quick facts: i have had 12 finger injuries (not including micro strains)
tendonitis in my right elbow
un known injury affecting both arms neck and back
all within a 4 year time period.
the best place to start is probably at the start. (unsurprising that) but to be honest im not 100% on when the start is so i'll go from here. when i was 13 a climbing team was established at my local wall and i was one of the members. we got regular coaching twice a week and messed about a lot pushing each other's climbing and generally becoming better climbers with aims to compete in national competitions and get on the gb team (from the original 9,3 are now team gb members). i loved the new set up and the people who i could now climb with on a weekly basis.(some are now my best friends). i climbed hard and although i often messed about i did improve a lot in that first year. things were going well. i had made it to the BRYCS final finishing 3rd in my region with only about 12 points between me and my friend sarah (pashley) who came 2nd. (for anyone who doesn't know the scoring that's the same as 4 holds higher over 18 climbs) so it was damn close. we were ultra competitive(still are) and now all that was left was to see who beat who in the final.
BRYCS 2009 before i ever got injured! |
in the few months we had between the regionals and the final i pushed hard. i was now climbing about 7a ish and had found a favourite style of climbing. crimps on slight overhangs and technical moves. i had good balance for these and could work them out quite quickly. seeing as i was good at these types of climbs i soon spent more and more time climbing crimps and all holds small. it was going well fingers were getting strong and i was having a great time. i felt that i should have a decent chance of doing well in the final and all was good.
during that time i kept a diary sort of thing about my climbing (which has turned out to be quite useful and i dont really have much recollection of that time). the first time i hurt a finger was on the 9th of june. according to my 14 year old self "my finger randomly started hurting" hmm not good. being young and naive this caused more annoyance than worry so when ashleigh (my coach) turned around to talk to someone else i jumped on a climb i had been working despite the fact i had been told not to climb. to me this seemed reasonable i mean its only one sore finger how bad could it get? my frustration at this stupid (my opinion at the time) climbing ban was summed up when i wrote "i wasn't even allowed to do frenchies" and i dont think i even liked them. this was the start of what would become a problem that would take over my climbing. (well the good times were never going to last were they?)
second boulder didnt get past here |
i reckoned that to fix the finger problem i was now developing all i had to do was give them a week off. this was easy enough to do as i was to go on a school trip to germany for a week which meant it was the perfect opportunity to rest. by the time i got back i told myself my fingers would be fine and things such as holding anything, opening doors and most importantly climbing would no longer cause considerable pain in most of my 8 digits (thumbs not included). how wrong i was.
just a little bit of finger tape...on every finger. (please excuse the questionable choice of t-shirt) |
i was still unaware of quite what i had done to my body. it was only the next week when i got told i really shouldn't be climbing and that i should see a physio that i really got the fact i had hurt myself. the next weekend it was the BLCC in ratho (one of my favourite places in britain) but i couldnt compete i went anyway to watch. i hadn't realised quite how much i missed climbing untill about half way through the day when i decided that all i wanted to do was climb. i promptly burst into tears and cried alot. when i returned home i made an appointment to see a physio in sheffield. from him i learned the extent of what i had done to myself.i think it was 3 partial ruptured pulleys and 4 strained ligaments. so just a few fingers really. i had to take about 6 weeks off and ice bath them everyday.
im going to skip through rehab and stuff as it would take forever and move to 2 weeks before christmas that year. i was back on track and climbing well. we were going on holiday the next day and i was down at the wall for a training session. i was on a fingery climb and hadn't really warmed up properly (no prizes for guessing what happened next) i popped for a hold and found myself on the floor in a lot of pain. the tendon to my ring finger of my right hand had been pulled and was now swollen. the pain went from the tip of the finger to my elbow and i could hardly close my hand due to the pain. this had been the only finger unaffected by the injuries in the summer and i was gutted. this equalled 3 weeks off and more careful climbing.
