StudioVeena.com Forums Discussions Conquering fear after fall

  • Conquering fear after fall

    Posted by Catsanctuary177663 on March 25, 2016 at 2:57 am

    Hey all! I had a fall a month ago which resulted in a concussion. I was a figure skater so am used to injuries but this happened with a move I am comfortable with and happened so suddenly I had no opportunity to break my fall. I didn’t even know what happened until I was on the floor. Now I am dismayed to find I have fear, especially when practicing at home. It was the fact that it happened doing a move I love, with no warning. I was in a superman, hanging out, felt nothing amiss, and then boom, down I went on my head. I sought the necessary medical attention, had a CT scan and I’m fine physically. My instructors are not at all concerned, said it will go away and are not making a big deal of it, which I appreciate. I love pole, especially being upside down, and normally have no fear of anything. Now am afraid to do laybacks and simple stuff. I know that I need to watch my thoughts and have been trying to do so, but can anyone share their stories and journey back? Thanks so much!

    Baudelaire replied 8 years, 7 months ago 15 Members · 26 Replies
  • 26 Replies
  • Anzia

    Member
    March 25, 2016 at 11:31 am

    I had almost exactly the same thing last year. I did a Hello Boys to Venus Sit, both of which were easy moves for me. I’d had a virus and had felt tired all evening in class. I went into the Venus Sit, had a split second of surprise when both my hands lost energy to hold the pole, and next thing I landed on my head on the floor. I had concussion for 4 days after, and went back into the beginner group for ages and had to be spotted for every move because I was so shocked and my confidence was knocked. A year later and I’m still not where I was. I’m still working one level lower in class, and I use grip aid more and ask for a spotter more. My confidence is coming back slowly but still nowhere near where it was. I suspect that like me, you may be quite a safety-minded person? Like, you’ll be aware of risks and generally behave safely in everyday life? I ask because I think these things affect us more. It brings our value of safety/security into conflict with our desire to do poling – a slightly more risky activity – and being injured really brings that conflict into focus, causing extra anxiety. What helped me was giving myself permission to only do what I was comfortable with for as long as I needed that (quite a long time as it happens!) until gradually my safety boundaries started to push outwards again and I found myself gradually trying more stuff again. It’s been very frustrating though, and I still don’t pole at home any more because I live by myself and I’m frightened of injury with no one to find me or help me.

  • Baudelaire

    Member
    March 26, 2016 at 5:48 am

    Hi Catsanctuary177663,
    I fell from a windmill early last year and gave myself a concussion. It was in the studio, I had done the move a number of times, keeping my hands on as I moved my body around the pole. Then the instructor asked to “do it with more momentum” obviously it looks more impressive when the move is more dynamic.
    I must have been a little too enthusiastic and next thing I knew I was on the floor, crumpled around the pole with a very sore head!
    It’s only been recently that I’ve had the courage to try the move again. Thankfully I have a wonderfully understanding instructor who was able to spot me, and take the time to let me work through the fear.

    I think falls can help us. I’m much more aware and focused on where the contact points need to be in certain moves, and asking for a spot is not something to be ashamed of. The more thoroughly you understand a move will only help you in the long run, even if it’s feels like your progress is slow at the moment. Your fear of getting into a move a certain way, may also inspire a new creative entrance or variation that helps you feel more secure!

    I wrote about overcoming my fear on my blog (http://melnutter.com/2016/02/28/turning-towards-fear/). I’m sure there are many polers with similar stories.

    Stick in there and give yourself time. Being kind to yourself and focusing on other strengths in the meantime will help you move on.

    🙂

  • Cherished

    Member
    March 26, 2016 at 6:24 am

    I fell out of a CAR, but I wasn’t doing it properly to begin with, even after learning the right way to do it (thanks Veena!) I was still nervous. So I did it over and over again regularly until I became desensitized to the fear. I also used lots of pillows to start over. It took some time but eventually I got my confidence back.

  • Veena

    Administrator
    March 26, 2016 at 2:34 pm

    I’m glad your ok! 💜 You might find this periscope helpful. 😊 https://www.studioveena.com/videos/view/5632ba12-6de8-430c-bc75-1e2eac11006c

  • Catsanctuary177663

    Member
    March 26, 2016 at 5:11 pm

    Thanks everybody. So appreciate your stories and advice. I have a love of sports that have a danger element to them, which brings joy to my life, and normally have less fear than others, which allowed me to progress rapidly in pole, so I’m bound and determined to conquer this!

  • chimponaut

    Member
    March 26, 2016 at 10:55 pm

    I had the same thing happen almost a year ago. Two days before my competition my doubles partner and I were sneaking in a quick practice before work. I fell out of a move I could do in my sleep. I tucked my head but fell from 6 feet and shattered my collarbone and got a severe concussion. I assumed it was from overtraining but after 8 months of still having headaches I went to see a neurologist who discovered that I actually have epilepsy. He thinks i got it from my first concussion many many years ago. Long story short, after my fall I had surgery to repair a severed tendon in my arm and then had a metal plate put in to fix my collarbone. It’s been a long hard road to get back to feeling strong again. I have so much fear now and no longer trust my arms. Before I never thought twice about crazy drops or moves. Now I get nervous doing anything upside down or high above the ground 🙁

  • Rachel Osborne

    Member
    March 27, 2016 at 1:50 am

    So saddening to hear so many stories of falling. I hope you are all healing mentally and physically. I fall regularly but usually land like a cat (years of horse riding meant I learned a lot about falling from a moving object at speed and from a height…)
    But in January this year I fell really badly. I’ve always had a fear of inverted moves where my arms are behind my back and there’s nothing to cushion my head if I let go…I was demonstrating iguana fang on quite a fast spin and my grip just went. I had a split second choice as to whether to try to take the blow on the squishy bridge of my nose or twist my head and try take it on my collarbone/shoulder but risk my neck.

