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Susan McCulley

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Gentle Rewilding: Shoulders

September 5, 2023 Susan McCulley

Gentle Rewilding: Shoulders. (Photo: Rebecca George Photography)

This is Part 4* of the 7-Part Gentle Rewilding series!

We’ve been tamed, y’all. Modern life molds and changes our bodies, minds and spirits. Much of our modern domestication is just fine: I’m glad we use forks and don’t spit inside and don’t drink milk straight out of the carton (oh wait, I do that). But some of our taming is worth questioning and unwinding. This series is an exploration of ways of reconnecting to our human design with gentle rewilding.

* Find Part 1 – Gentle Rewilding & Feet here.

* Find Part 2 – Gentle Rewilding: Hands here.

* Find Part 3 – Gentle Rewilding: Spine here.


The weight of the world on your shoulders.

Shouldering the load.

Putting your shoulder to the wheel.

In English, we metaphorically refer to shoulders as parts that carry a burden or take the work. While it’s true that functionally, the shoulders can be strong, they also allow a wide range of movement which can also make them vulnerable to injury and stress.

Unlike the deep bone socket of the hip, the shoulder sits more like a golf ball on a tee. As I wrote in a post a while back, the hip joint is like a travel mug in a car’s cup holder and the shoulder is like a tea cup in a saucer. In the post I wrote:

The upper arm bone, the humerus, actually floats – it is not anchored into a ball and socket joint like the femur is to the hip. There is only a shallow indentation where the head of the arm bone rests. The support comes muscularly from underneath, around, and inside the shoulder, demonstrating that the shoulder is designed to support free movement in a wide range of directions but not to bear a lot of weight.

Gently rewilding the shoulders asks us to use and train the shoulders in alignment with how they are designed: for wide reaching (think gathering berries) as well as pulling in (think gathering a loved one in for a hug) and pushing away (pushing a cart stuck in the mud).

Modern life corrals us into using our shoulders in a much more limited way that they are meant to be used. Rounding forward over keyboards and steering wheels, leaves the muscles at the back of the shoulders (and upper back) weak and overstretched, the muscles at the front of the shoulders (and chest) tight with restricted mobility.

Even a limited number of sleep positions can cause shoulder issues. I am a hard-core right-side-sleeper, but when I do, I notice that when I wake up my right shoulder feels like someone punched me. Hard. I’ve been doing my best to sleep in other positions, but I keep ending up on my right side. Turns out that breaking my right-side-sleeping habit is devilishly difficult.

Since noticing my sleeping imbalance and the soreness in my right shoulder, these are my current favorite shoulder moves for gentle rewilding!

Gentle Rewilding: Shoulders

It’s important to go gently and slowly as we stretch the shoulders given their “lightly held” socket and their tendency to hold tension and stress. Easy does it is the way here!

Doorway stretch.

Place your palms at about shoulder height on either side of a door frame and gently lean into the doorway. Open your chest and breathe breathe breathe.

 

Ahhhh! Ease your chest ahead of your hands!

 

Wrap and stretch.

Wrap your right arm under your left, bend both elbows and gently pull your left shoulder to the right. Lift and lower your elbows slightly and play with other micro movements that feel good. Shake it out and do the other side.

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2b wrap & stretch.jpg

If the bent arm version feels too intense or the wrap just isn’t working for you, you can draw one arm across your body with the other, gently pulling at your upper arm or lower arm (avoiding your elbow) while keeping your shoulder away from your ear. Play with different palm directions for different sensations.

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2d long arm.jpg

Arm swings.

Ever see a swimmer standing on the blocks getting ready for a race? They’ll often swing their arms front and back, side to side and wrap around. Swimmers use the bejeezus out of their shoulders so they know how to get them ready for movement! Swing away!

3a arm swings.jpg
3b arm swings.jpg

Shoulder hang.

I’ve been wanting a hanging bar for years and my beloved Frank installed one for my birthday last month! I’m still getting used to the feeling in my hands, arms and shoulders as I let myself hang and even swing a little from the bar. You can start with your feet on the ground and gradually allow more weight to come into the hang. We are designed to do this movement and it’s one that we often miss. There is simply no replicating the sensation of hanging.

