Quiksilver
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2006
- Messages
- 2,853
- Reaction score
- 55
So, according to my mother, who is a doctor who specializes in studying bones, I almost paralyzed myself squatting today. Cheery thought isn't it?
Can anyone with enough squatting exposure confirm that this type of injury is possible?
I don't know how it could have happened, my form was more or less perfect, albiet abit shaky past the 15-16th rep. Could it potentially happen if, when fatigued as i obviously was, you start to use your lower back to push the bar up in sort of a Good Morning type maneuver?
Just trying to clear this up. Getting under the bar with the thought "I could paralyze myself here" isn't the best frame of mind.
Apparently this happens when you apply pressure to the C6 disc in your spine. Enough pressure and I would have--according to her--been potentially paralyzed.2. 20-Rep back squats:
20x245
the back of my head hurt like hell by the 16th or 17th rep, my arms and hands were numb and tingling, my vision was going white, and i thought i was going to black out. Only the 2nd week of doing these(instead of LP), and already they are harder than I gave them credit for. I would go so far as to say that 20x245 is far harder than 6x315.
Can anyone with enough squatting exposure confirm that this type of injury is possible?
I don't know how it could have happened, my form was more or less perfect, albiet abit shaky past the 15-16th rep. Could it potentially happen if, when fatigued as i obviously was, you start to use your lower back to push the bar up in sort of a Good Morning type maneuver?
Just trying to clear this up. Getting under the bar with the thought "I could paralyze myself here" isn't the best frame of mind.