Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1467: How to Squat for Your Body Type With Dr. Aaron Horschig
Episode Date: January 14, 2021In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin talk all things squat with Squat University's Dr. Aaron Horschig. The origin story of Squat University and his reasoning behind the name. (3:37) Understanding your ...anatomy and why people like to blame theirs. (10:28) What is “butt-wink” and it is optimal for your body? (14:55) Why everyone's body has its own set of needs and requirements to perform properly. (19:30) His order of operations assessing a first-time client. (23:54) What happens to the body when you do mobility and why should I care about doing it daily? (26:54) Why he subscribes to muscle re-education. (32:50) Are squats a fundamental human movement? (34:13) Can you justify a quarter squat for a basketball player? (38:33) Is there a test to find your ideal squat stance? (40:16) What are the major differences between correctional exercise and exercise to build strength & muscle? (45:19) What irks him the most about the physical therapy space? (49:06) Don’t ignore your physical capacity. (51:45) Why you shouldn’t stop inflammation, but understand it instead. (54:12) Related Links/Products Mentioned January Promotion: MAPS Fitness Starter Bundle 50% off! Visit Paleo Valley for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “Mindpump15” at checkout for 15% discount** Amazon.com: Dr. Aaron Horschig: Books How Deep Should I Squat? | T Nation Becoming a Supple Leopard 2nd Edition: The Ultimate Guide to Resolving Pain, Preventing Injury, and Optimizing Athletic Performance 3 Ankle Mobility Exercises You Should Do for Better Deep Squats Are Quarter Squats Actually a Better Option For Athletes? How To Squat For Your Anatomy (FIND THE RIGHT STANCE) How to Squat For Your Anatomy (DEPTH & STANCE WIDTH) The McGill Big 3 For Core Stability - Squat University Don't Ice, Walk it Off! - Squat University Athletes love icing sore muscles, but that cold therapy might make things worse Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Website: Squat University Dr. Aaron Horschig (@draaronhorschig) Instagram Kelly Starrett (@thereadystate) Instagram Ed Coan Powerlifter (@eddycoan) Instagram Chris Duffin (@mad_scientist_duffin) Instagram Mike Boyle (@bodybyboyle) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You are listening to the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
You guessed it, this is Mind Pup.
Now, today's episode, we talk about squatting with one of the world's authorities
on one of the best exercises you could possibly do.
We talked to Dr. Aaron Horshig from Squat University,
great guy, very smart person, performance-oriented,
physical therapist.
And in this episode, we talk about how to squat
for your body type.
So it's one of the best exercises,
but not everybody should be squatting the same.
By the way, you can find Dr. Aaron Horshig at squatuniversity.com
or you can find him on Instagram.
He's got a great Instagram page at DR Aaron.
So that's A-A-R-O-N-H-O-R-S-C-H-I-G.
By the way, he has a new book called Rebuilding Milo.
Pretty cool stuff.
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So, Aaron, how long have squat university existed?
It feels to me like in a short period of time,
you guys just exploded. Has it been a short
period of time? I know sometimes people become successful and you're like, oh, it was an overnight success.
And like, now we've been doing this for 15 years. It just took off last two. I mean, when did you start
and what got you started? How did it all happen? So I started Squy University in
October of 2015. So it's been just a little over five years now. Now I guess everything that sort of went
into squat university was a long time coming. I've been an Olympic weightlifter ever since
2005's when I started competing, very early undergrad, and then did strength conditioning
sort of coaching and everything and then went into get my doctorate of physical therapy.
And then I started working with athletes as a physical therapist for many years
before I then started speaking to the world as Squat University. The reason I decided to call
it Squat University really, as a physical therapist, I started doing a ton of evaluations on some
amazing athletes across just the complete spectrum of athletic pursuits, you know, football,
baseball, basketball, weightlifters, power
lifters, crossfitters, and I kept on getting this deja vu like scenario where during the evaluation
for something back pain, knee pain, hip pain, whenever it's non-surgical, your goal as a physical
therapist is to sort of be a detective. You want to uncover the movement-based problem,
sort of like what we talked about earlier with a great cook in the FMS,
the idea of looking at the body through a movement lens.
And I was continuing to see this deja vulec scenario of problems in body weight squatting.
And nevertheless, say, single leg squats as well.
So I was seeing these athletes who squat tremendous weight.
I mean, the squat for anyone in the weight room is a staple exercise.
But yet, when I was asking people who were in pain
to remove their shoes and just show me a basic body weight
squat, I was seeing a number of these flaws.
And it's sort of dawned on me that as a society,
we've sort of conceptually rearranged the squat
to first and foremost be an exercise.
It's how much do you squat, not how well do you squat.
You know, in third world countries, you see people often sitting for the how much do you squat, not how well do you squat. In third world countries,
you see people often sitting for the bus in a deep squat, preparing food in a deep squat.
Yeah, in the US, we look at the squat as first and foremost in exercise. And I think because
of that, we have sort of flipped our performance pyramid upside down. Louis Simmons always said,
a pyramid can only be as tall as it is wide. Well, the way in which I
think a lot of athletes nowadays are set up theoretically is an upside down
pyramid. We have this very minimal base of movement quality yet we try to add
so much strength and performance on top of that. And I think when you can
rearrange those and put the squat back into perspective as a movement
first, because in order to squat with great movement, you have to have good foot stability,
good ankle mobility, great ankle or hip mobility.
You have to have good core and telephotocontrol, good balance.
Whenever you can move well first, sort of put that building block of a quality squat back
into your repertoire,
your movement repertoire, I think it allows so many things to happen.
You're going to be able to first off get out of a lot of injuries because you're just
moving a little bit better.
And then you're also going to be setting yourself up for better performance.
You're almost unlocking, taking the key and unlocking the potential for future performance
athletically.