 

Start slowly and gradually add weight, then time, then movement to your hang!

 

Bonus passive stretch: Finger crosses.

Most all of us have a postural tendency to either round shoulders forward (think hunched over a keyboard or phone) or overreach them back (think military posture). If you, like me, are a shoulder rounder, cross your middle finger over your ring finger and you’ll feel your shoulders drop back. If you tend to puff your chest up and bring your shoulders way way back, cross your middle finger over your index finger to soften your shoulders forward and relax your ribs. You can hold your fingers like this while walking, waiting in line, any time you want a passive realignment!

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5b middle ring.jpg
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Whether you are healing a sleep injury (ha!) like I am or you are carrying the weight of the world on yours, give some gentle rewilding to your sweet shoulders.

Tags rewilding, shoulders, sleep, stretch
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Support from Behind: 6 Ways to Connect To Your Back Body

April 18, 2023 Susan McCulley

photo: Rebecca George Photography

Let's give it up, sad bones
'Cause we all fall on hard times
But you don't have to stand up all alone
Just put your hand in mine

Climb on a back that's strong

~ Shawn Colvin, Climb On

Human eyes, predators that we are, face front. All of our humaning — working, cooking, making, parenting, connecting — happens in front of us. Paradoxically then, it is the back of your body that is the source of your physical power and support.

Check it out: the biggest bone is in the back of your foot, the biggest muscles are along the back of your legs and hips, the back muscles, too, are broad and expansive.

Given our forward orientation, we tend to lean forward and out of the support that is naturally there for us. As head and chin and shoulders come forward, the smaller muscles in the front body tighten and contract while they strain to hold the body upright. Meanwhile, all those big muscles at the back get over stretched, weak and/or tight from disuse.

Here are 6 practical ways to build power and connection to the back body plus a bonus for another way of getting support from behind.

AWARENESS

 
 
  1. Pay attention to how you stand and sit. Are you leaning forward (even a little) so the back of your body can’t support you? Get next to a mirror and sit or stand as you usually do (while looking away from the mirror), and then without moving your body, gently turn your head so you can see your usual posture. Be gentle with yourself. This is simply information so you can make choices with awareness to bring more ease to your body.

  2. Notice how you walk. The power of the human walk comes from pushing off the ball of the foot and letting that push propel you forward. Pay attention to how you usually walk. Notice if you tend to reach forward with your feet, shoulders and head. See if you can play, instead, with feeling the push from your foot, the swing of your leg and let your shoulders and arms relax back.

STRENGTH

 
 

3. Sink and rise. I mean, really sink and rise. We tend to hesitate to sink into the strength of our legs. Play with using your legs to get down with your bad self. Drop something? Squat down to pick it up. Use the big muscles of your legs whenever you can.

4. Engage your back. Some days, get on the rowing machine instead of the stair stepper. Pull your elbows behind you with your palms facing forward and squeeze/pulse. Get in Plank position (either toes down or knees down) and feel the support from your back hold you in a line. Do some pulling movements with a resistance band, on a weight machine, or in the garden!

STRETCH

 
 

5. Open your chest by lying with a foam roller or rolled towel lined up along your spine with your feet flat on the floor. Let your arms spread to the sides and gently let gravity open tight chest muscles.

6. The hip flexor muscles at the front of the hip tighten with repetitive walking and hours of sitting. Open those muscles by stepping one foot back and gently tucking your tail under as you sink. Go gently and let the muscles lengthen. Another option: do a Supported Bridge pose. To do it: lie on your back, feet flat and close to your tail, knees pointed up, legs parallel, shoulders spread on the floor; then press your hips up creating a diagonal line from shoulders to knees. To support the bridge, place a block or firm pillow under your sacrum/hips (not your low back), and rest the flat sacrum bones on the support. Allow muscles to unwind themselves for several minutes.

 

BONUS: Build a Team of Allies

 
 

Think of people who inspire you, people whose lives guide yours. Whether they are people you know or have never met, people who support you directly or by their example. Recruit them to your team of allies. Imagine them standing behind you when you need encouragement or guidance. Call on them when you need strength or support. Ask them for wisdom when you’re not sure what to do next. Your team of allies is another way of getting support from behind.

Tags back body, strength, stretch, awareness
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