Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2117: Fix Your Knee Pain
Episode Date: July 13, 2023In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover what you need to know to correct knee pain. The guy’s worst knee injuries. (1:33) The myth of overuse. (2:41) Understanding the root cause of knee pain ...and how it operates. (3:48) Defining acute pain vs chronic pain. (7:19) How the ankle and hip relate to knee pain. (11:59) Why everyone should squat. (16:46) The guy’s success rates with clients with knee pain. (18:50) Why the unlearning process is VERY important. (23:00) The importance of getting stronger and expanding your mobility education. (24:51) The BEST knee-protecting movements. (28:37) The BEST mobility exercises for the ankles and hips. (33:46) Related Links/Products Mentioned Limited time offer exclusively for Mind Pump Listeners ONLY: 50% off the Stress, Mood & Metabolism At-Home Lab Test + Health Coaching Call - Reserve yours today here July Promotion: MAPS Starter | MAPS Starter Bundle 50% off! **Code JULY50 at checkout** Knee Pain in Adults and Adolescents: The Initial Evaluation Are ACL Tears Really More Common in Women? Mind Pump #1382: Why Everyone Should Squat Improve Your Deadlift with a Single Leg Romanian Deadlift Focus Session The BEST Beginner Lower Body Exercise (LUNGE VARIATIONS) with Sal Di Stefano The Only Way You Should Be Doing Bulgarian Split Squats! (BUTT GROWTH) How To Do The Sled Push The RIGHT Way! (AVOID MISTAKES!) – Mind Pump TV Short Foot Exercise & Foot Activation with Dr Emily Splichal Activate Your Glutes with Tube Walking – Mind Pump TV MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Ask Mind Pump Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
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Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
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This is Mind Pump right in today's episode.
We talk about knee pain, how to make it go away, and how to prevent it.
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All right, here comes the show.
Knee pain is one of the most common types of pain
that people report.
In today's episode, we're gonna talk about how to fix knee pain,
better yet, how to prevent it from ever happening
in the first place.
So you're gonna love this episode. Let's talk about the knee pain. Who's got the worst knees here?
Worst knees
All of us are pretty good with knee you've had knee surgery. Yeah, I've had knee surgery
Have you had knee surgery? I mean I had I didn't have surgery, but I did strain and then slightly tear my MCL
But okay, yeah, no cool story. I had dislocated kneecap. That's about it. Oh, you did?
How did you do that?
My 13 years old playing at a park,
playing volleyball with a family.
And I landed weird and my kneecap went out to the side.
And then after that, I had to rehab it.
Rune the barbecue.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
No more sport ball for you.
That was the end of my athletic work.
I retired after that.
I was saving a baby. so that's how I did.
Dolan in front of a car, and of course he worked.
No, a guy landed on my knee.
It wasn't even like a good player or anything.
We were both going up for a rebound,
and I planted, and my leg was straight,
and he landed on it, and just pfft.
Well, so what's interesting is,
I looked up the statistics for how many people report knee pain,
25% of Americans report knee pain.
So it's definitely one of the most common ones.
I think back pain might be a little more.
It might be a little more.
Back pain is higher.
Yeah, but knee pain is right there, second.
It's super common.
And a lot of the, a majority of that
is not the kind that we're explaining where you hurt yourself and then it hurts until it heals.
It's the chronic type.
It's like, I hurt you.
Yeah, it's like, I hurt my knee, but that was 10 years ago.
Or, you know, it just bothers me.
I can't do certain things.
I'm just getting old.
And there's this myth out there that it's overuse.
People will hear that.
So, over you, oh, it's because you're using your knees too much.
Here's something that kind of flies in the will hear that. So over you, oh, it's because you're using your knees too much.
Here's something that kind of flies in the face of that.
Reported knee pain has gone up 65% in the last two decades.
So, and I don't think people are moving more, they're moving less,
and yet you're getting more reported knee pain.
So that right there shows you that it's not because...
Well, I mean, I would make the case that that's exactly why it's going. Yeah, right?
Yeah, yeah, 100% you know, this obviously this conversation is it's spurred from the you know
that this we just had a caller not that long ago who brought up prime pro and this is not the first time
this has happened we've actually had this had multiple times or someone has purchased our Maps Prime Pro program
which goes over all the major joints in the body and the mobility movements to it, and people go, why is there nothing for
the knee?
And so we've had to explain this, and we normally address it in a short version when it gets
asked, but it's like, you know what, maybe we should do an episode explaining since this
has happened so many times where people don't quite understand why there's not these mobility
drills for the knee.