if you look very closely you can see the hail! |
more tape and a hard climb (see those nice fingery holds, well i spent quite i while locked off on them) |
the following summer i got tendonitis in my elbows. not quite sure how over training most likley. this resulted in 6 weeks off. i got back to climbing but it wasnt 100%. becuase i didn't really know why it hurt i carried on. i found that when the blood flow was good it hurt less therefore climbing helped so i kept at it. during a conditioning session with my coach they flared off again. i had done a few different exercises and when i came to repeat the pull ups i found that i just couldnt. my arms refused to pull and that hurt. a lot. i didn't take time off then (november 2011) but was a bit more gentle with my climbing. things steadily got better on the elbow front. they still hurt a bit but less and less each week i was climbing quite well and was looking forward to improving in the new year.
by january the pains were gone most of the time. still there a bit but nothing too bad. in february they went completely. i was pain free for the first time in months! that is until i met a chisel. now to make it clear i DID NOT stab my arm with the chisel as most people seem to think i must have. i was working in really nice hard wood.(im a tech student) making a finger joint. this involed aot of chiselling which really hurt my elbow. obviously i ignored this and carried on. (i really should have learned by now!) and when climbing soon after. my arms hurt but hey i was climbing its not like i had had any injuries before that should of taught me not to climb when things hurt so i carried on.
the day i found that i really shouldn't be climbing was the 13th of february 2012. i was in sheffield with my coach climbing in the foundry. i warmed up and found my right arm was hurting. having learned a few lessons i told katherine. she asked if i reckoned it would be ok. i reckoned it would (ok so i hadnt learned as much i i should have by this point) so got on a nice 5+ to warm up. the first few moves were ok but then my arm started to hurt. when it was straight it hurt intensely in the centre and when it was pulling my weight it hurt as well. i topped the route and decided that massaging it would do the trick. katherine asked if it was ok. i told her it hurt alot but reckoned i should be fine.(when will i ever learn?) i got back on the climb to repeat it.by the time i reached the 3rd clip i knew something was wrong. i dropped off annoyed and and in pain cursing my luck. i was injured again.
it took about and hour and a half to persuade me of that fact. i didnt want to listen. im going to talk more about how i react to injuries another time but lets just say not very well. this has by far been the worst injury i have had. it affects both my arms meaning that something like climbing is impossible and painful. sometimes there are intense pains in the centre of my elbow, other times the back of both my elbows hurt when i bend them. i cant keep them in the same position for any length of time without it hurting and i have problems gripping this especially when its cold as the backs of my arms "freeze up" and i cant open or close my hands without being in a lot of pain. know one really knows what this injury is. and all i know is that it hurts and that if i tried to climb i wouldnt have any use of my arms for the rest of the day. so for the past 10 months ive not been on a wall. climbing is still a key part of my life but right now its the waiting to climb that has taken over not the climbing itself.
so thats all of them. now i know it seems hard to believe that you can get 7 injured fingers all at once. but trust me you can. i have yet to met anyone else who has had quite so many at once but hey you got to be good at something right? ok maybe not getting injured. but now i know a lot more than i did back then and although im in the middle of my biggest and most injury im still a climber and nothing will change that about me.
i would just like to thank natalie berry for proof reading this :)
Hang in there now you know how to train .
ReplyDeleteDont forget those hard learned lessons - climbing is also not everything , in this world .
but if you like ,,, keep climbing - you will do good as long as you really just stay injury free , and thats so hard to do for 90% of all of us .
love your blog and ---- i hate caps to
thank you. i dont think i could forget those lessons now. i know climbing is not the be all and end all but as the biggest part of my life it can seem that way. its good to know that now people ca hopfuly learn from my mistakes and not repeat them. and also good to fine someone who hate caps!
ReplyDeleteailsa
I've had lots of problems with injuries in the past: ruptured pulleys, torn shoulder, strained ligaments and golfers and tennis elbow (all those within the last 3 years as well). I really feel for you and hope you make a full recovery and learn to avoid injury in the future!
ReplyDeleteI had such bad golfers + tennis elbow (medial and lateral epicondylitis) that 2 months rest made no difference and I couldn't even do basic day-to-day stuff - like lifting a glass or turning a key - without continuous pain. I finally started a strict regime of eccentric exercises (2-3 sets of 15 negatives in 3 exercises every day) and found my elbows recovered very quickly. Now I continue doing the exercises as a preventative measure and make sure I don't climb more than 3 days in a row. I usually do 2 days on and 1 day off now. In the evenings I use hot/cold treatment or ice baths for the fingers to ensure my finger joints do not become too swollen or sore. I've quit my job and started climbing full time and am now climbing harder than ever, which is all the more reason for being careful and listening to my body.
