RolandG wrote:
Hey Gregory,
Well, I messed up my left arm in a rather silly fashion. I worked on a big Mother's Day project last month to surprise my wife and I was mixing QUIKRETE in a wheel barrel for a few days. I ended up with tennis elbow.
Playing traditional grip hurts a whole lot so it has given me a good excuse to get my match-grip back up to snuff.
This getting older nonsense is not at all a thrill sometimes.
Roland
Ditto what Cliff said about grips. And growing older is not for sissies.
I've added finger strokes to my repertoire which has changed my approach to the drums and drumming, but I suspect that tennis elbow would still impede traditional grip. I have had tennis elbow, but only on the right arm so did not affect playing.
One aspect of aging, along with the theoretical accumulation of wisdom, is having either to train for unusual muscle use or to treat projects as engineering problems. I hurt my right ankle - for a couple of years - by working on the moderate pitch of my roof, so I just won't do that anymore. Yesterday a friend wanted help getting his free standing mortise machine from his pickup bed up to my loading dock; maybe together we could have lifted it, but I got my engine hoist to do the work. After wearing my hands out shoveling a foot of snow this past winter, I bought a snow blower. My hands didn't hurt, but it was several days before the muscles relaxed enough to have finesse, and it was not something I wanted to repeat for the two-footer we were being warned of later that same week.
I have been fortunate. Even when I was younger, and despite many aches and pains along the way, I not to have seriously hurt myself in any way that prevented drumming. I've been unable to walk but still capable of hitting the kit with energy. Very fortunate.