We're not isolating just the knee,
like we're looking elsewhere.
Right, yet everybody,
but everybody correlates knee pain as like an issue,
a major issue.
So where, okay, what do I do about it?
And very few people understand where it stems from,
where the root cause.
And so I think it's important to address that.
Now, although it's true that oftentimes joint pain
is the result of other things happening in the body,
so that that joint ends up operating over time
in a way that's not optimal,
so that's true a lot of the times.
With the knee, it's almost always true
because the knee is pretty basic in comparison
to the joints that are closest to it, the hip and the ankle.
And so this is why, and we're going to talk about this in today's episode, hip and ankle issues
are what tend to cause most of the knee pain. Because if you look at the knee, first off, yes,
you need to have strong muscles that support the knee. So your hamstrings, your quads,
or should I say strong stable muscles,
right? Quads, the abductors, adductors. Those all should be pretty strong because that helps support
the knee, but the knee is pretty basic in the sense that it really only flexes and extends, okay?
So what does that mean? That means you can bend your knee or you can extend your knee, okay? There
are ligaments attached to the knee
that prevent it from really doing anything else or that keep it stable. So like you have
like the ACL, PCL, that keep it from sliding apart. You have lateral ligaments like the MCL,
LCL that keep it from bending sideways. The meniscus, which is a shock absorber that prevents it
really from twisting too much.
All those things, all those ligaments and cartilage is there to keep the knee kind of stable
so that it can try to keep it in place and it's optimal track.
And then to add, you know, a little bit more complexity, you have the kneecap, which kind
of floats on top of the femur, the big bone of the leg.
And it kind of glides if you take a kneecap off and
look at it underneath that there's cartilage, and it kind of slides over a groove every
time you bend and extend your knee.
So that's how the knee is operating.
And if it's not operating optimally, if some ligaments are having to do more work than
they're supposed to in terms of supporting, or if the meniscus is constantly being strained
because there's stuff going on with the ankle of the hip,
or if the kneecap is tracking too hard
to the left or the right,
then you start to develop chronic problems.
And you can see the issue in the knee oftentimes.
So a doctor can go in and be like,
oh, inflammation here in the meniscus,
or there's a slight tear,
or you have patellar congemolation, which is underneath the patellar, where it's all kind of chewed up.
That is, yes, that's one of the reasons why the pain is there, but the root issue is
that the knee is not operating optimally.
And again, it has a lot more, most of the time, to do with the hip and the ankle.
I'm glad you went that direction, because I also think that there's a bunch of people
that get lost in this conversation that
don't understand that they fall in the category of this chronic pain because they got diagnosed from a doctor. They go in and they're told they have tinnitus, percytis, they have arthritis,
and so they think, oh, this isn't something that I could have solved. This is not something I could
have fixed. It's like, I just got a bad,. The car's older. Yeah, I'm getting older.
And so it's like that, but that falls in the category of chronic pain.
Like before we had done the episode, I just wanted to see what, you know, Google and
chat GBT said for like the 10 most common reasons for pain.
And like every single one of them were all these, you know, presidious, the arthritis,
the tendonitis and all the patellar stuff.
Everything is all things that are related to poor movement
or weakness in those other joints that then end up
causing a drawn out amount of time.
And so I remember talking, I would tell clients
like when they come in and they say,
oh, I have really bad knees.
And then I would say, oh, well, you know,
we need to address hip mobility and ankle mobility and strengthen
those areas.
Is that happening to my knee?
And they'd be like, oh, no, no, my doctor says that I have tendonitis or I have bercitis
or arthritis and I shouldn't do squatting and I shouldn't do these things.
And I was always trying to overcome that diagnosis from the doctor because it made people believe
that they have this thing that they're forever going to be plagued with, and there wasn't something that we can do to address it and potentially
eliminate it completely.
Because a lot of people don't understand that just because you get diagnosed with those
things doesn't mean that you're stuck with it for the rest of your life.
Yeah, first, okay, we have to differentiate something because common does not mean normal.
So knee pain is common, but that doesn't mean it's normal.
You're not supposed to have chronic pain in your joints.
Your body is very well equipped at regenerating,
at lubricating, and at moving,
at tamping down inflammation when it needs to,
producing inflammation when it needs to.
So it's really good at these things,
but if things are moving in sub-optimal ways over time
and you're overcoming your body's ability to heal
and recover and lubricate,
then you start to develop these chronic issues.
And yet, yes, the pain is coming from the fact
that you have swelling underneath your kneecap,
but that's not what caused the swelling to begin with.
