I have had the privilege of studying from some of the “greats” in musculoskeletal medicine e.g Professors Sahrmann, Janda, Lewit, Kolar to name a few. In the years of clinical practice and teaching, many clinicians that I meet ask for “short cuts” and “clinical patterns.” It’s not wrong to give folks short cuts and clinical patterns, as long as they also understand the reasoning behind the why-how-when-where to apply particular tests or treatment techniques.
It is my bias that wrestling to
understand the fundamentals is an exercise NOT to be short-circuited. It helps
one appreciate the approach fully, at the same time acknowledging its strengths
and limitations, and how that particular approach can be integrated with other approaches.
It can be beneficial for backward
reasoning when the treatment outcome is not as expected or optimal. The discipline and lessons learned from my days of competitive badminton have proven invaluable and have shaped how I approach clinical reasoning. This quote by Pablo Picasso strikes a cord with me and I will illustrate its clinical relevance with a short personal story.
I started playing badminton at a
young age, and began competing at age 10.
By age 14, I won the state U-15 singles title championship, and went on
to win several more championships under the tutelage of Master & Mrs Ng
Boon Bee & Mr Khong Shu Ming. At age 17, I had a change in coaches after completing high
school. This particular coach-teacher,
Master Aw believed that I had the talent and drive but lacked the foundational footwork & stroke play to take meA to the national level. So began the long arduous journey of motor re-programming
for efficient footwork that would lay the foundation for polished and stronger stroke play. I was already a state champion at that time, but I was going back to the
basics. Needless to say, my ego took a beating as he drilled me on the fundamentals.
Those deliberate hours of practice on and off the court seemed mundane & endless
but I was motivated by an inner drive to make it to the national
squad. When we were not practicing on the
court, he would make me analyze my strokes and footwork as well as those of my opponents. After each match, while others celebrated
their victories, we went over plays or strategies that worked or failed.
During one particular match, I
defeated my opponent to win a tournament. To my surprise and dismay, Master Aw chewed me out
as he saw that I had returned to my old patterns of scrappy footwork and un-strategized
powerful smashes solely for the purpose of winning. So it was back to more
deliberate practice. A couple months later in another championship match, I
lost to a junior player. I was humiliated and embarrassed. As I hung my head in
shame after the game, Master Aw surprised me by congratulating on a job well done and proceeded to explain that he "saw "or rather detected
that my brain was processing in choosing the new over the old pattern. There
was hesitation in my strokes and footwork which made me a split micro-second
slower but nevertheless I chose the newer pattern. That experience will always be etched in my memory as that was the beginning of a lesson well learned. A motor engram was formed from that new foundation and my coach was able to build upon it to teach me variations and finessing
of the strokes (ART) to make them more polished, powerful,or deceptive depending on
my opponent’s play. To make a long story
short, that was the beginning of my rise as a polished badminton player and in
the next 4 months after that humiliating defeat, I won the National U-18
singles championship and soon after that, was selected to join the national team and represented Malaysia in the
Uber Cup championship (equivalent to Davis Cup in tennis) in Japan.
What has this story to do with
the clinical world of physiotherapy? Below are some of my thoughts.
- Good
coaching (education, mentoring) is of great value and significance. I got
pretty far merely from some talent, sheer grit and drive (NATURE) to succeed. But my coach in his wisdom and foresight showed me that appreciating the fundamentals, discipline of deliberate practice and self-reflection
made me a superior player(NURTURE). I have carried these lessons to my clinical career and I owe much to my family, coaches and teachers who patiently guided and nudged me to better myself. Thank you for believing in me. I will always be grateful for your influence in my life.
- It
is my firm belief from my personal and clinical experience the importance of
going back to the basics and learning them well can indeed accelerate one’s
growth. When one gets stuck or if a
treatment is not working, one can always back-track or self-reflect on where
one went amiss in the thinking process and adjust the treatment, thus, learn
from it. Perhaps that’s one of the reasons
I subscribe to Dr. Shirley Sahrmann’s emphasis on performing a structured exam,
so that one can piece the data collected and makes sense of the SOURCE and
CAUSE of a musculoskeletal pain problem.
Tagging on Vladimir Janda’s influence in my clinical career, the
functional exam accelerated my understanding and appreciation of “regional
interdependence” and looking at a patient as a “whole” and how we need to
promote treatment or exercise strategies to target the central nervous system
to make long lasting changes.
- Movement patterns can be changed but it does take conscious and countless repetitions of deliberate practice for motor engrams to form and take hold. My coaches (like Mr Miyagi in Karate Kid) understood that principle – if you recall the movie, young Daniel was made to perform countless chores e.g painting fences, waxing cars, while concentrating on the quality of the movement. He was frustrated and angry because he thought that Mr Miyagi was just exploiting him. Just as he was about to quit, Mr Miyagi showed him the relevance of those menial tasks when he attacked Daniel, and Daniel instinctively and reflexively defended himself because of the motor engrams formed from the supposedly repeated menial tasks that was he was given by Mr Miyagi. Only then, did young Daniel understand the reason for the countless hours of the mundane and repetitive chores.
In short, in all
of our ambition and drive to better ourselves, we often seek the quickest way to
become the most efficient, the most effective in order to get the quickest
results. However, let’s not forget all
the lessons, beauty, and insight gained from taking the long way home. I leave you with portions of a quote that captures
my sentiments about the importance of not shortchanging the journey.
“As you journey
through life, choose your destinations well, but do not hurry there. You will
arrive soon enough. Wander the back roads and forgotten paths, keeping your
destination in your heart like the fixed point of a compass. Seek out new voices, strange
sights, and ideas foreign to your own. Such things are riches for the soul. And
if upon arrival you find that your
destination is not exactly as you dreamed of,
do not be disappointed. Think of all you would have missed but for the journey there, and know that the true worth of
your travels lies not in where you come
to be at the journey’s end, but in who you come to be along the way.” Unknown
Blogpost written by Clare Frank
Blogpost written by Clare Frank