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J**Y
Reliable information
Particularly in the area of health care, the publishing market is flooded with unreliable information. This book is careful. It is based not only on extensive academic studies, but on academic studies carefully correlated to clinical treatment. It recognizes the difference between muscles whose function is to stabilize the body during movement and muscles intended to create movement. Recognizing physical reality and correlating it with years of successful rehabilitation of many back difficulties, I see this as very reliable information. A person who simply wished to avoid injury could use this book to help structure a good exercise program. A person who was injured but could not afford the increasingly inaccessible medical system, might buy this book for less than a treatment session and accomplish a good portion of self-rehab. It is, of course, never optimal to avoid medical treatment. Not everyone can afford it these days.
A**F
Absolute Game-changer of a book
Can't recommend it more. But if this is your first book on back healing, go and get Back Mechanic by Stuart McGill first. See my extensive review there... this is the second book to move on to, to get you back in the game. In a word: Superb!
C**.
Excellent book for back issues
Everyone with a back should read this book. I wish it were required reading in school. Explains in layman’s terms not just how to deal with back problems but avoid them in the first place.
S**T
Very informative
This book is the second of its type and goes into more detail about back injuries, the anatomy of the back, and a routine that is easy to follow for getting well.
S**R
4.9 stars. Typos
I am enjoying this book, but every time the author has intended to write ‘movement’ he has written ‘moment’.
J**Z
Help Your Back. Help Your Tennis Game.
My tennis trainer/coach introduced me to the work of Dr. Stuart McGill through what I came to know as “The Big Three” (well represented on the internet). This is a set of core exercises that includes the “curl up.” The curl up is a substitute for the sit-ups and crunches we’ve been brought up on – but which Dr. McGill has found can injure the spine. One thing led to another and I wound up buying and studying his most recent book, published in 2017. To cut to the chase, my back remains in excellent condition and my tennis game has improved. I link these directly to a greater understanding of how to protect my lumbar spine and how to strengthen my core without hurting myself. Dr. McGill extensively discusses “stiffness” as a way of protecting the spine and also for allowing the most effective flow of energy and power through the kinetic chain. Particularly fascinating and useful is his presentation (on p. 187) of how you can generate tremendously increased grip strength by calling stiffness into play, evoking “neuronal overflow.” In trying this out, be careful you don’t crush someone’s hand or allow yours to be crushed. I have found, and continue to find, this book to be tremendously interesting, well documented, and useful. I suspect that physicians, trainers, and athletes will, too.
B**M
For a clinician
I was recommended this book as a person with a serious lower back herniation. I will be working through this book after I master Stuart's book "Back Mechanic"
A**R
Fixing a Herniated Disc
I can't say enough great things about this book and the author. This is a must ready if you have back problems. This is the go to author. His book has helped me immensely in healing my back and learning to live with a herniated disc.Stuart McGill is the expert in back mechanics. I found out about it him after endless amounts of research to help me heal a herniated disc without surgery.
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