    I went with nose. Noses are pretty easy to fix. I took the fall really well and did a textbook roll to shoulder and tuck – but I lost a lot of skin from my nose and it scarred my face and for a month I had a scab there, a horrible reminder. Afterwards I was very pole-shy. It’s almost April and I am still very cautious. I don’t push it and am staying in my repertoire of movements and gradually pushing the boundaries back. I let myself just dance and flow with no pressure, simple pretty things.

    I know why I fell, and this is IMPORTANT and why I share this story.

    For months and months my passion for pole, and my desire to add to my dance repertoire and to use pole as therapy to deal with life stresses meant I was overtraining and pushing my shoulders and forearms too hard. They became inflamed. I didn’t rest or stretch or condition them enough. They became more and more knotted and angry and exhausted and the inflammation got worse. And the small muscles in the shoulder girdle and forearms, they are what determine your grip strength.

    My grip failed because I failed my body. I did not listen to it. I didn’t give it what it needed.

    I wonder how many pole injuries, like mine, are actually avoidable and happen because the dancer is assuming her strength is the same at the end of the practice as it is at the start? Or that she is as strong on her third day training as her first?

    We push our bodies so damn hard. I used to tell myself ‘be a machine’.

    I am not a machine.
    I was lucky.
    I am still trying to put my learnings into practice.
    To listen to my body and to take rest days and when I am tired, to just stop, or switch it down and do simple grateful flow.

  • littlebunny92

    Member
    March 27, 2016 at 2:10 am

    Agree. I’m getting back into this and just want to pick up where I left off… it’s a little discouraging doing beginner things again. Like, I have my superman from the floor, but I can’t even hold the side v to get into it. I’m getting bored a bit lol. Haven’t even had the pole a week yet!! I need to just stop and take my time. It’s hard, but I’ll get there.

  • Katherine McKinney

    Member
    March 27, 2016 at 2:45 am

    I’ve fallen out of superman before as well, and that is not a fun experience. I managed to roll and hit my shoulder instead of my head, but I had horrendous bruising and held off on that move for probably six months after that. I took it very slowly and also tried a different way to get into superman first that made me more comfortable. I fell out of it from a shoulder mount to superman, and I spent a lot of time on the gemini to superman and the side climb to superman. You’ll be happy to know that this was four or five years ago, and now superman is one of my favorite moves. You’ll conquer it again, and your fall will only make you a stronger poler with more awareness!

  • maurer rose

    Member
    March 27, 2016 at 3:40 am

    Just curious, is there a video anywhere about safety when falling and how to protect one’s neck? I’ve taken classes at three pole studios and somehow never been taught this.

  • littlebunny92

    Member
    March 27, 2016 at 4:03 am

    I’ve never fallen from superman….don’t want to either! I fell one time. I forget what I was doing… I used to cheer though so I had that “air awareness” some call it. flipped and landed on my feet. I still don’t own a crash mat. I should buy one, but they’re so expensive… then I feel I wouldn’t use it enough. I use my husband to spot me. it works….for now.

  • Girl On A Pole

    Member
    March 28, 2016 at 9:47 am

    Such a good thread. I’m with chimp above, I am safety aware (remember my thread about handstand, cartwheel and flip fears) and that does colour my pole progress. I did fall from superman recently. Landed with a thud on both knees (I didn’t have a mat for some reason). It wasn’t the move I expected to fall out off, but it happened. And my knees were bollock’d for weeks after and in truth are still achy. I am more respectful of the move now. I might ace it 9/10 but there’s always that one moment when….

  • Catsanctuary177663

    Member
    March 29, 2016 at 2:10 am

    @Girl-exactly! My mind tells me “You fell out of that comfortable move without warning so it can happen at any time” and I have to keep countering it with “That’s not true!!”. It’s like Veena said in the Periscope-awareness is key. I think it was a combination of being tired and being distracted by other people in the class. It doesn’t mean that my body is just going to indiscriminately fail me-that doesn’t make sense.

  • Rachel Osborne

    Member
    March 29, 2016 at 12:39 pm

    The lady who wrote this blog is now walking again.
    https://fitbitlinny.wordpress.com/2015/12/07/back-break-recovery-week-1/
    She fell from Ayesha.

    Sobering reading. So glad she is recovering so well.

  • Baudelaire

    Member
    April 3, 2016 at 12:18 pm

    After reading this discussion I got thinking about falling and safety while pole dancing. Turns out there is very little said on the topic, beyond grip aids, installing your pole correctly and “chin to chest” mantra.
    I am currently putting the finishing touches on an article that will be out on my blog http://melnutter.com tomorrow. Collating ideas from martial artists, circus performers and the like, I can hopefully add to the knowledge of how to learn to fall safely. I feel that if we had this kind of training our confidence might not be blown so much when we do fall, and the chance of injury would be reduced.
    I’ll post the link here to when it’s up 🙂

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