So I sort of thought, all right, well, this is the one building block
the squat that I think so many people are missing. And when you can regain that,
so many more things are possible, unlike many other movements out there. So sort
of Donna, the squat, this is sort of where I'm going to go. I ended up writing a book
which my first book, the squat Bible, I wrote like where I'm gonna go. I ended up writing a book, which my first book, The Squat Bible,
I wrote like 500 pages, single space.
Like I just wrote, wrote, wrote, wrote, wrote.
And back in 2014, 2015, it's all done, 500 pages.
And I'm giving it to my friends to read
just to print it out version, which is like that thick.
No, like dude, this is way too science-based.
Like you're talking down to people with all this, you know, scientific jargon.
You know, it's not going to be relatable on one topic.
And I ran into this person who told me about a guy named Gary Vaynerchuk.
Do a lot of people out there who are in the social media world, you know, Gary Vee is.
But his big thing was you need to create a brand.
If you're gonna sell anything, you need to create brand.
And you need to give away your best information for free.
And that's how you build brand.
And then people will want to find out what you have to offer
to learn more.
So I sort of re-did things.
I completely re-wrote my book.
My first book is only 128 pages now.
It's clear as day. But I started a brand called Squat University to give away literally
every single piece of information I know on how people can move better, how people can
have better technique, how they can lift more weight, stay safe, and then eventually over
the past couple of years has turned and molded more into what I actually do professionally, which is be a physical therapist.
So how people can fix common aches and pains.
There's not a single person that walks in the weight room as I know you guys have had
experiences with.
You're never pain free all the time.
My achy hip, you know, my right elbow aches up sometimes when I'm benching.
These are common to every single person.
So I wanted to be the person that could be that intermediary
between the ivory tower of the medical world,
the physical therapy world and the athlete.
Because I've been that athlete for such a long time.
I competed in weightlifting for over 11 years
before I finally decided to take a step back to do this more.
And I've had so many injuries, so many things where,
you know, I right knee hurt so bad I couldn't even squat
but I'm trying to pull two days to get ready for a national championship meet. You know, I understand
that drive that athletes have. So I wanted to take that knowledge that I had, but speak to people
in a way in which they could understand. We talked about communication. I wanted to be able to take
all this stuff that you find in textbooks and stuff that you find in the medical world, but I wanted to relate to people on that athlete, on that coach
level.
You don't have to have a college degree to become empowered to move better, decrease your
aches and pains and find what your true potential is.
That's what SquI University has been and sort of molded into.
And it's been five years now.
What most people don't understand, I'm still a full-time physical therapist
as you can see, I'm in my office right now at work.
I still treat patients 40 hours a week here in St. Louis
and then it's quite universities.
Technically, I guess my second job,
another 40, 50 hours a week job.
Let's talk about that.
I love that philosophy and I love the idea
of the squat and flipping it on its head like that.
Now how do you, and I know you have to get this, we get this all the time, how do you speak
to somebody that tells you that they can't squat like that because of their morphology?
I can't get asked to ask.
Or I can't do a narrow stance, what's your thoughts on that?
That's a great question.
So I think there's a number of people that like to blame their anatomy.
Now first and foremost, you have to understand anatomy because the way we evolve from a baby
to growing up, things change sometimes.
So there are some people that will not be able to get an ass to grasp squat because things
change.
You're ass to tabulums of your hip socket.
Some people develop a deeper hip socket.
I'm sure some of you guys have heard the phrase,
the Scottish hip.
Well, that was done based on epidemiological studies
where they looked at the rate of hip dysplasia
throughout different countries,
the world, different ethnic groups.
And they found that a number of people,
particularly in Scotland,
but there's very high numbers
in other areas of the world where they have a very deep hipsocking.
What that does is it's going to limit obviously the amount of forward flexion that the hip can go into and then how for someone can squat down.
Someone could have a lot of retro version in their hip, which would limit that sort of classic toes forward squat. The one thing I want people to understand is it's important to understand what type of
anatomy you have, but realize you've probably not maxed out your potential mobility wise.
So just because someone has deep hip sockets doesn't mean they don't work on their hip
mobility or work on their ankle mobility. Just because someone has a lot of retrovers and doesn't mean we don't
continue working on hip internal rotation to become just a little bit more optimal.
But we also have to understand that, hey, let's not say everyone needs to squat toes
forward because that's not right for everyone. Let's not say everyone has to squat ass
to grass because that's not right for other people.'s not say everyone has to squat, ask to grasp, because that's not right for other people.
Some people can do as much ink mobility as they want,
throw some weightlifting shoes on,
and if they try to squat below 90,
they're gonna get a crazy amount of butt length,
just because their body's not built for that.
That doesn't mean they don't still squat.
It just, we have to understand
that there's gonna be specific limitations
for that person, and we need to modify it for the individual
so that we can find the most optimal results.
Now, that being said, what percentage or would you say it's a lot of people that the reason why they can't squat is due to their anatomy
or would you say that's a very small minority and it's really mostly due to the fact that they just lack mobility.
I would say it's a small minority in my experience of evaluating people.
I would say a large portion of it is mobility restrictions because of the way in which we
use our body.
I think so many people nowadays we sit in chairs all day long.
You get up, you know, you've been sleeping all night long, you sit in your car, you go
to work, you sit all day at work, you know, we've been sleeping all night long, you sit in your car, you go to work, you sit all day at work,
you know, we're not actually using our body optimally. I have seen so many people just make tremendous progress in their depth,
just by having a rigorous mobility type, you know, program throughout their day, and knowing,
just doing 20 minutes of mobility before your workout, a couple days a week is not enough to see long changes.
This has to be a movement lifestyle change.
And when you can integrate different things,
like we talked about Kelly Starat with his first book,
Becoming a Self-Elever.
And his very first mobility-wide video,
if you guys remember back,
this is like 2005 in YouTube,
is very first one was a 10 minute squat challenge.
And can you sit in the bottom of a deep squat
for 10 minutes cumulative throughout the day?
And I think so many people, when they first started,
they're like, holy crap, this is crazy.
