I think mine would be when I was doing the Russian twist and sit-ups, due to me overusing my abdominal muscles then had to take a few days and allow my muscles to recover before returning to the gym.
I don't really do the gym, but I've walked into a jab (two stitches inside my lip) and broken a rib doing Krav Maga.
At the gym, doing seated rows, I accidentally set the weight at 70 lbs. instead of 50. Should have looked closely at the weight setting. This was in 2012.
"Why do I feel so weak?" I wondered, doing a set of 10 reps. at 70 lbs. Afterward, it felt like someone had jammed a knife between my shoulder blades. The constant pain never stopped.
Four months later, I met a Canadian medical doctor through online dating. I mentioned the knife-like pain in my upper back.
"Two vertebrae in your upper back popped out, rotated 90 degrees, and locked in that position," he said after examining my back.
"Do you know a physical therapist who specializes in spinal rotation?" he asked. "In Canada, we have physical therapists with that specialty."
I did. The physical therapist taught me weight lifting exercises to strength my upper back, and prevent this from happening again.
Here's my back in 2016 at age 62. I wanted to see if I had any back muscles.
Not possible for vertebrae to rotate. Was he a real doctor or just used that as his pick up line?
My medical doctor and the physical therapist confirmed his diagnosis. You are incorrect.
@LiterateHiker Collectively, the vertebral bodies make up the bony building blocks of the spine. The bones are stacked on top of each other and securely attached with a disc in between each one.
The thoracic spine makes up the upper back and has twelve vertebral bodies, labeled T1 through T12.
These structures have very little motion because they are firmly attached to the ribs and sternum (breastbone). There is little motion in the thoracic spine, so this region has less risk of injury or wear and tear.
Since they are major load bearing structures, vertebral bodies in the upper back are prone to developing compression fractures, particularly in patients with osteoporosis (which weakens the bone). These fractures can lead to chronic back pain and progressive misalignment or deformity of the spine.
Vertebrae are attached and don't have the capacity to rotate independently.
Spinal rotation and spinal rotation therapy refers to treating instability in the spinal column due to uneven load bearing.
A few sore and pulled muscles. On the other hand I got a black eye from the Jim once. He’s an angry drunk.
Snapped my ankle once, my foot was about 90 degrees off to the side! It did sting a bit!
Also got hit over the back of the head with a heavy beer stein in Germany! Knocked out and ended up with a split scalp and a lump like an egg. I swear I didn't know she was married and I certainly didn't know her husband was behind me!
The worse injury I got was injury to my sense my psyche, when l showered and discovered I was not the biggest dog on the team.
Torn Achilles tendon, both of them, 7 years apart. I have matching scars on my ankles.
Not me but my daughter was using a treadmill at school when she was in 7th or 8th grade. She's clumsy like me and somehow fell and gave herself a fat lip. Called me to bring her home from school because she was embarrassed. She's a straight A student and I sympathized with her bruised ego so I brought her home, lol.
I didn't get this from the gym but it's a sporting war story. I ruptured my ACL in my right knee while skiing. A fellow skier went over the back of my skis and we somehow got tangled up. So as she kept going it turned me round but my right ski was planted, so when she kept moving I got turned and kept slowly turning until my right knee popped!
I dislocated about $300 from my wallet.
Took a few weeks to recover.
Dislocated my knee while doing a split jerk. Not fun.
Dont like to remember such things ...probably heartbreaks from the anti social yoga gals ?
I haven't had an injury, but I did have a terribly embarrassing accident in a gym in that I intended to stop my jog on the treadmill and intead of pushing the stop button, I simply stopped jogging, on the still moving treadmill. I was swept backwards into the wall and made a hole in the sheetrock upon impact. I didn't get hurt, but I was humiliated at myself. :/
Blew out my rotator cuff lifting heavy. All replaced with plastic now, huge scar covered by a tattoo of hummingbird at a morning glory......
Shin splints in both legs about 1/4 mile from the end of a 7-mile run. Not in a gym, but out with a running club.
Second degree muscle tear in my right calf muscle, six weeks.
Ouch!
i have never been injured at a gym, but i have a health ride, which has handlebars like a bike. twice in my life i walked into the end of a handlebar, hard, right in the gut. the second time was so hard i wondered if i'd been injured, then dismissed the idea, but not long after that -- long enough not to put the two together but not years or anything -- i noticed the shape of my upper stomach changing weirdly when i began to lie back. i asked the doctor about it and she said it was diastasis recti, and that this meant the tissue holding my organs together there had torn. i'd never have a six pack, she said. it only recently (now a couple years later) occurred to me that the timing was such that i almost certainly had caused this by walking into that handlebar. so i really was injured on a piece of gym equipment, but at home, without even realizing i'd been injured.
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