So it would be like wearing one shoe with a five-inch rise and then you walk
around and then your back hurts. And so the doctor is like, oh, the back pain, I can see
where it's coming from, when your disc is over here. But they never address the fact that
you're wearing a shoe that's so much higher than the other, right? So it's the same thing.
So yes, you can look at a knee joint and you can see, you know, tendonitis and inflammation
and cartilage that doesn't look right and all that stuff.
And yeah, pain's coming from that,
but there's a reason as to why that's there in the first place.
And it's because that knee is not operating the way it should.
It's doing more than it should,
or it's compensating for the joints surrounding it.
And again, that's the ankle and head.
Which is also why what ends up happening a lot of times
is people end up taking quarter zone shots
and it's one of the worst things that you can do
because it ends up masking what's really going on
and you get this temporary fix and I get it
because it feels like magical right after you do that,
right? You get that shot and all of a sudden
it brings nails down all that inflammation.
So the pain goes away and you're like,
oh my god, it feels so amazing.
And then what a month to three months go by and then you have to go do that again. But nails down all that inflammation, so the pain goes away and you're like, oh my god, I feel so amazing.
And then what a month, two, three months go by, and then you have to go do that again.
I think, oh, this is just going to be part of my routine as I go and get these quarter
zone shots all the time.
And it's like, dude, what's going on is that you're not addressing the root cause.
It's causing the inflammation.
And we can get to that and fix that.
Yeah.
In fact, if you look at the data on quarter zone shots, oftentimes, majority of the time,
what they do is actually accelerate
the degeneration of the joint
and they cause worse problems later on.
There's two reasons for this.
One is it's really hammering inflammation down.
You need some inflammation for your body to heal.
That's a signal, right?
Your inflammation is literally your body trying to heal itself.
That's why if you cut yourself,
you get some red and some swelling
because it's sending things to heal.
So if you tamp it down completely,
it really stopped the healing process.
Pain's gone, but now there's no healing process going on.
But then too, now that the pain's gone,
you don't have a signal telling you
that you're moving wrong.
So you just move wrong more so, walk more,
squat more in bad ways.
And so you see the acceleration of joint issues as a result.
So it's a temporary fix.
It improves your quality of life in the short term
and the long term, it's not great.
You got to figure out what the hell the root issue is.
So to give an example of kind of what we're talking about.
So, you know, because people are like,
well, how's the ankle in the hip
relate to the knee?
So we'll look at the ankle for a second.
When you do a full squat, if you're standing
or you're doing full squat, your hip has to bend,
your knee has to bend, and your ankles have to bend.
So let's look at the ankles for a second.
As I squat, my ankle has to bend.
Now, if my ankle is tight or my foot is weak,
or I lack mobility in it, and I'm trying to squat more and I'm pushing myself
down to squat more.
What'll happen is my feet as I'm squatting
will start to turn out to compensate.
That twisting that's happening in the body,
my hip can handle that no problem.
My hip can twist, okay?
My knee can't.
So I'm squatting while my knees are twisting out
and with preventing my knees from twisting apart,
my meniscus.
Well, if I squat enough times that way,
I'm gonna strain my meniscus,
I'm gonna have inflammation there, maybe a tear,
of course, a doctor will go in there and say,
oh, we could trim your meniscus, make you feel better,
but then you keep squatting, never figure out
what's going on, where in that case,
if I had just worked on my ankle mobility,
now when I squat, my knee wouldn't have to rotate out.
But because the knee doesn't rotate
and that rotating is happening under load,
well now we're causing problems.
Let's just one example.
But again, if you look at the ankle itself,
it can bend laterally, it can flex and extend,
it can rotate to a degree.
And then the foot itself has some movement.
Then the hip is also a very mobile joint
in comparison to the knee.
So if the hip and the ankle aren't able to stabilize
and do what they're supposed to do,
then what happens is the ligaments
and the cartilage and the knee,
all of a sudden start to support things.
You don't want ligaments and cartilage to do the support.
You want muscle to do this. So
imagine if you're holding a weight here with your elbow bent in your bicep tense. Now imagine if
you extend your elbow all the way, so you put your elbow at the end of a table and then put a weight on
it. And your elbow, it's like an arm lock, right? And your elbow is now supporting the weight,
how bad that would be for the joint. So that's kind of what happens to the knee over time when those
things aren't functioning the way they should. Well,, I mean that's in terms of like my actual injury when I was playing football
It was because of the surface
So it was normally you know, you have a little bit more give and your foot can kind of move and slide
you know on a
Type of like a grass surface versus like this. This was like a very thin asterisk like I was basically on like a really
Sticky kind of like a a thin astroturf. Like I was basically on like a really sticky kind of like an astroturf that's almost like, uh,
there's no give.
