So here's the news:
While out fighting, I put a foot down to brace myself (perfectly positioned) and felt a Pop! as my achilles tendon ruptured completely. I knew what it was despite having never experienced it before. The first few minutes were spent living the next six months of my life in anticipation, howling in mental anguish the whole time.
I'm past that. I have had the surgery to re-attach the tendon and I'm in a partial cast with crutches. I dropped the painkillers within 24 hours and I have been plying myself with
i) rest, elevation, and more rest
ii) Vitamin C, B complex, MSM, protein, Omega-3, anti-oxidants (including now alpha lipoic acid, flax seed oil, and salmon oil), and chondroitin/glucosamine sulphates
iii) reduced my caffeine intake (that's hard)
I've also been looking into the various rehabilition protocols and trying to find the most reasonable, performance-oriented protocol (translates as "aggressive") I can.
I'm looking for your input. Supplements to take. Rehab protocols. Words of wisdom. Anything useful.
But no kind words of sympathy, OK? A downed fighter is a fighter who is getting up....
For anyone interested in the wheres and whyfores, I was actually fighting SCA (i.e. in armour against sword and shield), not DB/kali, at the time. I've been steadily training in SCA, starting out with 10 lb shield (or "heater" as its called) and 36" sword, and moving over to double sword (or Florentine). Why? 'Cause DB doesn't dress up in funny costumes, call each other Laird/m'Lady, and bow/curtsey before hitting each other really hard (otherwise known as "heavy death" fighting). I kind of like that sort of thing myself - and of course I can bring the kids and wife along and they have fun too 'cause there's lots of stuff going on. Every weekend is like a cross between a two day country miedeval fair and a drunken brawl.
I'm adapting Krabi Krabong to Florentine - it ain't easy - and don't think kali/KK doesn't have something to learn when there's a shield and armour involved. Open field, unarmoured fighting may be best done with DB/kali but that ain't the whole picture. Try this SCA stuff out and you too shall relive the humility of being a newbie. And despite the armour, THEY HIT REALLY HARD. And despite the rules, the best fighters try to reduce their armour to the minimum.
So anyways, I had stretched my achilles (which I almost never do since I have a very fine natural stretch) for some reason. And been warming up and fighting for over an hour. And I was just going to get a few extra fights in. I stepped forward (double sword) to engage, drew a shot from a newbie fighting sword/shield and stepped back quickly out of range, intending to load my achilles/calf, and spring back in for a sinawali-like flurry.
Pop! I thought someone had hit me in the back of the leg because they were too close. No pain. Just that feeling of something popping. Whirling around, I saw no one, realized immediately what it was, and collapsed to the ground. Still no pain.
I took some time, screamed at my disfavour in the eyes of Destiny, removed my armour, and felt the achilles. It was still there, for about 5 cm, and then there was a slightly sickening soft spot where it should have been tight. And then the muscle. Ruptured. Completely. Still no pain.
So I'm happy there was no pain. And even the operation was relatively low impact. And I'm on my way back. And I have a long way to go before I can face down the likes of Lonely Dog.
Crafty has lived this down before (his knee in any case) and come back. And so I will too. Your experiences are appreciated.