Golf Injuries Watch Your Back
Written by Bart R on March 20th, 2008If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed, or use one of the many feed readers available from the 'subscribe' button. Thanks for visiting!
My wife is a goddess, as was proof this past week when it comes to golf injuries. I am thankful for having such a great girl. You see my college buddies and I who have keep in touch over the years planned a golfing get away. We had planned this golfing get together for the past year. Then it happened my golfing back started to act up putting some doubt on the trip. We all had looked forward to this weekend of playing golf, shooting the breeze and yes perhaps a little side betting on our golfing.
My wife encouraged me to go on this trip believe it or not, maybe I should wonder why she wanted me out of town, but also help me to get my golfing back in shape. A dancer by trade the only golf she has watched is when she happens to come into the family room and someone like Tiger Woods is playing on TV.
Here are the Top Ten golf injuries. Starting with golfers elbow, knee pain, trigger finger, ecu tendon subluxation, bad back, shoulder pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, DeQuervain’s Tendinitis, wrist impaction and fracture of the Hamate Bone.
When I was on the golf team I had dreams of playing the PGA back in my college days. Not being in Tiger Woods class it seems I had a better head for business than golf. Here is the good part, not once did I have any golf injuries while playing in college. I guess the younger age had played a big factor in that, being twenty compared to being over forty.
At thirty the strain on my back seem to increase a lot, especially while using a driver. After age forty proper exercise for warming up is an absolute must. Advice here from my wife is also a must if you want to keep playing those weekend getaways with you friends.
“Honey”… this is how my wife talks when she wants me to pay attention. “Whether you’re playing golf or dancing, you need to pay attention to core strength, stability and flexibility.” Since she was wearing alluring leotards, I could only sit spellbound and listen. “You need to do strength training to tighten up your abs (could that be hint?) since all your power comes from your center” (she motioned to her stomach, then did an imaginary golf swing) showing me how my abdominals effect my back and hips. Hmmm… maybe she was onto something. “And”, she continued, now on flow, “you have to stretch before you play, the better your strength and flexibility, the better you’ll feel during and after the game”. I couldn’t argue with her, and especially not when she smiled, that’s the gleam that caught my eyes years ago. So I took my wife’s advice, although she doesn’t know a divot from a shank and heaven forbid if I mention a foursome. But keeping a body in shape was her specialty I began to implement her advice, into my daily gold regimen; strengthening my midsection, stretching before tee time, trying (in general) to live healthier. Believe it or not, it not only helped my golf game, but my overall outlook, I could drive longer and straighter and playing eighteen holes didn’t wear me out.
Now my buddies from college are envious, of my golf game, my “drop dead gorgeous” wife and of course my core strength (though they’d never admit to that one). Golf injuries can be a thing of the past, stay in shape stretch before tee time, and give a listen to what the little lady has to say.
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Tags: Recreation & Sports