Yeah, no give.
It's like cement just in a sense,
but I was wearing like regular shoes,
astroturf shoes.
And so like I wasn't used to cutting with those.
I go to cut this way and my whole body keeps going that way,
which then I was going to rotate,
but my foot just got caught.
And so now put all the pressure and buckling right there on my knee.
And so it just stretched out my MCL to like a crazy degree.
But that's the thing.
It's, I mean, your ankle and your hips, they have to be able to have that kind of travel
in movement in order to keep it in good tracking.
Isn't that one of the challenges that they've had with like figuring out how to make
fields, the astroturf fields is to make it as close to like grasses because one of the things about
grasses, it grasses being a lot safer. It's forgiving. It is. Because it kind of gives out, right? So
if your cleats get in there, it tears through the dirt and grass where you don't get stuck in something.
Isn't that what the challenge is? Now they have that other kind of turf that's got like the rubber, rubber, yeah, so it actually has a little bit of,
you know, some you could kind of dig into versus it being
that like a brub stop.
Yeah, so just another example is if you look at female athletes,
female athletes suffer from ACL tears at something like,
I mean, it's a multiple, I believe it like seven,
I mean, versus male athletes are much higher believe it like seven, I mean, uh, uh, uh, versus male at like female athletes are much higher risk for ACL tears. And you think, well, how, why,
when they play the same sports like what's going on? Well, it's, it's, as a, as a girl
goes through puberty, uh, her hips start to widen. First, and the, and the pelvis of,
of women tend to be wider anyway. So there's a stronger angle from the hip to the knee, requiring
more support from the ligaments. You added that you add in the fact to the knee requiring more support from the ligaments you add in the
fact to that women wear high heels a lot more than men do they do so you throw that at the
top of that.
Now how do you prevent this in female athletes?
You really work on hip strength and stability and when female athletes do this it reduces
their injury of their knees significantly because their hips now have
the ability to stabilize.
But if that's not there, now you're relying on all the ligaments and stuff of the knee
to support you.
And that basically is, you're basically playing with fire.
How much can my ligaments handle and how much of my body weight can support when I move
the wrong way or twist?
And it's not as much as muscle, it's not as much.
Well, then there's this idea of,
oh, which some doctors will recommend to these patients
is stop squatting, you know?
And of course, I would not barbell,
backload, you know, squat heavy with one of these clients
that are in this condition,
but this idea of, let's just eliminate a movement pattern
like that, that is so fundamental.
You're forever gonna have to get up off the toilet. You're forever gonna have to get up off the toilet.
You're forever gonna have to get up out of your bed,
out of your vehicle.
So this idea of, oh well, you shouldn't squat anymore.
It's one of the dumbest things that someone could tell a patient
because that is such a functional movement.
Sure, loading a barbell for 200 pounds
and doing a barbell back squat is not the most ideal
situation that client, but to tell them to stop doing a pattern that they're going to need to
do for the rest of their life is only going to make this condition worse in the long
run.
It is.
By the way, the data, they're starting to figure out a little bit like, for example, when
they tell people in older populations, it's time to use a cane or a walker.
They're much more careful because when you tell somebody who's having trouble walking to
start using a walker, the decline in their ability to walk accelerates because he stopped
practicing walking.
Now, the reason why doctors will say this about exercises is because it's like, oh, exercise
is a big deal.
Stop doing them.
But really, it would be no different than you saying, go on the doctor and be like, hey,
my foot hurts when I walk.
Oh, stop walking.
Right.
Nobody would settle for that.
Well, no, I got a walk, you know.
So if you don't do these exercises,
your ability to do them declines even faster.
Now, we're not saying do these exercises
if you can't do them,
but the answer should be,
let's figure out why you can't do them.
Let's get you to a point where you can do them
and then let's do them so we never lose that skill.
And let me tell you,
that is the best way to bulletproof your joints is to be able to keep
them strong through all these different exercises and movements.
Yeah, really.
It's a lack of strength.
For the most part, anytime a joint isn't like stable and functioning properly, there's
some kind of an instability.
There's a lack of strength somewhere there that we can address to help kind of embolden
that response of it being protected and being functional. There's a lack of strength somewhere there that we can address to help kind of embolden that
response of it being protected and
being functional. Now here's the interesting thing about knee pain. I'd love you guys as
Feedback because this is all my anecdote. So I haven't trained millions of people right? I've trained
probably a hundred you know or so and then thousands maybe by proxy
But of all the common injuries or chronic pain issues,
my success rate was very, very high with knee over time,
very, very high.
