Seeler
Well-Known Member
The thing I remember learning as a child was 'if you are losing your balance and about to fall, try to fall forward'. Ratheer than going back and hitting your head, you go down on your knees, catch yourself on you hands/arms, and do a shoulder roll if necessary. Children and heealthy young athletes fall and get up and usually carry on with nothing but a few bruises. For older people it's different. I fell on black ice in middle age. Nothing broken, but I did somethingg to my groin that made it impossibly painful to put weight on that side. I used a walker, then a cane, and had therapy for several months.
A bad fall as a senior can be a matter of losing mobility for life, or sometimes a matter of life or death.
I am quite sure that if I expeerienced another fall like the one I had, at my age and physical condition, I would end up with a walker or wheelchair for the remainder of my shortened life.
Please be careful.
A bad fall as a senior can be a matter of losing mobility for life, or sometimes a matter of life or death.
I am quite sure that if I expeerienced another fall like the one I had, at my age and physical condition, I would end up with a walker or wheelchair for the remainder of my shortened life.
Please be careful.