The Alexander Technique can be extremely effective in helping
keen runners to avoid injuries, Peta Bee discovers
Jogging doesn't have to be a pain

Bee and Sheilds: "Most people who
take up running never learn to do it well," he says.
The Alexander Technique
can help people move and breathe more easily.
Running is back in fashion and while this is
welcome news for our waistlines, it bodes less well for our hips
and knees. A decade of pounding the pavements during the jogging
boom of the Eighties left many fitness enthusiasts injured and
forced to switch to less strenuous activities.
However, the sport's image as the enemy of vulnerable
joints is being challenged by the authors of a new book, The
Art of Running. According to co-authors Andrew Shields and
Malcolm Balk, it is not so much as jogging itself that is usually
to blame for niggles, pain and strains.
Just watch the London Marathon on television
or take a look at runners passing you in the street, says Shields,
and you will witness the most particular technical adjustments
to what is, basically, a natural form of movement.
"It is sad but true, that most people who
take up running never learn to do it well. They run with knock-knees,
rounded shoulders, bobbing heads, flapping hands or even leaning
to one side." he says. "Sometimes they are grunting,
or running flat-footed with such force that you hear them well
before you
see them."
As a high-impact activity, running is not without
its risks. Each time a jogger's foot strikes the ground, a shock
equivalent to three times their body weight reverberates from
the feet and legs and up through the spine. A well-cushioned
pair of trainers helps to lessen the blow, but even the most
expensive shoes will not make up for inadequacies in running
style.
"If your body is off-balance when you run, you
are asking for problems," says Sheilds. "Very often, pain in
one part of the body is simply a sign that you are doing something
wrong elsewhere. For instance, a strained calf muscle could be
traced back to the fact that you hold your head to one side.
That might cause tension in your back muscles, which forces you
to compensate by adjusting the length of your stride."
A keen runner and nationally ranked triple jumper
in his youth, Sheilds was plagued with recurrent injuries until
he discovered the Alexander Technique - the popular method of
postural awareness that teaches people to become more in tune
with the way their body moves. A chance meeting with Malcolm
Balk, an Alexander instructor from Canada who applies the principles
to coaching runners, confirmed Sheild's suspicion that the two
disciplines would combine perfectly. Now the pare hope to revolutionize
the way people run by teaching them how to undo the bad habits
they have been practicing for years.
Crucial to the Alexander Technique is learning
how to loosen the neck so that the head extends gently forward.
This promotes a natural lengthening of the spine, which releases
muscles and joints so that body alignment is improved. For runners,
it translates into freer movement of the limbs and an ability
to breathe more easily under pressure.
"The head weighs about 10 pounds so it
doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that letting it
roll around
is going to place tremendous loan on the rest of the body," says
Sheilds. "It creates tension in the shoulders and puts immense
pressure on the spine. Similarly, running with your head backwards
compresses the vertebrae in the neck causing the back to arch
and stiffen."
Another common mistake is to clench the teeth
or grimace when the going gets tough. Smiling, says Balk is infinitely
preferable. "Runners do some pretty awful things with their
faces when they run," he says. "Facial grimaces do
little to help you get from A to B. Rather, they are an indication
they your energy
is being misdirected instead of going where it will do most good."
Shields also advises learning to run quietly rather than pounding
the tarmac and to avoid springing too high. "Research has
shown that elite runners have less vertical change in their centers
of mass compared with average runners," he says. "If
you stop bouncing up and down you will reduce the quantity of
vertical
movement and proceed at the same pace with less effort."
However, it is not only those who run for fun
who are technically inefficient. Sheilds often winces at the
simple mechanical errors made by top athletes when he watches
television coverage of the international track and field meetings.
"Even in Olympic races it is not unusual to
see a runner who is in the lead panic and become tense. His shoulders
hunch so his arms can't move as freely and is breathing is affected,"
he says. "Inevitably when this happens he is beaten by the man
who maintains good style through the line. It has happened countless
times."
While a few bodily adjustments could mean the
difference between winning and losing at an elite level, for
those of us who are content to plod through life at a more sedate
pace, they can transform a daily run from an unforgiving slog
into an enjoyable ritual. Poor technique not only leaves runners
prone to injury, it often means they don't enjoy what they are
doing.
"Part of the problem is that people put
too much focus on running fast," says Sheilds. "They
put their head down and grimly try to record a faster time on
their stopwatch.
Nine times out of 10 people who take this approach finds it ends
up becoming a chore. Boredom and blindness set in as they put
on their trainers and they wish they were somewhere else doing
something more exciting. "
This approach, I confess - as Sheilds and I
trot through Regent's Park in London - is my big downfall. I
have run for 20 years but all too often the tyranny of the stopwatch
scuppers my enjoyment. Shields suggests that removing the pressure
of time constraints will be like lifting a weight from my shoulders.
Others could benefit from scrapping their self-imposed
rules of running. Listening to music on a headset is the ultimate
sin committed by joggers, says Sheilds, because it means they
aren't "tuned in" to their surroundings. But that aside, there
are few restrictions you should place on your regular run in
the park. Even slowing down to a walk when you are tired should
not leave you racked with guilt.
"When running becomes just a means to an
end - be it fitness, fame or fat reduction - it loses the features
that elevate it from just another mundane activity," says
Shields.
"Children run in an uninhibited way and we could learn a
lot from them. They have yet to pick up on the mistakes we make
as
adults and, above all, they run purely because it is fun."
How to be a better runner