Quiksilver
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2006
- Messages
- 2,813
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Last Tuesday I went to a professional seminar with my colleagues at work. I sat in a chair for around 8 hours with minimal breaks. My back hurt FAR more after doing that, and didn't hurt one iota after doing a widowmaker set with 250lbs on my back.Lifeforce said:I can't last recall the time when I saw someone actually perform a proper squat in the gym. I've probably not seen ten people during all my time training who have performed it as it should be performed. It seems people think squatting is easy, it's just sitting down and standing up but it's one of the most complicated lifts you can do in the gym.
I used to think that deadlifts were the villain behind my back pain but now when I switched my stances around I found that the squat was the reason I had lower back pain. I did it with improper form, quads were overtaking the lift and put pressure on the lower back even though I performed the lift good. Now I use a wide stance and can go ATG again with knees out and I havent felt back pain ever since.
I am certain that this study should be taken with a grain of salt. Most injuries are probably due to bad form or lifting too heavy too often but as with everything there are risks involved in lifting which needs to be considered. On the other hand, how many backs haven't been hurt because of sedentary jobs such as sitting in an office all day?