And I want to guess it's because the knee flexes and extends
and it was much more simple
and I could really work on mobility and strength
on the ankle and hip and just strength on the knee.
And it was like, I was like nine out of 10 times,
I would have significant improvements
versus like more complicated joints,
like the hip or the shoulder, which would take me a little work.
I don't know if you guys had any similar experience?
Yeah, for the most part, it was like that.
I mean, I did remember one real difficult situation
with dancing clients because of the,
so they've hardwired this type of movement
where they're just constantly kind of outwardly pushing out
and completing and all that kind of stuff.
So that would be something that you have to sort of
repattern that and that takes the few years
to really like repattern it and get everything
to track the way it should.
I had tremendous success with it.
Once I became educated on it.
Once I became a corrective exercise specialist
and understood what was going on.
First part of my career, I was terrible.
I was the trainer who would like,
oh, we'll just avoid this thing.
Just avoid moving it.
Oh, you can't squat, okay.
Let's do this because you can't do these things
or oh, your doctor told you that,
okay, don't worry, we won't do that.
We'll do this instead.
Later on, when I become more confident
in what I was able to do
and then I realized the root cause
and like how common this was in a lot of my clients,
it was actually an easier fix than you would think.
And what I mean by easy is not like,
it didn't take consistency and discipline
of doing these movements,
but it wasn't like this really hard thing we had to do.
I would do like get down and do a hip mobility test
with somebody or an ankle and it was glaring.
It was like this person could not get their knee to travel even close to the end of their toes, much less over their
toes.
We're just like, oh my god, we lack all kinds of ankle mobility. And if we lack ankle mobility
there, we probably were probably weak in the ankle and the foot. So that was an obvious
thing.
And then the same thing for the hips. I remember the first time that mine got tested with
brink and realizing like my inability. And I actually had okay hip mobile, it wasn't even horrific,
but I saw how much more range of motion I could have
if I had better connection there.
And so it was very glaring to me like,
oh wow, there's so much room for improvement
in these joint, and I used to give this analogy to clients
that man, when we're young, when we're kids,
we do so much play, right?
Where we're rolling around and you're cutting left and you're cutting right and you're
spinning around and we're doing all these things where we put demand on the hips and
ankles to have to rotate and move and flex in all these different directions.
And so we stay good and connected to it.
Even if you're not really super strong in those areas, we're at least good and connected. What ends up happening is we get older,
and especially when we stop playing sports and playing like this,
is the body just prunes it off.
If you don't take your hip like this and rotate it all the way around
or move that ankle all the way.
You lose your ability.
Yeah, your brain goes,
oh, we don't need this anymore.
So let's stop sending neurons over in that area
and prioritizing that movement.
Let's send it in other places where we do still have demand
and it prunes it off.
And it doesn't mean you don't have the inability,
and you just have to retrain that neurological connection.
And then once I can get you to do that,
then all of a sudden it frees up all this movement.
Yeah, I mean, that's really where I found the most success.
You started dressing it with mobility, hip and ankle,
and then really like incorporating and programming
intentionally in lateral movement
and rotational type strengthening movement.
So you just learn how to respond
in real life situations a lot better
where that's where all that potential for injuries
is gonna occur anyways.
And so we're strengthening those types of movements
so that way you're equipped better
for if you move quickly or you twist all of a sudden or you're a weekend warrior and you're doing a
basketball game or whatever it is, like your body is better equipped to be able to be strong and
supported around your joints. Yeah. So just to just to put it plainly, our bodies and brains
So just to put it plainly, our bodies and brains have this amazing ability to learn. They also have this amazing ability to unlearn.
The unlearning process is very important.
It's what keeps us efficient machines.
It's what keeps us alive.
So if you're not using something, you lose it.
The old adage, if you don't use it, you lose it.
You really do.
If you were to lay down right now in bed and not get up for 30 days,
I promise you, when you got up,
walking would not come as easily,
no wood running or no wood standing.
So if you don't do certain things,
you'll lose that that ability.
And in other words, your body's only ever a strong
or a fit or a mobile as it thinks it needs to be.
So if you wanna move through life, pain free if you want to move through life pain-free,
if you want to move through life feeling like, man, I feel really good, you want a fitness
mobility and strength capability that's far higher than your daily demands. Then if you step
off the curb, you jump to do something, you got to grab the kid from the back seat or whatever,
not a problem. By the way, those are all ways that people hurt themselves often because
it's just above
their capability because they had to do it in a way that was a little faster or whatever
than they were used to.