Well, it's because so many people
are never in that bottom position.
So if you're never exposing your bodies
to that deep squat, and you think, you know,
five sets of 20 second deep goblet squats
is gonna make a big impact around your mind.
You have to integrate this stuff throughout your day.
So I do think there are some people
who will not be able to perform an astro-grass deep squat
because of their anatomy.
So again, it depends.
But I think way too many people are using their anatomy as an excuse for why they cannot get a more optimal looking squat.
When in reality, I think they just need to be a little bit more consistent with their mobility work.
Now you mentioned about Buttwing. Can we get a ton of questions about this?
Is it truly problematic or can you kind of break that down and explain to people what this might be?
Yeah, so butt length for those out there that don't know exactly what it is.
When you're squatting down eventually some people sort of hit this gap in their squat
where their pelvis tips under. So it's a posterior pelvis tilt and what it looks like
is a little wink. The butt is winking under the body.
Now, what is happening is because the pelvis is winking under the body. Now, what is happening is because the pelvis
is being pulled under the body, the lower lumbar spine, particularly L4, L5, L5, S1, those
joints are leaving a relative neutral position in their flexing a little bit. And that's where
the problem occurs. It's not because we're having gradual flexion, because if you see like
a strong man left in Atlas Stone, or you see some of these power lifters have a slight curvature within their spine.
Slight flexion that's braced is not a problem for most people long-term, especially a
strength athlete who's built up a lot of capacity.
But what happens is that when you get concentrated flexion at one or two joints under load over time. That is the injury mechanism that just over time
increases your risk. I'm not saying you have but when it's going to blow a disc like that, that's not
the case. Everyone's back is different. In it takes repetition, repetition, repetition,
but we know through a lot of that that flexion under load at specific concentrated stress
concentrated the joints is what eventually leads to injury. So what we would say is that
butt wink is not optimal. Now is a little bit going to be okay? I'm sure it sort of it depends.
If you see a little bit of butt wink for someone who's squatting once a week, it's probably
not the biggest deal, especially if they're not squatting a lot of low.
What we're looking at is there's a lot of, it depends with the more frequency, the more
load, the greater the movement, just the more increased risk there is for injury.
We have to look at a couple different things when we're discussing butt wink, because the
first thing people ask is, well, can you improve it? If you have improved ankle mobility, it will lead to less compensation movement at the pelvis.
So a lot of times people have buttwing and they're just concentrating on their hips and they
don't even look that their ankles are just super tight. So yes, ankle mobility work. For some people,
putting on a pair of weightlifting shoes, adding that other inch and a half heel height allows you to mimic more ankle mobility, which allows a lot of people to squat
deeper with less compensatory movement at their pelvis, so you're maintaining that neutral
range that much better.
I think that's a big thing.
Sometimes we can look at spacing the hips a little bit further apart, driving the knees
out to the side, because for some people, if they're having too narrow
of a stance, their femur will run into the front side
of their acetabulum a little bit sooner,
which then their body has two choices.
A, you and pin down yourself,
and you get a front of the hip and pinjment,
pain feeling at a deep squat,
or your body works around it.
And the pelvis turns under as a way to not
and pinj upon itself, but then you have something else at Compensage,
which is your low back rounding.
So it's not a black and white answer, it depends.
And you also have so many confounding factors of how much load,
how much motion is actually occurring,
is it a tiny amount or is it a big butt wink?
And then how much repetition are we squatting once a week?
Or are we squatting five, six days a week?
Are you an Olympic weightlifter?
And you're going into butt wink every single day,
five, six days a week with a lot of your lifts
because you're catching it to full depth.
And we just know that it's not optimal
for long-term resiliency of the spine.
So we wanna try to modify it as much as possible,
but no, it's not gonna just blow a disc the day of you see it. So let's not call it, you know, throw up our
hands and throw a cause for a concern up right now, but let's understand it for what it is.
So what you would say for a lot of people, I know it's it depends, but for a lot of people
ain't look at ankle mobility as one of the areas. Okay. Yes, for sure.
And I mean, someone who just has a pair of weightlifting shoes, do a quick test for
retest or just put some plates on the ground and squat with your heels elevated on the
plates and without.
And you can quickly see a huge change in a lot of people's butt wink just by elevating
those heels and having a little bit more knee over toe translation, which is that
ankle mobility.
And it's going to allow everything up the chain
to remain in that ideal stacked position.
Now, what do you say to people,
because there's people on social media now
that strength athletes,
and some of them having formal education and background
saying that correctional exercise and mobility work
is a waste of time, just practice the exercise with a lighter load
and just keep practicing squats and getting them.
What do you say, are you familiar with that argument
and what do you say to them?
I'm not familiar as much with that argument.
I do hear is a lot of like as far as warming up goes,
they're like, oh, you don't need to do foam rolling,
you don't need to do stretching,
just grab the bar and practice the bar more.
So a similar way of understanding it.
Again, I think a lot of it comes down to, and it depends.
I don't think foam rolling is right for everyone.
I also don't think grabbing the bar and just doing squats is right for everyone because
just like a performance like Formula One car or NASCAR, every single
athlete's body.
And if you walk in the way or you're an athlete, everyone's body has its own specific needs
and requirements of what it needs to be tuned in order to perform as well as possible.
If I have a person who's had five ankle sprains on the right ankle from praying soccer
their whole life, and they have a big difference in right ankle mobility
than they're left, because what happens is that
many times when you have bad ankle sprains,
you develop a little scar tissue in your right ankle.
Now, no amount of just squatting is gonna fix that.
You have to be able to do for that person
some banded joint mobilizations
to improve the mobility of the ankle and then you get
under the bar and you work your body within that symmetrical range of motion. So it's all about it
depends on finding what works best for the individual. I like to look at warming up or corrective
exercises sort of like going to a fancy restaurant. You look at a menu. Now the last thing you want to
do is just order everything off the menu. You're not going to be able to do that. You're going to pick an
entre, you're going to pick a dessert, you're going to pick an appetizer, you pick what you need,
you pick what you want. When it comes to corrective exercises, it's ridiculous to say every single
person is going to do all these bandage joint mobilizations. Or everyone's going to do hip squats, you know, with a hip circle on, because not everyone
needs that.
