as a Hospital Corpsman myself, attached to the Marines thirty years before, and it was like a homecoming to me and the vibrancy of the Marines and Sailors energized me.
In April of 2010, after work, I drove to the Oceanside Harbor and got into the water. I was afraid of injuring my neck and exerting myself. I just looked up my first post on this blog and it was October 2010. From my first tentative dip in the ocean in April 2010, I continued to go to the beach after work, very gradually making progress and healing and rehabilitating myself. No blog entries for my first six months of rehabilitation. Once I got to a stronger sense of wellbeing, I started the blog entries in October 2010. I worked the blog diligently to keep me focused--and it has worked for me.
I increased my distances, improved my times, and fought back against fear. To be sure I'm no swimmer, but I get by and thrive under rough and miserable ocean conditions.
Now I'll get to the reason for my post today. About a year and a half to two years ago, my lower back self-destructed on me. Decades-old lumbar fractures, disc injuries, and wear & tear hit me and I lived with severe pain & spasms, and experienced the discs that move out of whack and put you down on the floor instantly. Long story short--over time I couldn't stand up for more than about twenty minutes and I took daily pain medication. I lost my job based on my inability to meet the physical requirements of my position: extended periods of standing, bending, lifting, etc.
I have been out of work for eight months. I have spent a lot of time and effort trying to get treatment: x-rays, MRI's, epidural pain injections, pain medication, documentation for work and disability, etc. The civilian HMO health care system has been inadequate--to put it nicely. Thankfully I have care at VA facilities and I have had moderate success at the VA getting tests, treatment, TENS units, back braces, pain medications, counseling, and three different types of low back, spinal injections to try to decrease the pain.
Just within the past week I have gotten a big decrease in my lumbar pain after a series of injections two weeks ago. Thank goodness. I hope these effects persist and when they wear off I hope to get more injections.
Will this guy ever get to the point? My new goal is to strengthen and stabilize my low back through the gradual use of weights. My back is unstable and discs and nerves shuffle around back there causing big problems. I will take it easy and tentatively, hoping for increased strength without bringing on damage and recurrence of agony. I will continue to swim.
Just setting the goal out feels good mentally. Wish me luck. My blog will change a bit. My son has lots of training experience in boxing, muay thai, jiu-jitsu, weight training, and MMA training (mixed martial arts). He has me beginning with light weight in two exercises: the dead lift and the squat. Before I discussed this with him I did a little very-light lifting in the garage, wearing my back brace and his weight belt strap for back support.
My intermediate term goal is to rehab the back so that I can stand and hopefully get back to work part-time.
"The first time you quit is the last time you try."
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Spring Arrived in Oceanside Today
It was 64 degrees at the beach today but it felt warmer. The sun was bright and the warmth was palpable. Really beautiful. More people there enjoying the warm conditions; you could play in the water to your waist and get warmed up by the sun. Let me check surfline.com for the water temp. It felt a bit warmer than yesterday so I'll guess 59. And the answer is: 55-57. Wow. That tells you how much I know.
The surf was bigger than usual and the surf zone was very deep--about 150 yards of surf to swim through. The outside waves were 6 foot. You can't tell that from my photos. Also I didn't think it was that big as I studied the water before I went in. The interval between waves was small, maybe 5-10 seconds.
I went in and swam hard for 7 minutes to get through that surf zone; I rested for a minute after it. With the current moving north to south I faced the common "get out past the waves before you get dragged into the pier" scenario. Mission accomplished.
The ocean was flat but it had neat, large swells out 300-400 yards. Very pretty and easy to swim through.
The south side had bigger waves and I got wiped out 2-3 times by some big white water. Just a beautiful afternoon and an exciting swim. 34 minutes to get around the pier.
"The first time you quit is the last time you try."
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