That's the crux of it.
Back to the knee, we got to get the ankle strong and stable and mobile and we got to get
the hip, strong and stable and mobile.
Then the knee can move the way it's supposed to and then you don't develop any problems. I just talked about one issue, right? The ankle not being able to
really flex properly when I'm doing a squat, making my knee need to come out. If my hips are
weak, similar things start to happen when I'm squatting or lunging or standing or staying down.
If you ever see somebody try to stand up in their knees, buckle in, then you're looking at maybe some hip issues that are going on. So we're going to talk
about all those, but I think we should start with basic lower body strengthening exercises
because if you look at the average person, I could really, this is general, but generally
speaking, if the average person's knee hurts, generally speaking, they just lack strength.
Generally, we can get more specifics,
but the average person's pain today
is a result of lack of strength.
And getting them stronger overall in movements
that are really mimic good movement patterns,
getting them stronger overall tends to take
away a lot of this type of pain so long as the movements are properly executed.
What you just said is where we align really well with the strength community that's anti-mobility
people, right?
So there's a divide in the strength community and the like supermobility people when we
come from a camp of like both.
But there's a camp in the strength community that's like,
oh, you don't need to do all this gumbee mobility, you know.
Just squat.
Yeah, just squat more.
Just, and there's some truth to that.
And it's exactly what you just said right now.
Because in most cases, it is just purely weakness.
You're just weak in that area.
You haven't even attempted to build strength
in that range of motion.
And once you start to do that, you will increase this range of motion. You will get stronger.
You will become more stable. And that many times will solve a lot of issues.
But the reason why I don't like to stop there because in my experience of all the clients
I've trained, it's not always that way. There's also other cases where we have to address
mobility. But I just wanted to highlight that because the time we've been doing this podcast,
there's people,
yeah, well there's people that like try and pit us against,
even some of our friends that come from the strength background
that tout that all the time of like,
you just need to squat more and practice.
You can practice bad patterns.
That's right.
That's right.
But what Sal was saying right now,
that's where we align.
There's truth in both. That's right. But what Sal was saying right now, that's where we align. There's truth in both.
Look, it's right.
If you are, if you've never swung a baseball bat and you go to a coach, here's what the
coach is going to do.
They're going to break everything down.
You've got your feet got to go here, bend your hips here, your knees here, hold the
bat in this way.
This is how you rotate.
Here's what happens in the back leg.
You got to watch this.
And that's how you practice at first.
But then when you get good at swinging a bat,
all you gotta do is practice swinging a bat.
You never have to practice all the pieces anymore.
If you're an advanced strength athlete,
yeah, you probably all you ever need to do is squat.
But that mobility stuff comes in handy
when you're not an expert,
when you don't have great movement pattern.
You take the average person off the street,
tell him to do a barbell squat,
it's probably not gonna look good,
there's a lot of mobility movements we need to work on.
And then to take it back, if you're that strength athlete
and you're pushing the weight,
well the stronger you get,
the more little tiny discrepancies in your mobility
start to become glaring.
Well, then mobility becomes more important.
Again, for that advanced athlete.
So there's definitely truth in both.
Yeah.
But you need both. They're both
very, very important. Yeah. I mean, it's movement education for the individual. So it's like, you
have to know your body's abilities and its limitations as well. And I think that going through
mobility, it's an important part of that process of connecting and figuring out my entire joint's
ability and where those lines are and where that's established.
And in a pretty safe way,
and in terms of just loading it,
and then just trying to master a complex movement,
which yes, you can sharpen a complex movement
and get good mechanics and reinforce that
and end up getting strong.
So yes, you're going gonna be in a good place.
If, but again, they're more educated.
So they've been doing the process a lot longer.
So.
They know what a good squat feels like.
They know what it feels like.
They know to get into that.
Right.
So let's talk about some of the best knee protecting movements.
We mentioned already the barbell squat or squats in general.
Squatting is one of the best, if done
properly, right? One of the best knee protecting movements you could do. If you're squatting well,
you're strengthening everything that you need to have a stable knee. Now, it's not perfect in
the sense that you never should do anything else. But generally speaking, if the average person did good barbell squats and that's all they did,
they'd probably be okay. They'd probably be okay. They wouldn't be as good
as if they did other stuff as well. But a barbell squat is up there in terms of
protecting the knee when done properly because it strengthens all those muscles.
Yeah, yeah. No, and it's one of the fundamental places that you go to. The next one would have to be,
and I think you could categorize this similar too,
as you single leg stuff,
like so single leg squat or single leg deadlift,
I think is another great place.