But for one person, that may be exactly what they need to tune their body in order to
perform as well as possible.
And what we do is just a simple scientific method, test, retest.
I have someone come over and they squat.
What does it look like?
Is it easy? Can they sink into the bottom?
Does it look symmetrical? Are they shifting to one side versus the other? If so, let's find out why.
If someone has a Hitchhift because they're limited in their left-hit
internal rotation mobility, I'm not just going to have them squat, squat, squat, and cue them.
I can't cue them out of that. I have to do very deliberate and specific exercises
to improve their mobility, retest it,
see if I made any change,
and then we use the barbell or whatever implement
you're using to then make sure that they're now moving better,
and then maybe the next time they come in
because I've worked it well enough,
I can throw that mobility exercise out,
I don't need it anymore.
But I'm very much so looking at corrective exercise
as a tool in the toolbox to keep my car running well.
So I think, again, when it comes down to arguments,
like that, I think a lot of times people
like to stay in their own camp
and they get married to this idea
of either being on one side versus the other.
There's some people we know and all they do is corrective exercise.
And if you were to look on their pages like, man are these people literally doing 50 minutes
of corrective exercise every day?
When are they ever loading up the barn, lifting some heavy ass weight?
And then you've got other people on the other camp and they're like, corrective exercise,
that's woosey stuff.
I've never foam roll in my life.
Bandit joint mobilizations are just goofy. Thanks people.
Put on social media to look cool.
Well, those people can run into issues themselves because some things can't be solved by just
lifting more or taking weight off the bar.
Sometimes, you need a screwdriver when a problem's going wrong.
And I think when you can find that blend of it depends in finding what's best for the
individual.
That's when you find the marriage of having met your true performance in movement potential.
That's really what it's all about.
So true.
Aaron, you have, so we're talking about the squat breakdown.
When you have a client, let's just, they got forward head, they got rounded shoulders,
they got the butt wing, maybe they got some pronating in the feet, they don't have
good ankle mobility.
It's all kind, which is actually pretty common
with an average person that's middle age
that you get in the gym,
first trying to learn how to squat.
Do you have an order of operation
on how you would address all those issues?
You know, there's a number of different people
that will use like a top down or bottom up
or like core out type of approach.
I think it's all about sort of finding what works best for the individual
because you can use a bottom's up approach of starting at the feet and
working up for 10 people and it works for eight and then there's those two people
that hey, you got to start at teaching them course stability and proper
breathing and bracing first or else it's not going to work.
So I think it's you're finding out different methods, but the big thing I like
to use is just a simple joint by joint approach when I'm looking at people to
Understand the connection and that understanding that the foot it needs to be stable the ankle has to be mobile
These have to be stable stacked in line hips have to be mobile enough to maintain that proper alignment
We have to good you know have good core trunk stability, which means proper breathing and proper bracing.
In understanding of that, if one of those are out, everything else along the chain can be
effective.
Now, sometimes certain cues for people, hey, create an arch in your foot.
Don't let it move.
Learning that tripod foot.
That alone sometimes can create everything else, optimal alignment all the way up the
rest of the body.
Sometimes for other people,
it's, hey, open your hips up, spread the floor.
Like Ed Cohen says, open the tank.
Sometimes that works well for people
and it's just automatically things kick on
and their foot stability is all of a sudden there.
They had horrible pronation before.
I didn't cue them about their feet.
I told them to open their hips up as they started,
and all of a sudden everything went into optimal alignment.
I'm a big fan of Chris Duffin and a lot of his work
with Kabuki's Strength and talking about breathing
and bracing mechanics or some of the most important cues.
You can get someone with great alignment
and movement everywhere else,
but the second you put them under load,
if they don't know how to optimally breathe,
diaphragmatic breath, and then have that proper stability, you know, their backs
can be moving all over the place, and their lift is never going to look as good as possible.
So I think it's understanding and taking someone through each sort of step, looking at what
that individual needs, and what maybe few cues I can give them.
I don't want to overload them with 15 cues
because they're trying to learn one movement.
They're probably a novice at that.
So you give overload of information.
They're not going to take it in and move very well.
So figuring out what that person needs
and trying to optimize and find what puzzle piece
works best for them, I think is the ultimate approach.
So I don't say I'm married to one approach
if top down, bottoms up or core out,
but sort of understanding the different cues
that can work in finding what works best
for the individual.
Okay, so I have kind of a two-part question.
The first one is when you're doing mobility work
or like what we like to refer to as priming
before your workout, what's actually happening to the body?
Like why am I all of a sudden improving my ankle mobility
because I did 10 minutes of ankle mobility exercise
before I squat it?
And then the second part is, I'm just interested
in my aesthetics, I just wanna look better.
Why would I even care?
Why don't we even care about improving my mobile?
Besides preventing injury, is it gonna benefit my aesthetics?
So I'll talk about the first one first was what exactly is happening with mobility.
Now, if you were to look up the vast amount of research on what's going on with different
tools, like soft tissue mobilization, stretching, things like that, there's a number of different
theories, and not a single one of them are like 100% proven.
So if you ever speak to someone that's like, yep, it's 100% this, they're married to one camp.
There's a number of different theories.
But I would say for the most part
when we're talking about stretching
and we're talking about soft tissue work,
most people are in the belief that a lot of it's
more of a neurological response within the body.
You're not actually creating a lengthening of the muscle because
we're not adding sarco mirrors in length. So for people out there that don't really understand
muscle architecture and anatomy, think about your muscles almost like a Lego but stack. You
have different building blocks. Well, those are called sarco mirrors in length. That's basically
what the breakdown muscle building blocks are.
