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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 6:19 pm
#11

Quote from: crimsontide on March 13, 2015, 06:14:39 PMkirk, que paso...


these guys wanna  daydream....


there is no way  anyone is going to be better  at sports after lengthening 8 cm....  zero chance that happens


expect to be around 90% realistically, maybe a bit more... best case scenario


nope, it might be possible. if you keep every variable constant (ie, same amount of training, same amount of plyometircs or lack of plyometrics), then u recover 90%

u can recover 120% if u work much harder than before surgery (eg, nba conditioning exercises, plyometrics, reduce body fat)

if ur super lazy and fat before LL, but become super-fit after LL, I don see why its impossible to be in a better shape and more agile.

and add the biomechanical advantages in this article.. u might be fitter than ever before.

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 6:25 pm
#12

anyway I haven't heard of anyone who done plyometrics and agility training, so it is still an Untested area.

crimsontide is too pessimistic. to be honest when I was reading his diary I was actually laughing.. (though I felt bad for him)... eg.. his frames were so tight, he kept complaining.. he complaining his ballerina and that it was "dangerous" etc.. the wheelchair collapsed for him... his "black oil" coming out..the desire to remove the "tight" frames, in a sense, it was so funny that I literally burst out laughing.. (no offense)

when I was recovering post-op I kept reading his diary and it made me so happy and positive. cos' I wasn't experiencing anything he did.. I am basically doing well except for some knee contracture. my distal pin sites are fine but in these few days started to ache badly, I just hope I am not crimsontide no2...

he is pessimistic for most things but he has reassured us that we will be fine after surgery, in terms of non-sports abilities if you train hard, you might gain back 110% athleticism.

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 6:25 pm
#13

huh


dude,.... get real.... you will not be 120% after this surgery.... no one will be more athletic after

no  one who's actually gotten the surgery says theyre better now than before... most say life is good, functional, basically the same, but no one is better than before

you need to  be realistic

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 6:31 pm
#14

im realistic.... you have x legs now and youre writing this nonsense???

realistic, not pessimistic

you have x legs, and youre talking about being 120%

also, i never experienced knee pain, and had zero knee contracture... you are taking these things way too lightly... they are not insignificant

forget about  this dream of 120% athletic ability, and fix the knee contracture and x legs

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 6:33 pm
#15

in medicine and sports, nothing is impossible.. doctors say it is likely vs unlikely. I admit its unlikely to gain back 100% or 110% athleticism. this doesn't mean, in the RIGHT CASE and given the correct effort, it is impossible.

ive yet to see any pro-athlete or even semi-pro take on LL or anyone who is even a little into contact sports and the conditioning that these sports need... goodfootbaler, I didn't read that he did any leg or plyometric exercise.. Sweden too.MDOW gave up on plyo... and Sysop/apo is a fat-looking man who only did plyometric boxes pathetically(like, what, 7 inches)

patient suffers from cancer and a lesion removed from her cerebral coretex. she didn't study in her pre-cancer years. after she got cancer, she decided to study doubly hard. but doctor crimsontide will say its impossible for u to get the same results as you did before.. that is the intelligence behind his argument...lol

I thought he was done whining In his diary... crimson if u wanna regain your abilities (if ur a sports person but I doubt so), u cant sit on the wheelchair all day long like when u were lengthening. u gta put in some effort.

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 6:36 pm
#16

Quote from: crimsontide on March 13, 2015, 06:31:46 PMim realistic.... you have x legs now and youre writing this nonsense???

realistic, not pessimistic

you have x legs, and youre talking about being 120%

also, i never experienced knee pain, and had zero knee contracture... you are taking these things way too lightly... they are not insignificant

forget about  this dream of 120% athletic ability, and fix the knee contracture and x legs


its not called being realistic, it is called being stuck in a box, and being rigid.

if I was 100 kg before LL and slimmed down to 50 kilo after LL, will I not do better in sports?

if I did zero hours of leg training before LL and after LL did nba-style conditioning for hours daily, will I not do better?

it is only logical.

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 7:30 pm
#17

Quote from: ItsMyLife on March 13, 2015, 06:36:06 PMits not called being realistic, it is called being stuck in a box, and being rigid.

if I was 100 kg before LL and slimmed down to 50 kilo after LL, will I not do better in sports?

if I did zero hours of leg training before LL and after LL did nba-style conditioning for hours daily, will I not do better?

it is only logical.

Obviously it is possible to improve in sports, but considering that you were quit sportive before the surgery don't expect any improvements in your athtletic ability. You plan to gain 8cm's, not even 5cm's are a guarantee to get back to 100%. I asked Dr. Solomin about that and he said that 4cm's is a good amount for sports more will habe a negative impact. He is probably more realistic than your Dr.

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 7:31 pm
#18

Quote from: Alittletooshort on March 13, 2015, 07:30:24 PMObviously it is possible to improve in sports, but considering that you were quit sportive before the surgery don't expect any improvements in your athtletic ability. You plan to gain 8cm's, not even 5cm's are a guarantee to get back to 100%. I asked Dr. Solomin about that and he said that 4cm's is a good amount for sports more will have a negative impact. He is probably more realistic than your Dr.

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 7:31 pm
#19

itsmylife


give me 1 example of someone increasing their athletic ability

in reality, not theoretically

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Posted on Mar 13, 2015, 8:23 pm
#20

its my life is not thinking clearly.

the narrative of this thread has been changed to something that is not logical.

the real question is:

is it possible to return to 100% of you pre LL potential.

a coma patient could get LL, wake up and then walk 10 steps and he will have better function(compared to his pre LL ability).

however that 10 steps does not prove a 1000% increase in function. only relative function which is meaningless.


--------------------------------

in short it appears that crimsometide is saying LL always decreases your athletic potential for function.


as for me. im still thinking. I believe I will return to 100% function (pre LL potential).

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