Yes, now why single leg?
Because your body does a really good job
of compensating when one side is weaker
or not as stable than the other,
and it does such a good job that you don't even,
you can't even tell.
Like you can't even tell half the time, until you try doing things on one side versus the other, and it does such a good job that you don't even, you can't even tell. Like you can't even tell half the time,
until you try doing things on one side versus the other.
Here's an easy way to test it.
You don't even have to do anything complex.
See how long you can stand on one leg in balance,
and then see how long you can stand in balance
on the other leg, and I guarantee you,
unless you practice this,
you're probably way better on one side.
Right there, that shows you there's a difference
between one side of the other.
So single leg exercises are great.
Single leg deadlifts are one of my favorite exercises for the average person.
And I do them with no weight.
I would have clients just balance on one foot and they would go down.
That's it.
Just go down and see if you could touch your foot and stand back up without your other foot touching the ground.
Or if they're beginners, I'd have them just touch their knee to start with.
Great exercise at stretching.
Stress in them with a more unstable type of a situation where it's like now you're just
highlighting the feel of like how everything's sort of compensating in order to try and get
you to stay within that, you know, optimal position with your hips.
So I have a movement that I would,
and this was later on like a years of training,
I started a piece together and I would tell my clients,
like here's a movement I want you to learn.
And it seems so probably gimmicky for some trainers
that we might have teased about in my early career
that I now go, I want you to be able to do
this for as long as all the exercise I show you if you can do this one exercise it can compasses
so much that's going to protect your knees hips and low back and that I would have them stand on
a box stand next to a box at this tall facing like like so your parallel the box up open the hip
step up single leg toe touch come back down. Oh, that's everything
So it literally gives you the stability component in there
You have to have good hip mobility in order to open the hips up and to step all the way up like that
You have to be able to stabilize with the ankle on the foot and then to hamstring over and touch the the toe is
Such a good basic movement
that if you can just keep the ability
to do that for a long time,
you're gonna, as far as knee pain and hip pain goes,
you're gonna cover a lot of the bases
just being able to do that.
I love that.
There's all the split stance exercises which are good too.
They're not necessarily single leg
because you have the back leg supporting you
but like a lunge, all the versions of lunges,
Bulgarian split stance squats.
And then this one was at one time, a lunch, all the versions of lunges, Bulgarian split stance squats.
And then this one was at one time only athletes use this tool.
But the funny thing about this tool is, I think it's actually not that it's not valuable
for athletes, very valuable for athletes.
I think that this tool is more valuable for the average person, which is a sled.
A sled is so valuable because it's such a low skill. You don't need a lot of skill to push a sled. A sled is so valuable because it's such a low skill. You don't need a lot of
skill to push a sled. I've had old people push a very light sled. I've had really strong
people push a heavy sled. It involves the foot and the ankle and the hip. There's no
like having to lower a weight under control so they don't get sore and I can drag a sled.
I could push a sled. I could do it laterally. It's like, it's one of the best things you could use.
Well, on you see, I know if things his name's been,
John.
I was just gonna bring him up.
It's a comment about how we, I wish I would have,
I've been doing that with my clients forever.
Yeah, I wish I would have
intended for this reason.
Yes, yes, shared the sled drag
for what proofing your knees.
Cause I swear to God, he went viral.
I know he was on, I know he got on Joe Rogan.
Yeah, Rogan show and like,
heuberman, I know a lot of people have shared him
and he's got great content.
This is not a knock on him whatsoever.
I love his stuff.
It's good stuff.
But I mean, it's like,
and there was nothing revolutionary
about what he was teaching.
It's like if you, if you understand corrective exercise,
how to bolt proof your knees,
those are the ways.
Especially ankle mobility, right?
Yeah. So if you're,
if you're directionally kind of digging your heel down and pushing back proof your knees. Those are the ways. Especially ankle mobility, right? And so if you're directionally kind of digging
and you're heel down and pushing back
and your knees just naturally will be in that
like forward position where it's going,
directing it over the toe,
but all the stress isn't hitting it there
because you're directing all the force backwards.
So it helps you too to kind of get into that position
if you have a hard time with mobilizing your ankles like that.
All right, now let's talk about some of the best
mobility movements for the ankle and the hip.
By the way, these you would do before
doing your squats and dead lifts
and split stance exercises.
The truth is you should do these.
If you have bad knees, you should do these
as much as you possibly.
Yeah, not just before, good point.
All the time, I mean, this was one of the biggest things that broke through for myself, which is typically
right.