And when you can stretch a muscle and you may be casted,
so let's say someone had their elbow casted completely straight
or something like that, sometimes if you cast someone
for weeks and weeks, their muscle will actually physically
get longer because they will add more sugar,
sarcomere in length, so basically they add more Lego blocks to the architecture of the muscle.
But that's usually take the cast off, it's going to go back to its normal length within a couple weeks.
So it's tough to really make the muscle longer that way.
So what we see is that when someone does a stretch,
if you're stretching a muscle for maybe 30 seconds,
then afterwards you retest your flexibility and you see it's longer. What happens is you're not actually muscle for maybe 30 seconds, and then afterwards you retest your flexibility,
and you see it's longer.
What happens is you're not actually making that muscle longer, but you're decreasing your
sensation of pain.
So you have a neurological adaptation to the stretch at which you just imposed on your body
and allows you to move in a further range of motion.
Same sort of thing happens to a point when we're doing a lot of soft tissue work, which
is why we often don't see a lot of stretching or soft tissue work create long term adaptations.
Some people will be like, a foam rolling, it doesn't work at all.
There's a lot of research that shows that it does.
The changes in improvement in flexibility just aren't very long lasting.
There usually may be about 10 to 45 minutes in length.
Same sort of thing with stretching. So, whenever we're talking about a mobility or flexibility
regimen, most of the research is really only like six to eight to 10 weeks long. There's not really
like long duration stretching protocols in the research to see if we can actually add more
sarcomeres in like can we actually make the muscle physically longer long term now?
We see a lot of these like ballet dancers and things like that that literally they stretch every single day for years and years and years
So we believe there's the potential to physically change the length of a muscle
But often what happens is that when we're doing mobility work
we're changing our sensation of pain threshold that you get
when you push a muscle to its physical length and you allow yourself to get into a little
bit more mobility range of motion.
Now the thing about mobility versus flexibility is that flexibility is purely the ability to
elongate a muscle.
Mobility has to do with movement.
It's how a joint moves, how
you move in space when you're weight bearing things like that. So for example, you could
have crazy tight hamstrings, yet someone could squat to full depth. So we have to understand
that there's a difference and a lot of times people just love to stretch, stretch, stretch,
stretch, yet they still move like crap because they don't understand how to use their
body afterwards.
So that's the difference between the mobility work versus just stretching to stretch.
Now, when you talked about someone that's looking for aesthetics, I think the big thing to
understand is that mobility work is to allow better movement, better freedom of movement
throughout your training and throughout your life.
If you're there in the gym to be able to just look better,
if you can improve your mobility,
it will allow you to access different parts
of your physiology, of the movement of a bench press,
of a squat, of a push press overhead,
that could then allow for different stimulus on your body,
that could then allow you to maybe have different types
of adaptation.
There's a number of different research articles
that will show that someone who squats deeper sometimes,
and this is again, certain research articles,
there's always conflicting evidence
that sometimes you may elicit a little bit more
gluten activity if you're squatting deeper
than someone who's maybe only doing a three quarter
death squat or a half squat.
So someone that could potentially squat deeper may potentially allow themselves to have
different physiological adaptations to their strength training that prior they weren't able
to get.
And then I think it's just about life, you know, we don't want to be that person that can't
bend over to pick up a box off the ground because we're so stiff.
So aesthetics matter, yes, but having the ability to move the rest of your life
is very important as well.
And being able to access that strength
that you're creating in the gym
so that you can pick your kid off the ground,
when he's a young kid,
being able to put a box on the top shelf
when you're 80 years old,
being able to walk up and downstairs,
that, in sense, is mobility and strength allows you
to access that mobility in a functional manner.
Aaron, when talking about mobility and stretching,
do you, do you subscribe and you were alluded to
it being a neurological issue?
Do you, do you actually encourage people
while they're in the stretch,
do you have an isometric contraction while they're also in there
or do you not and why or why not?
Yeah, I think you can definitely do that.
For example, I love using the world's greatest stretch.
So you're in a deep lung stretch
and driving that knee out to the side.
So we're working a little bit of hip external rotation,
flexion on one side.
And in that position, sometimes sort of squeezing
and contracting the muscle, that isometric contraction,
I think what it can allow you to do
is integrate what we'd call muscle reeducation,
in teaching the body how to own that new movement.
Because yes, you can push a joint
to its end range of motion,
but adding that muscle contraction
and sort of allows you to then own
that new movement capability.
So yeah, I think, I mean, it's a little bit of PNF at times if we're talking stretching,
but when we're talking movement through mobility exercises, having that isometric contraction
at the end range or through certain specific ranges, I think allows you to lock in that movement
quality, that much more so it bleeds over into your movement, that you're going to do afterwards.
Yeah, it's the difference between passive flexibility and being able to own it and control
it.
Exactly.
Our squats, a fundamental human movement, I know, I mean, from my perspective, I think squats
are phenomenal.
They're great performance, strength, they build incredible lower body, but you sometimes get the argument from people in our space that say that squats are not this fundamental
movement.
I know some strength coaches will say that they only do unilateral or split stance movements
with their athletes.
So is it a fundamental movement?
Is it something that humans should practice often because it's this fundamental
to us, let's say walking or standing up right?
Yeah, so I think you have to look at it two different ways. You said fundamental human
movement and then you talked about training, because those are two different things. So when
we're talking, fundamental human movements, yes, the first and foremost, the squat is
a fundamental movement because
it's something that we learn as a growth in development in milestone. If you watch a baby,
it's going to crawl, then it gets into a squat pattern and eventually to stand up. If you watch
a baby take something up, it is a way in which we as a young child learn to explore the world.
We use the squat as a fundamental building block to eventually standing, walking, running, things
like that. Now, when it comes down to training, I think Mike Boyle gets brought up in this a lot,
because he uses a lot of single leg movements, Bulgarian split squats, things like that, more so
than the squad. But you have to understand, when we're talking about training, we're looking first
and foremost at what are the desired
adaptations I want to bring out specifically for the sport at hand.