I assume you're doing rehab exercises in your 10 months off, but if you're not then definitely get on them. Climbing training in the volumes you're doing is going to generate repetitive strain injuries unless you balance it out by training the antagonist muscles and take sufficient rest periods in order to recover and become stronger. I'm no expert but your arm pain does sound a lot like what I suffered with (tendonosis rather than tendonitis) and doing the eccentric exercises was the only thing that helped. Go see the physio again if you haven't already!
Injuries are a life lesson to take more responsibility over your training and body. It's unfortunate we've both learnt the hard way that a "no pain no gain" mentality is not a sustainable policy in the long-term.
Wishing you all the best for a speedy recovery and injury free future!
yeah. i know where ur coming from! i am a huge advocate for ice baths having used them so much in the past. im planning to move on to talk about things like rehab another time as i think its really importanr and can be the hardest part of injurys. unfortunaly for me i know its not a tendon problem im currently dealing with. ive had several mri scans to conferm this and nothing remoty like tendonoisis has come up. im going to talk more about my current injurys and try to explain what i know about it but my doctor thinks its age and growth related. as knowone is sure what ive done yet im not doing rehab as knowone can tell me what i should do but im dam physed to get started with it. thanks you for ur suport and i hope u mange to stay injury free from now one!
DeleteGlad to hear you've been getting lots of advice and scans etc... Bit of a nuisance they haven't given you a definitive diagnosis yet but if it's age related hopefully it'll go away and never come back! Look forward to reading your future posts.
Deletethank you! i hope so as well. ive got quite alot to say about injurys and after the amazing up take i have had with this first blog there should hopfuly be more. hopefuly people will learn from me and not repeat. please sheare this with any other climbers you know espectialy the young ones to try to help raise awarness about climbing injurys!
DeleteSo sorry to read about your problems. It is so important to get on top of these problems. Not just next week, next month or even year. When they are sorted you will be able to enjoy climbing, you have a long journey ahead of you. Hope it is a happy one.
ReplyDeleteGaz
thank you. and i would aslo like to say thanks for shareing it on fb :)
DeleteI've just had a few weeks off earlier this year due to bad elbows. Got to the point where turning keys, opening door handles, driving, opening jars, writing, belaying, coiling ropes etc. were all causing me pain. Changing all the little things ( as well as doing my rehab ) seemed to make the most difference. I know you say you can't do rehab at the moment but i adapted/changed the way i did loads of tasks that hurt it throughout the day. Belaying was the big one for me. If i held the dead rope with a bent elbow and a bit of tension it hurt. Straight arm and no tension = no pain.
ReplyDeleteJust a thought that even though you've stopped climbing there may be loads of other things that aggravate it.
I've also had loads of finger injuries in the past. Not had anything other than minor tweaks in my fingers now for ages since changing my climbing style following advice i got from 9 out of 10 climbers and from Dave Mac's blog too.
Anyway best of luck to you. There seem to be those of us who are injury prone and those who are not. It may be genetic or it may be something we are doing. Find out and keep the faith.
I'm back to pushing on now and going for my best yet - there is light at the end of the tunnel.
Good luck.
Andy
thanks. i have often wondered my i have had so many wehn some of my friends who do much more agressive trsining have had non. its somthing i would like to talk about but there are so mnay things i would like to talk about to it may have to wait a while. and yes you are right many things in daliy lifr casue pain and i like you have had to adapt to them. some things i do agrivate my arms but some of them i must do. again somthing i want to talk about in more deatil at another time. i would say i did learn with my fingers and in the past 2 years have only had minor tweaks thst i have delt with swiftly and they no longer cuase trouble. i may not be as hopless as i seem! thank you for your suport and i hope u get to where you want to be in climbing soon! for now its a waiting game but im not giving up and at some point i want to be able to talk about my climbing achivements not what ive hurt! ailsa
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