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Back of neck feeling sore. Which part of the workout is causing this?

LKArgh
Posts: 5,178 Member
Today, and I have noticed this on a few other occasions, the back of my neck is feeling sore. Yesterday was weight training day, day before this was swimming. I cannot figure out which part of my workout is causing this.
The suspects are two:
1) Swimming. I am new to this, and working on my breathing, which means that I am still lifting and turning my head more than I should. Which is not good and I am working on this, but wouldn't it cause the soreness the next day and not 2 days later?
2) The only part of my strength training routine I am not 100% confident about are deadlifts. I know my main form problem is tending to round my back. Which I correct as soon as I realise it, but I know it happens, so I know a few reps here and there happen with not perfectly streight back. But would this cause a sore back neck? I am not using too much weight, as I am trying to fix the form issue. And I am not looking up, which I would expect to cause the neck pain, I am trying to look streight ahead but I believe I am probably looking lower than I should.
The suspects are two:
1) Swimming. I am new to this, and working on my breathing, which means that I am still lifting and turning my head more than I should. Which is not good and I am working on this, but wouldn't it cause the soreness the next day and not 2 days later?
2) The only part of my strength training routine I am not 100% confident about are deadlifts. I know my main form problem is tending to round my back. Which I correct as soon as I realise it, but I know it happens, so I know a few reps here and there happen with not perfectly streight back. But would this cause a sore back neck? I am not using too much weight, as I am trying to fix the form issue. And I am not looking up, which I would expect to cause the neck pain, I am trying to look streight ahead but I believe I am probably looking lower than I should.
0
Replies
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Are you looking up during your deadlifts? You should look straight forward - so when starting your lift you'd look down and when standing up forward.0
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Sorry, you clearly state you are looking lower - somehow I missed that. Next best guesses would be shrugging your shoulders while lifting or having the bar too far away from your legs, thus lifting with your back and not your legs.0
This discussion has been closed.
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