If I'm training a weightlifter, a powerlifter, a crossfitter, yes, the squad is first and
foremost an extremely important fundamental for that training, especially in the power
lifting because it's one of the three competition lifts.
As a weightlifter, the squat is an assistant exercise
that allows you to strengthen and reinforce the capacity
to get in and out of the bottom position
for a snatch and a clean injury.
For a hockey player,
is it always something that you're in
a double-layed symmetrical stance?
Probably not.
For a baseball player, I would say potentially,
especially like a short stop,
third baseman getting down in a ready position.
That's a squad.
You know, I think it sort of depends on the sport at hand.
And when we're looking at sport specificity, we want to take into account what in the training
room am I doing that's going to lead to better performance on the field?
Do I need someone to squat five hundred pounds astrogras in the weight room if their sport is
tennis? You know what I'm saying? We want to be able to bring out the best adaptations. Now,
do I think the squat should be something that should be trained by all? Yes. The way in which we
squat then has to meet the individual's capabilities and end goals. So while a back squat is amazing and has to be a
fundamental for a weightlifter or a powerlifter, you know, what's wrong with
maybe a zircher squat for someone else? Or maybe just like a kettlebell goblet
squat? Because having a load in the front and showing capacity, it shows
symmetrical, you know, mobility through a four-inch emotion that that person can
perform. I think it's a fundamental movement.
Now, maybe we're only doing that once a week and then we're doing, uh, Bulgarian split
squats and single, like, RDLs and single leg squats, three out of the other lower leg
days for that athlete if they're a hockey player.
So again, I don't think it's something, I think there's a lot of it depends.
And I think at the end of the day, it comes down to the individuality of what you're looking
for.
But I don't think there's a situation where I would ever say we completely cut out a double
leg squat.
But then understanding that who says a barbell back squat has to be performed by anyone.
Because you can squat in a lot of different ways. I just think it we have to meet the individual
I want goals that they need. But regardless of that they should be able to perform a great quality looking body weight squat.
Again, coming back to fundamental human movements first and then as we go up the chain of how do we develop strength, how do we develop power, we can then base and
change our things off that.
But we have to every single person should be able to perform a good quality looking body
with squat.
Yeah.
Now speaking to sports specificity, we've all seen kind of videos out there with LeBron
James doing a quarter squat.
In general, can you can you justify a quarter squat, say, for a basketball player?
I think when you look at the research, there are some articles out there where they talked
about quarter squatting as far as improvements in vertical leap performance as compared to
a full depth squat.
I can't remember the article offhand and I haven't read it years.
It's stashed away, but I do believe
that there are some research articles
that have shown that.
Now, here's the deal when it comes to that again,
is a lot of times people will take like one research article
and then they'll just run with it.
Just like split squats or full-depth squats
with a barbell on your back.
What's to say for a basketball player, I can't do both.
If LeBron James feels like he gets benefit
from doing a quarter squat in his vertical leap performance,
what's wrong with doing quarter squats one day of the week
and then having him do a maybe full depth
goblet squat the other day of the week?
Again, I think there's not a right or wrong,
there's an it depends.
And I think when you come out and you make
big, large black and white statements
like I would never quarter squat,
well then why is there an article saying that it did help
some people show better vertical jump performance?
I think you have to understand what's our end goal
am I gonna have a power lift or quarter squat?
Probably not.
But you know who's to say that box squats
or, you know, pin squats from different heights aren't also helpful. So I think there's a lot of
it depends in variability is the name of the game at certain points in your training career.
You know, speaking of the squat, is there an easy way for somebody to find or figure out the ideal
squat stance for themselves.
Is there an easy test that they can do
where they can find where they should place their feet
if it's a little wider, a little more narrow,
feet out, feet in, or is it just trial and error?
So there's a lot of it that's trial and error,
but there's a lot of signs that we can bring into it.
I actually made two recent YouTube videos.
So if anyone listening just goes
on Squat University YouTube and types in how to squat for your anatomy, the first one was
talking about understanding toe angle. Now, like I said, I think a lot of people haven't
reached their max potential mobility wise. So this is only a small glimpse into the potential
way in which you should be pointing your toes. And that's looking at,
antiversion versus retroversion.
And basically what we do is we have someone
look at their internal rotation and external rotation
in both a seated and on their stomach position.
So when a seated position, your hips flex to around 90 degrees
and we look at internal and external.
And then on your stomach, your hips fully extended.
So at a zero degree extension.
And then again, we look at hip internal rotation
and extension.
Now, if someone shows limited internal rotation
in excessive external rotation, in both positions,
we can say that likely they have a degree of retro version. So their hip socket in the way the femur
attaches is retroverted so it's more of a flat angle. That
person is likely going to have a greater ease at squatting
deep with their toes turned out to a greater degree. Now to
what degree, obviously there's going to be a lot of variability,
but more so than probably 15 degrees. For someone that has excessive internal rotation, in very limited external, in both a seated
and a prone, so on their stomach position, we can say that they likely have a good degree
of antiversion, meaning that their hip socket alignment with the femur is more angled compared
to a retroverted position, meaning those are the people that usually can squat
with their toes a hundred percent straight forward.
Now, again, this is only a glimpse
into the potential anatomy contributions,
because here's the deal.
Some people could have a crazy amount of retroversion
or antiversion at their hip,
and as they grow and develop,
they develop a twist, a torsion in their tibias,
their lower leg bone, to hide the fact that they have a twist, a torsion in their tibias, their lower leg bone, to hide the fact
that they have a specific twist at their hips.
So it's not 100% this way or that way,
but it gives you an understanding
because some people like,
and I just cannot squat with my toes forward every time I do,
I just get this huge black sensation in the front of my hip,
and then they do this test, they're like,
wow, I'm really retroverted.
I literally have no internal rotation.
And then they turn their toes out and they're like, I can finally squat full depth.
