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Or, for a real challenge, how about learning to play Stanley Jordan style? That would make good use of your fast right hand! http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7942029277711475397 --Josh > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Richard Sales > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > Sent: Tuesday, 13 June, 2006 16:12 PM > Subject: Re: Way OT: EM fingers! > > >>The woman who's husband I am... (PC anyone?!) crushed her finger with a >>sledge hammer a few years ago. Lost all the feeling in the finger. She >>smashed it much worse than you, I can guarantee it - the whole finger was >>wide open - gruesome. > > Yep, I had to clean up the blood before we left for the hospital, it was > all > over the new stone tiles and they hadn't been sealed yet! > >>Anyhow, after a year or so of trying everything else, the feeling and a >> lot >>of the motion was restored with acupuncture. > > I'll ask my acupuncturist about this. She's done wonders for blood > pressure > and circulation around injured bits before! > >>I think the carpenter might be close to right as far as healing time. But >>the rest of your fingers work, eh? Remember Django Reinhart? > > Er, while I've been tempted by a very fast right hand with the idea of > re-learning to play Jimi-style, such is a hurdle I'll deal with only if I > have to. The middle finger's my main/center point (self-taught, played >by > ear since '71). I'll tell ya it's a real temptation just to play after > going to see Fripp today. I knew it would be a little painful thinking > about playing after coming home but I really don't want to screw up what > could be healing interior-wise just by mistakenly using that finger. > >>Time to learn how to play slide guitar? > > Too late. Started using a slide in the early 80s, long before learning > anything about Blues music. Been thinking about it, frankly. > >>My own take on money, after having spent huge piles of it, is that TIME >> is >>more important than equipment. > > Ah yes, but having had no disposable income - much less income - for over > six years, and seeing my 50th birthday coming up in December, I've >decided > that time is something that's, as Riff Raff put it, "fleeting". > > In preparation for unleashing myself on the public again, I need to find >a > good, inexpensive guitar repair person to fix a grounding error in ol' > Cthulhu. In London, someone I can see face-to-face and trust with my > beloved tool. After several years of dealing with workmen in London I > only > use good personal references. > >> Some of the most riveting, entertaining, soul stirring and wonderful >> guitarists I've ever known just used a Tele and amp... or, even simpler, >> one acoustic guitar. Just my $.02 > > I'll try to keep the bar high then, as all I've got is my ol' strat and >an > Oscar Schmidt acoustic. :) Yes, here's to working within limitations to > achieve a lovely result! > > Thx! > > >>Good luck > > richard sales > glassWing farm and studio > vancouver island, b.c. > 800.545.6846 > 250.752.4816 > www.glassWing.com > www.richardsales.com > www.hayleysales.com > www.blueberryfieldsfarm.com > On 13-Jun-06, at 1:41 AM, Stephen Goodman wrote: > > > Okay, I knew I'd ask about this but now have no choice from context > alone... > > The rig has been down for several months given massive works on the >house. > On a weekend three or so weeks ago when I'd just had it and wanted to >play > no matter what, I stupidly crushed the end of my left middle finger > between > two big flagstones around 3 weeks ago, splitting the end like a melon. > Didn't break anything (x-ray check) and it wasn't a center-on hit so I > kept > the nail. I can however feel the hard bit inside where the scar tissue is > forming. I massage the tip most of the time, gently, and the feeling in > the > tip still hasn't come back. I've been told by a carpenter who says he did > something similar that it won't come back for as much as three months. > Obviously this effects playing - and even if one excludes the nuances one > obtains through good feeling-control, the hazard of not feeling the > fingertip becomes one of finger damage through sense ignorance. > > I was itching to play before this happened, and have been having lucid > dreams about playing since a week after the accident. Needless to say >here > is an illustration as to why one should not hesitate before going at it. > I'm > going to come into just a little bit of money via my late mum-in-law > sometime in the next month or so, and have decided that [a] life is > frigging > short, and [b] I'm going to get a small, efficient amp system for > performance purposes and rent a couple of halls in the London area when > this > damned finger gets better. > > So, guitarists on the list: How long will it take for this to come back? > Thx > in advance. > > S. > > ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jeff Shirkey" > <jcshirke@midway.uchicago.edu> > To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> > Sent: Tuesday, 13 June, 2006 02:04 AM > Subject: Re: Way OT: EM fingers! > > > > > > > ... but can you imagine how you could use this to feel your way around a > keyboard, or a guitar.... your house? > > > Actually, no. :) How would this help someone make music? > > I currently treat a fractured bone in my foot with EM waves 10 hours a > day. > I'm not sure that's something I'd want to feel. > > Jeff > >