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I have had a hard time trying to change fellow therapist's beliefs about the 8 8oz of water a day myth. There was studies done at the Mayo Clinic and Dartmouth that dispel this popular myth, which was taught at my school. I can't find the links to these studies, but will try to post them later if I find them.
Keith is right. I've had such a rude awakening on these forums to find out that so much of what we are told in massage school isn't true. Bodhi Haraldsson and Paul Ingraham have shared a lot of research on their sites that shoot holes in so many of the things we've been taught, including the lactic acid theory.
Paul also has a site called Save Yourself where he has a section about debunking popular myths. He printed one that dispelled the idea of epsom salt baths helping soreness, and told me he got so much hate mail about it, he would never have believed people felt so strongly about something as silly as epsom salts.
The difference in Keith, Bodhi, and Paul, and the rest of us is that they are into evidence-based scientific research, while most of us just took the teacher's word for whatever we were taught in school. There is so much more to know.
Laura Allen said:Keith is right. I've had such a rude awakening on these forums to find out that so much of what we are told in massage school isn't true. Bodhi Haraldsson and Paul Ingraham have shared a lot of research on their sites that shoot holes in so many of the things we've been taught, including the lactic acid theory.
Paul also has a site called Save Yourself where he has a section about debunking popular myths. He printed one that dispelled the idea of epsom salt baths helping soreness, and told me he got so much hate mail about it, he would never have believed people felt so strongly about something as silly as epsom salts.
The difference in Keith, Bodhi, and Paul, and the rest of us is that they are into evidence-based scientific research, while most of us just took the teacher's word for whatever we were taught in school. There is so much more to know.
Laura,
This is strongly among the reasons that I was so hard-nosed about evidence-base and objective knowledge in the voluminous Body of Knowledge discussion. Once misinformation gets formally "accepted", it is almost impossible to eradicate after the fact. The only filtering likely to be successful is upfront.
I would like to see this. I don't know if my office (full time job, not massage) is normal, but noone here drinks any amount of water to speak of! Soda's all day and their health record speaks for itself. I have wondered if there is a correlation between dehydration and hypertonic muscles? As a triathlete I drink half of my body weight in oz. every day, plus fresh juice. My body lets me know when I have not given it the attention (water) it desires.
I don't think you're hard-nosed! You're just standing up for the truth and I appreciate that. Thank you for all you do for the rest of us.
Keith Eric Grant said:Laura Allen said:Keith is right. I've had such a rude awakening on these forums to find out that so much of what we are told in massage school isn't true. Bodhi Haraldsson and Paul Ingraham have shared a lot of research on their sites that shoot holes in so many of the things we've been taught, including the lactic acid theory.
Paul also has a site called Save Yourself where he has a section about debunking popular myths. He printed one that dispelled the idea of epsom salt baths helping soreness, and told me he got so much hate mail about it, he would never have believed people felt so strongly about something as silly as epsom salts.
The difference in Keith, Bodhi, and Paul, and the rest of us is that they are into evidence-based scientific research, while most of us just took the teacher's word for whatever we were taught in school. There is so much more to know.
Laura,
This is strongly among the reasons that I was so hard-nosed about evidence-base and objective knowledge in the voluminous Body of Knowledge discussion. Once misinformation gets formally "accepted", it is almost impossible to eradicate after the fact. The only filtering likely to be successful is upfront.
you must be on Slowtwitch.com ..... they argue about everything and anything..... you will get arguments here also...
Actually, Tri Talk.com And yes a lot of debating. The good thing is we can jump to a different topic and be great encouragers for one another in spite of our differences. My hopes are I will find that here as well.
Michael McAleese said:you must be on Slowtwitch.com ..... they argue about everything and anything..... you will get arguments here also...
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