


Project Walk-Austin gave me a chance for hope. Instead of waiting for a miracle or on science, I am working towards a goal set by my trainers and me.
By the time I finished my SCI program with Project Walk® in California, I was walking across the room on crutches. Bringing the program to Texas as Project Walk-Austin was my next best step.
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We call Phase IV the transition phase because the client is between worlds. You are no longer paralyzed and have the ability to move and control your legs and arms, but do not have the strength or coordination to walk with aids. The transition from Phase III to IV can be long and hard, and quite often very frustrating; and it can take anywhere from six months to over two years. Additionally, it is not guaranteed that every person will make the transition. Of those who do finally break through to Phase IV, the majority go on to walk with the help of aids.
Why does this happen? What we have learned, and what we teach our clients, is that movement creates more movement. Once tone and spasms are broken down, controlled movement occurs. The more one moves, the easier it becomes; and because it is easier, activity levels increase. Because activity levels increase, the client continues to improve. It’s like going downhill; as you gain momentum, the faster you go.
Phase IV, like the entire recovery process, doesn’t happen in distinct stages. Each stage overlaps with the next. Clients usually start to have coordinated movement in one area and plane of motion, while they are unable to control other movements. For example, a client may have one leg that is good while the other one isn’t. Even though they may be mobile, they are still working on re-learning to use their nervous system.
The Dardzinski Method™ addresses nervous system discrepancies by working the nervous system as a whole. As the nervous system continues to mature, function slowly returns to more and more of the body. Because of this, we really pay attention to posture and biomechanics. Every day, we train the body to work in a functional manner with a goal of alleviating a dysfunctional gait. Gait patterns are much easier to fix before you start walking and before compensation gets worse.
If you can move your legs, you should be able to walk, if you have the right stimulation and the knowledge of a trained professional. Our combined background and experience in performance training gives us a totally different mindset when it comes to this process. We work and train our clients like athletes and teach them the skills they need to walk well. By mastering those skills, the body slowly regains coordination and momentum starts.
Guidelines are set on an individual basis. They can be changed at any time, as your body evolves. The biggest misconception out there is that you need to work out 6 to 8 hours a day. Our program focuses on the quality and intensity of a workout and the results that it produces. Each client has at least one Specialist at all times. Often, two or more Specialists are used to help perform a particular movement or skill. We cannot emphasize enough the importance of REST AND RECOVERY. The human body gets stronger when given the proper time between workouts to rest. Those who follow these guidelines get better; those who don’t allow for rest and recovery, struggle.
At this stage of your recovery, mental and nervous system fatigue is replaced with real muscle fatigue, so you will begin to experience muscle soreness. Diet and rest become very important. Over-training is now a real possibility and will only slow down your recovery.
Individual workouts become more specialized during this phase, because now more than ever, the wrong program will only produce more tone and spasms. Learning how to adapt to a client in this phase takes years of practice. Only our best skilled Specialists train Phase IV clients. It is not easy teaching a nervous system to walk again, so we rely only on our most experienced Specialists to supervise this transition. In the beginning, your daily workouts will focus on coordination. As you progress, you will spend more time working out in the vertical plane (standing up). This is where you will start taking steps.
You need to be close to 100% coordinated on the floor, controlling your legs through the full range of motion. Perfecting movement patterns on the floor will develop the coordination needed to walk.
Pushing your coordination is how you will recover. We will work on your weaknesses over and over until they become strengths. Our center is designed to stimulate and develop coordination, so we have many great tools to work with.
You will be physically exhausted so you should sleep well at night. You will also experience tired and sore muscles, and notice an increase in appetite.
This is a very nice transition. Slowly you will end up spending more and more time in the upright posture learning how to perfect taking steps. Phase V will be some of the same things you were doing in IV only at a higher level. Everything gets more complicated when you stand. For the first time since your injury, you are now bringing into the equation the inner ear (balance); you also have to connect your upper and lower bodies. Those with C injuries sometimes have great legs but the upper body is weaker, slowing down the progress. Think about a radio with a dial tuner—working out on the floor you can find the station that you want, but when you stand, you get static. With practice, the station comes in clearer. When you are spending more time standing during your workouts than on the floor, you have moved on to our gait program.