Well, that doesn't say that you are never going to do internal rotation mobility work because
you probably haven't reached your end potential with that.
But if you actually turn your toes out and allow yourself to accommodate for what your body's mobility needs, it may allow you to move better and that's going
to allow you to have less increased injury risk.
And it's going to allow you to potentially unlock future performance.
So that's sort of toe angle, but there's other ways to where we're going to say.
Oh, I was going to ask the question of how you did though.
So you said seated and on your stomach.
So if I'm sitting down, do I have my knees bent
in 90 degrees and then in my rotate, I'm rubbing.
So essentially for the listener who doesn't know
external internal rotation, I'm turning my foot out
and then turning it in.
And when I'm on my stomach, my legs totally straight out,
I'm doing the same thing, turning my foot out,
turning it in and then.
So on your stomach, your knee will be bent still
and you'll let your foot come in and out.
Oh, I got it.
Okay.
All right.
Continue.
Sorry.
Yep.
So that's just sort of the toe angle based on retroversion or
antipersion.
Now another thing you can do is you can lay someone on their back and
you can either do it by yourself or have a friend, but you can bring their
knee towards their chest and see how far can you go before they sort of run
out of end range of motion
and either get a pinch sensation
or just the femur just stops moving forward.
And then have them go out to the side a little bit.
And some people will be able to get their knee
all the way to their chest.
That's what I can do.
Like I can literally have my knee touch my chest.
Some people, they'll sort of get a black sensation.
They may get kind of like 90 degrees.
But yet if I take their femur and'll sort of get a block sensation. They may get to like 90 degrees.
But yet if I take their femur and go sort of toward their, maybe their biceps, so I bring
them out of the angle, they can get their knee further toward their shoulder, so they
can get more hip flexion.
Well, that's showing that person that a slightly wider stance can allow them greater hip flexion,
greater depth of their squat.
So again, it's sort of, again, it's a lot of trial and error,
but there's a few different tests in which we can do
to give ourselves a little bit of an insight
into what stance may bring out the most optimal squat depth
and sort of position for our feet.
What are some of the fundamental differences
between correctional exercise and exercise to build
strengthened muscle.
For example, I'm doing a cable row
because I wanna develop my back
or I'm doing a cable row because I'm trying to,
I don't know, fix forward shoulder.
What are the fundamental differences
between the application of,
this is how you apply corrective exercise,
this is how you apply exercise
to improve performance and build muscle.
I would say probably the few big differences are first the load at which we're using and
the tempo at which we're going about.
Now, not to say that you can't use tempo work for regular strength building, but especially
when we're looking at corrective exercise for improving strength and stability, I think
that's a big disclaimer that a lot of people don't realize strength is your ability to produce force,
to create movement.
Stability is your ability to limit excessive
or unwanted motion.
Just because someone is strong,
doesn't mean someone has good stability.
And this points back to a lot of research
where they've taken people at their core
and they sort of train them different ways.
They've had them do dynamic movements
of like sit-ups,
rush and twist, things like that,
things that build strength within the core
abdominal muscles.
And then other research where they are different,
same research study, different group,
where they have them do isometric.
So this would be like the Miguel B3 modified curl-up,
side planks, things like that,
things that aim to improve endurance of the muscles,
but to limit any spinal movement.
And then they would test them after performing.
And they found that those who had done the stability protocol of the plants, things like that,
they had better ability to limit excessive motion in the spine when they were put on the
specific training regimen.
So it shows that sometimes, especially at different parts
of the body like the shoulders and the hips,
if we're looking to improve strength,
we're going to have usually faster tempos comparatively
and we're gonna be using more load
because we have to have progressive
resistance exercise to be able to show more and more strength.
Whereas stability exercises,
usually we're going to be going
much slower because I want that person to feel for the problems, for the waverness in
their technique. I want to put them sometimes into positions where they have very little
basis support. So like a single legartial is a great stability exercise. And I would
double that with a double agardiol
to improve strength, sort of they work together.
So you talked about like a single arm row.
If I'm just a row in general,
if I'm having someone do a row for strengthening their back,
I'm gonna be probably having them do
what between usually 10 to 8 to 5 reps with progressive load.
But if I'm having someone that maybe just has poor stability of their mid back muscles,
their Robboids aren't kicking on well, poster shoulder, musculature isn't kicking on
well, so they have poor poster strength imbalance compared to the front side of their body, which
is a common reason for some people developing shoulder pain.
I would maybe have them do that same row, but with less weight, and in that final position,
they're pinching that pencil between the shoulder blade.
They're getting that good retraction.
I'm having them hold for five seconds, getting that brain body connection, and then a slow
tempo back.
So I'm allowing them to really realize how that muscle should work, to limit the excessive
motion at that particular joint or joint complex, to allow them to sort of build that ability to limit
motion, control that area, which is then going to be a little bit different when we're talking
strength and power because we're going to be adding more load doing less reps usually.
Okay, so essentially you're going to go lighter a little slower and you're going to focus on
the contraction, the squeeze of the connection, you would say, is that summarized a little bit?
All right, perfect.
Now, some of the, you know, I used to own a personal training studio and I had a physical
therapist that worked in there and I learned so much about correctional exercise from,
just from watching her.
It was, I learned so much, it was a great experience.
She learned a lot for me in terms of strength and performance because that was my background.
You have both, right?
Your background is physical therapy, but you also, you talk a lot about performance and
strength as well.
What hurts you the most about the physical therapy space?
Now that you do both, what are some of the challenges you see?
Do you ever have clients that come to you from other physical therapists?
And then you got, you know, you're applying now your performance knowledge to kind of take
them to the next level.
Like, what are some of the challenges with that space?
Physical therapists hate to load the body.
They have no idea across the board how to actually lift some big weights.
