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Perfect
Golf Posture
By: Elizabeth Howzen Kais, M.Ed
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February 25, 2004
All those years your mother
told you to sit up straight and hold your head high….
little did you know that she was actually preparing
you for your golf stance! Posture, the position or arrangement
of the body and its limbs (1), is essential for organizing
the eyes, arms and legs around the spine as the brain
and body prepare for and execute motion. Good posture
indicates that the bones support the structure and the
muscles provide the movement (2). Here is where the
dialogue occurs between the brain, nerves and all the
muscles in the body as it prepares for and executes
the golf swing.
Muscles exhibit two types of functions, mostly phasic
and mostly tonic. Phasic muscles are primarily responsible
for movement. They react much like turning on and off
a light switch. For example, your brain sends the message
“kick” to your leg via the nerves and muscles.
As a result your quadriceps extend the knee and the
foot kicks. After the movement is over the muscle returns
to rest. The brain and nervous system turn the muscle
on, action, completion, muscle off.
Tonic muscles are primarily responsible for posture
and behave as if they were attached to a dimmer switch.
They balance against the gravitational forces that try
to alter the position of the body and its limbs (3).
For example, when you sit down the dimmer switch is
set on low with few nerves sending impulses to the muscles.
When you stand up the muscles need to increase their
activity and the nerves turn the switch up that measured
amount. If someone tried to knock you over these muscles
would be fully functioning with the switch turned up
to high but returning to moderate once the acting force
ended. Each moment the switch adjusts up or down depending
upon the amount of activity required of the nerves and
muscles.
Now lets take your address position. You eye up your
shot, set your feet, soften your knees, bend at the
hips, extend your arms, align your head and fix your
eyes on your ball. This is static strength and stability(4).
Gravity is trying to pull your stationary body toward
the ground and your nervous system turns up your dimmer
switch to counter act the pull and hold your position.
Meanwhile your brain is processing where the shot needs
to go and where all your body parts are in relationship
to the spine and performing that task. These skills
are the preparatory movements and mental set (5). The
eyes have reported 270 yards, slight dog leg left to
the hole. The brain reports 250 yards maximum if I call
on all the speed in the nerves and all the synergistic
power in the muscles. The arms and hands report back
the grip and club face angle while the feet and legs
report the stance to the brain.
The ego exclaims, “lets go for it!” and
you let rip. These skills include the back swing, force
producing movement and recovery (6). You have just asked
your limbs and joints to revolve around your simultaneously
rotating spine in a perfectly balanced arc. This is
dynamic strength and stability (7), light switch on,
swing, light switch off.
So what happened to the shot? Did it go exactly where
you wanted it to go? Congratulations! You were able
to hold your address position and move your limbs and
joints around your rotating spine, calling on the exact
amount of muscular activity and joint motion in perfect
neuromuscular synergy. This is optimal static and dynamic
strength and stability working in perfect harmony.
Did the shot veer from where you expected it to go?
If the answer is “yes” then you have a skill
deficiency in your mental set, back swing, force production,
or recovery related to static stability, dynamic stability
or both.
Most golfers falter the second they step up and address
the ball.
Work, habits, injury and pain all reprogram the neuromuscular
activity which then changes optimal static and dynamic
posture. Activating the same muscles over and over again,
whether phasic or tonic, creates imbalance. The always
used muscles become short, tight and weak restricting
movement and altering joint structure by changing the
position of the bones. The little used long, loose and
weak muscles are stretch beyond their abilities to effectively
create movement or support the structure of the joint
during activity or rest.
Phasic muscles, once controlled by the light switch,
may be neurologically reprogrammed to have a dimmer
switch to help the long, loose, and weak muscles do
their job. This robs the body of endurance and power
as the amount of muscle fibers available for on-off
contractions designed to create movement are now rerouted
to the dimmer switch of activity as needed. Tonic muscles
whose dimmer switch is always set on low eventually
turn off believing they are no longer needed. Tonic
muscles whose dimmer switch is always set on high lose
the ability to modulate and remain on high.
How did your posture look when you addressed the ball
and hit the shot that went awry? Was your head thrust
forward, shoulders pulled in toward your sternum with
your upper back hunched? Was your low back flat or excessively
arched with your knees pulled in toward each other and
your weight resting on the arch of your foot? Could
you draw a straight line from head to tail allowing
for a slight arch at the neck and low back or would
the line start low at the back of the head, kink and
raise up to touch the mid-back, and then divert sharply
downward again reaching between the hip bones for the
sacrum?
The key to rectifying the above description lies a
corrective exercise program. First you must determine
which of your muscles are short, tight, weak and which
are long, loose and weak (8). Then begin your corrective
exercise program by stretching the short, tight and
weak muscles and strengthening the long, loose and weak
muscles. For example, performing a lunge stretch to
lengthen short, tight hip flexor muscles at the hip
joint. If you need assistance a knowledgeable practitioner
can evaluate and measure the length and tension relationship
between your muscles and prescribe stretches.
Next you need to determine which joints, including
the spine, that have limited, excessive or normal range
of motion (9). The second step in your program is to
perform mobilizations to restore the joints that are
limited in their motion and exercises to strengthen
muscles surrounding the joints that have excessive motion.
For example, juxtaposing your shoulders and hips while
lying on a foam roller to improve rotation at the spine.
This evaluation, with measurements and exercise recommendations,
is also included in a skilled practitioner’s assessment.
In cases of injury a licensed connective tissue massage
therapist may be needed to mobilize the tissue around
the joint.
Finally you need to evaluate the quality of your movement.
The golf swing should be fluid with each muscle activating
at the appropriate time and in the exact measure. It
should not be choppy or segmented with some muscles
firing excessively while others sleep during the movement.
The third step in your program is to perform integrative
strength and power exercises designed to reprogram the
brain and neurological system to communicate optimally
with the muscles (10). These exercises combine multiple
movements in all directions. For example, combining
a squat with a reverse chop to improve the hip and shoulder
coordination during the fore and back swing or throwing
a medicine ball over your shoulder.
Static and dynamic posture/strength and integrative
movements are learned skills that require practice prior
to mastery. The greater the skill development, the easier
the action (11) and the more precise the ball flight.
Article courtesy of Elizabeth Howzen
Kais, M.Ed of Florida
Golf Conditioning
Source: www.TheGolfExpert.com
1. Web Definition, www.cogsci.princeton.edu/cgi-bin/webwn
2. Feldenkrais, Moshe, Awareness Through Movement, Harper
Collins, 1990, p. 68.
3. Feldenkrais, Moshe, Awareness Through Movement, Harper
Collins, 1990, p. 70.
4. Chek, Paul, The Golf Biomechanic’s Manual,
The C.H.E.K Institute, 2001, p.86.
5. Carr, Gerry, Mechanics of Sport, Human Kinetics,
1997, p. 136.
6. Carr, Gerry, Mechanics of Sport, Human Kinetics,
1997, p. 136.
7. Chek, Paul, The Golf Biomechanic’s Manual,
The C.H.E.K Institute, 2001, p.86.
8. The C.H.E.K Institute, Lecture, Level 1 Certification
notes, September, 2002.
9. The C.H.E.K Institute, Lecture, Level 1 Certification
notes, September, 2002.
10. The C.H.E.K Institute, Lecture, Level 1 Certification
notes, September, 2002.
11. Feldenkrais, Moshe, Awareness Through Movement,
Harper Collins, 1990, p. 87
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