The butt clench

Tldr: a few months ago, I realized that I clench my butt pretty much all the time. Like all day, for no reason. So I’m learning, slowly and rep by rep, how to relax my butt muscles…yup.

Oh and it’s not my outer butt muscles, the glutes. It’s actually the inside, the sphincter muscles. What you use when you gotta poop. But I feel more comfortable just calling it the butt clench :)

It’s partly amusing, kinda frustrating, and mostly weird. I don’t know when I started to do this. I might not be alone in this habit but it feels that way. The behavior can’t be healthy or helpful. It’s simply a bad and stuck habit.

Singing lessons helped me spot the clench. In everyday life, when you exhale, your body likes to squeeze your breathing muscles to get that last bit of oxygen goodness. When you sing, this squeezing and contracting is bad. It wastes air. One way to fight this tendency is to push outward, slightly, as you breathe out. Fight the contracting muscles. This is known as support. Some people say when you’re doing it right, it should feel like taking a poop. Others suggest expanding your stomach like a balloon – in a full circle, and then to maintain that expansion.

The more I practiced support, the more I noticed that my inner butt muscle, my sphincters, would relax. It’s like a tight knot that would unravel when I focused on it. And when the muscles relaxed, it felt good. Like noticeable good – relaxed, less tension, a kinda looseness around my pelvis.

I began to try and spot check throughout the day. I’d think about that inner spot and invariably I’d notice it was clenched. So I’d make a conscious effort to relax and release. But only moments after doing so, if I spot checked again, I’d notice that it tightened up again, like a slinky returning to its default form.

Through practice, it got easier to unclench. Less concentration was required. Occasionally – rarely – I’d do a mental check and notice that the muscle was naturally relaxed. But 98% of the time, it’d be tight and balled up.

How did this start? Why? No clue. Certainly doesn’t feel like a healthy habit, not in the least bit. Imagine flexing your bicep and walking around all day. Your bicep would get exhausted, and you put a lot of strain on your body, and over time your arm might forget what it felt like to really relax.

In addition to the conscious unclenching practice, I should probably do more relaxing stretches and physical activities – like yoga and massage and sauna.

Why am I writing about this? Also no clue. Just wanted to. This experience made me appreciate anew the enormous cumulative effect of tiny habits. If you walk up two flights of stairs every day, 300 days a year, that’s 5-10K steps you’ll take in a year. That’s meaningful exercise. If you write a page of your novel every morning, no matter how bad, you’ll have 300 pages – a full book! – in a year.

But life has a balance to it, and whatever applies to good habits also applies to the harmful ones. Sleep one hour less than you need every night, and your body will crave hundreds of hours of rest and recovery by year’s end. Daily damage to a body that is already fighting an unbeatable battle against father time. When we sleep 10 hours a day over the holidays, it’s because we badly need it. Hibernation isn’t just for bears.

In my case this butt clench. Bit by bit, day by day, it felt better or safer to tighten up, and now I do it all day every day and can’t even feel it! I began to wonder: What other muscles do I unnecessarily tighten? What effort am I exerting that is unhelpful and stressful? How can I relax more? What are the figurative and literal butt clenches in my life?

It all sounds a bit funny and I share it in part because it’s amusing, in a smh kinda way. For years now – maybe for most of my life – I’ve walked around with a clenched butt. Such is life.

2020 update: For the most part, I’ve learned how to relax that butt. Although when I am tense or stressed or have a tummy ache, I can still discover that sometimes I’m clenching out of old habit or forgetfulness. Thanks to everyone who reached out to share their struggles with the same issue. People seem to manifest their emotional stressors in different physical forms: For some it’s a neck crick. For others it might be dull headaches. For me it was the butt clench which was also causing the occasional tummy pain / lower back tightness. Now that my butt has chilled out, maybe my stress will manifest somewhere else?

2020 update 2: Also I’ve realized the child’s pose in yoga is great for noticing what’s going on in that area and helping those nether regions to relax and unclench :-)

Documentary on China’s pollution problem…mind blasted

On my roommate’s recommendation, I watched a powerful documentary about China’s deepening smog and pollution problem. While spending 2013 in Shanghai, I became a fair-weather vegetarian because for weeks, dead pigs were floating toward the city from an upstream tributary, and no one knew why. The government’s eventual explanation was “tainted feed”, but the uncertainty and distrust lingered.

I was also one of the stupid expats who jogged outside from time to time, sans air mask…won’t be doing that again!

(in fairness I enjoyed my Shanghai stay-cation and visit often, this is just a small slice of the experience)

The talk is more than 1.5 hours, but the first 30 minutes are its most gripping. Here’s a link with English subtitles [YouTube].

My notes:

  • there’s a strong correlation between air pollution and lung cancer incidence
  • this fact surprised me: severe pollution has been a reality since the early 2000s; it’s not just a recent problem; back then, a lot of the smog was labelled fog
  • the talk also gave historical context: how England went through a worse, more acute smog battle in early 1900s, 10K+ died; the rising pollution problems in India and Iran
  • China depends on these “heavy industries” for jobs and social stability
  • pollution is worse in winter months, due to increased coal usage (and much of the winter coal is lower quality, unwashed coal)
  • pollution is a regressive tax; the lower your income, the less able you are to buy high quality masks and filters, the more likely you are to work outside and within industry
  • lack of regulations, weak enforcement and corruption are to blame — for example, China’s big oil companies set fuel quality standards (e.g., Sinopec) and are quasi-governmental enterprises
  • with China’s continued economic growth, urbanization and transition from developing to developed economy, she believes many of these environmental problems are still in early stages
  • LA has 1.7M people and 1.3M cars! but while car ownership has tripled since the 70s, emissions have dropped by 75% due to strict regulations and new technology (e.g., diesel pollution filters mandatory for commercial trucks)

PS. and if you’re wondering why I said mind-blasted and not mind-blown, Russell Peters has your answer