So like you walk into any physical therapy clinic across the US and you'll see tiny little dumbbells
up to 10 pounds, you'll see a lot of Thera bands, you know, you may see some kettlebells but they're
probably not over 15-20 pounds. In my physical therapy clinic, if I were to show you around right now,
I've got five barbells, a transformer bar, a bars bar, a rack, that's five feet away from our bed, kettlebells up to 50 pounds.
You know, it's the idea that, you know,
functional fitness stops at 10 pounds.
And you can't treat it adequately,
they're just a person in general,
because the next time they go to pick a box up in their garage,
it's more than that five pound kettlebell you had them do.
Like, I think across the board,
because physical therapy in general for a long time treated
very debilitated people that are injured that can't lift heavy, we didn't realize that
there's this spectrum that once we get them out of pain, we have to then continue the
cycle of getting them back to performance or back to strength, back to functional levels.
And that requires low, that requires you to put someone
in a position where they have to be challenged
and you can't do that with small little bands.
I think it's something that the physical therapy profession
could learn a lot from the strength
and conditioning profession.
Yeah, I asked that question because I actually had
a lot of clients who did physical therapy
and then they come to me and they're like, oh my gosh, I feel so much better.
And I remember communicating this to the therapist that I worked with.
And it was great.
It was a wonderful relationship where we learn from each other.
So that's why I asked you knowing that you have both backgrounds, what the big differences
are.
So for the average person who goes to physical therapy
because they have a bad back,
and then they work with the normal,
your average, you know, typical stereotypical physical therapist,
they get the range of motion, they get their stability.
What's the benefit then, you know,
to get a little bit, you know, more specific?
What's the benefit then from there to go from there
to then building some strength
and working out more traditionally.
I think the big thing a lot of people don't realize is that even though they have gotten
out of pain, that doesn't mean that they are back to their prior level yet.
Because what happens is that when you have an injury, it really cuts down on your strength,
on your power, on your performance.
And it doesn't take a very skilled individual sometimes to get someone out of pain.
You can do that by just removing the injury stimulus.
So if bending forward hurts you, we stop bending forward.
We remove the flexion intolerance.
We build back some stability.
But then what happens is that a lot of times I get clients that are like, well, I got
out of pain. And then I went back to doing what I was doing and then my back pain came back.
Well, it's because we ignored the idea of capacity.
And capacity is your strength and your ability to stay resilient on your load or just in
different situations, speed power, however you're pushing your body.
So while you may be able to build up some genuine course
ability, that's authentic for the load
that you're putting yourself into,
and you improve your mobility,
if you don't improve capacity,
so your ability to withstand load
and maintain pastures and positions.
You know, the next time you go out to train
having your pick up a heavy box in your garage,
it's going to be putting you
in a situation where you could potentially find injury again.
So that's that sort of in between grace space, I think that a lot of people ignore an
area in which we can get, I think we can improve upon a lot in both the physical therapy
profession or also the strength conditioning coaches.
Of course, we can definitely sort of get kicked out of physical therapy early, having a better awareness of how they can build capacity because
that person, they used to squat 500 pounds, comes back to you, and they're not squatting
500 pounds anymore.
They're pain free now, but if you put 500 pounds and they're back, they're going to
crumple.
Well, how can I still continue along that transitional line to build back strength and build
back stability and capacity so that they can't have a normal start-thin-dition program
again?
Excellent.
Okay.
So, another question in terms of helping with pain.
What role does controlling inflammation play with this?
I mean, I know that in the past, we were told to really eliminate inflammation,
use ice and take non-staroidal anti-inflammatories. Later on, we learned that inflammation plays a
crucial role in signaling the body to repair. You work with a lot of people, athletes, people who
have pain and have injured themselves. How do you coach them through the use of anti-inflammatory, either drugs or ice or is it something that you even need
to manage?
Is it just movement-based?
I think there's a lot of it depends because inflammation is not good nor is it bad.
That's a big thing we need to understand here.
Implamation is normal. It's a normal part of the injury cycle.
If you ask any medical professional, what are the three stages of injury?
You have inflammation repair a model. If you don't have inflammation,
your body will not optimally repair and remodel the injury.
So to say, well, every single person just needs to take these anti-inflammatories
and ice, ice, ice to control information, you're actually delaying the injury process.
There's a lot of research that shows that those who ice excessively after injury actually
delay the healing process.
And actually, so a lot of people will use the rice protocol.
Rest ice can press elevate.
And that was from Dr. Gade Merkin, who in 1978 created the rice protocol.
Well, actually, he came out in 2013, I believe, and actually recanted his statement, saying
that ice actually hinders the healing process.
We know much more now than we did back then, that it actually delays and hinders the optimal healing of any type
of soft tissue injury.
So what we want to do is not stop inflammation, but understand it.
And that by improving our movement within a pain-free zone can actually bring your blood
to an area, allow proper healing to take place, but not continue the injury cycle.
Now, there are going to be some people that are just, you know, they're so painful, it's not
allowing them to do any type of movement. For those people sometimes, you know,
cortisone shots in anti-inflammatory medications do have a place. I'm not gonna say that for a positive situation,
but for the most people, what I find is that
pain free movement using things like a neuromuscular
stimulation device like the Mark Pro, the PowerDod,
complex things like that, that can help bring more blood flow
into an injured area, in the injury debris
that happens from any type of soft tissue
injury or just heavy intense training will allow the most optimal situation for healing
from anything without trying to stop inflammation.
So if I could say one thing, it's to people out there, inflammation is not a bad thing.
It's just a part of the injury cycle.
And we need to try to optimize the healing process
as much as possible,
and not just try to stop it.
Which same thing was swelling?
Awesome.
Well, I'll tell you what, Aaron,
this has been a great podcast.
I think we all enjoyed the hell out of this.
Talking to someone like you,
as smart as you are,
and you communicate things very well,
we appreciate what you're doing.
It's great to see people like you
putting out great information
in the fitness space and then communicating it so well.
You do a very good job with that.
So thank you very much for coming on the podcast.
And the honor to be on, guys.
Thank you very much.
Appreciate it.
Great having you.
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