We always talk about like we're good at training our clients and we're terrible at ourselves.
Until I had to go apply this for myself and to working on my ankle and my hip mobility
and I saw what made the greatest difference was these, you know, when I was teaching
at Orn's Theorah, I remember this is getting down and doing the combat stretch, you know,
every hour for a couple minutes, not long, not hard, just frequently doing it all day throughout
the day in these little bouts. I made huge improvement on my ankles and my hips and I didn't
realize how much better that was for me until I took
myself through that versus like programming it how I used to as a coach like oh before you see me
make sure you go over and do your couple mobility drills and then we're going to get into our workout not
realizing that my clients are probably only doing that when they see me those three times in the week
and they'll be at far more benefit if they if they practice three times in the week and they'll be far more benefit
if they practice this frequently throughout the day.
Yeah, now mobility, the reason why we're not saying,
I know it says combat stretch,
but they're not called stretch movements
because you're not stretching,
although you do feel a stretch.
The idea with real good mobility
is to connect to better ranges of motion.
Okay, so we talked about combat stretch.
That's for ankle mobility.
When you're in the position where you're moving forward with your knee and you feel the stretch,
what you need to do when you're there is to pull your toes up, activate the tibialis.
You need to spread your toes. You need to push into the floor, activate your calf. You
need to fire all the muscles that are in that position. Otherwise, are you going to get
as more flexibility? And more flexibility isn't gonna make you more stable.
You're just gonna be able to move more,
but now you can't control it.
So all the stuff we're gonna go over,
when you're in these positions,
you wanna try to lift your leg and twist your leg
and activate all the muscles that are holding there
and make it hard so you can connect
to those new ranges of motion.
That's what gives you the mobility that we're talking about.
So combat stretch is one for the ankle.
I love 90, 90 for the hips, 90, 90's phenomenal
because it's internal, external rotation.
When you're in that position, try to lift your foot
in your knee, try to press them into the floor,
try to pull your foot up behind you,
try to activate all those different positions on that.
And this is something again that you're doing.
You know, one of the things I wanna do
is we go through all these movements and we can wrap the episode up with like giving
kind of a protocol of what this would look like. And when I'm programming, we're trying
to bulletproof our knees or work on somebody who's got chronic pain. Mobility is every day
all day, meaning as much as you can, right? At the bare minimum every day, I want to do at least
two or three of these drills for my ankles and my hips that make the greatest difference
and doing it as frequently as possible. And then I'm strength training two or three times
on the strength training exercises that you were talking about earlier.
Yeah, so for most people, what tends to look like more realistic is in in the morning you wake up, do five to 10 minutes,
when you're watching TV at night, you're on the floor,
do a little bit.
You do that twice a day, you'll see some pretty fast progress.
If you do it just twice a week,
you'll still get better, it's gonna take a lot longer.
That's the point we're trying to make,
is that unlike other forms of exercise with this,
the more the better tends to be.
Just practice.
The disease king in this.
Short foot is another one.
Short foot, you're literally trying to activate the muscles
that are in the bottom of your foot or the arch of your foot.
Most of us are totally dead there.
Very difficult.
Yeah, it's very difficult.
We're very flat-footed, the majority of you.
Yeah, and it's weird because when I first tried doing this,
it's like the muscle didn't exist.
I couldn't do it.
I can't do that with my foot. Then when I was finally able to do it, as I practiced more doing this, it's like the muscle didn't exist. I couldn't do it, my foot. I can't do that with my foot.
Then when I was finally able to do it,
as I practiced more and more,
I was able to get those muscles to fire.
Why do you wanna strengthen your foot?
Because if your foot is weak,
it's like you're standing on stilts,
and your foot is just there.
And all kinds of weird stuff can happen
with your foot and ankle if it's not strong.
Short foot is one way to strengthen it.
And then lastly, and we're giving you
just kind of the most common basic ones
because there's a lot, lateral tube walking.
That's really, really good for activating
those muscles that abduck, right?
That bring the knees apart in the hips.
You see now a lot of fitness influencers
doing this to build their butt.
It's, this is not a huge muscle builder,
but it can definitely help build your butt
if you have trouble connecting to that area.
Then you do the other exercises that build the butt and you got better technique.
Now, as far as resources for this, obviously we created Prime Pro, which was specific to
addressing things like this.
So you have that.
If you're not buying a program from us, then we've created all kinds of YouTube videos.
You can look these up on our YouTube channel file.
We've gone in great detail addressing knee pain.
So all these movements that we've talked about, they're all on my
webinars.
My webinar is a great one to go through.
We've got the Prime Pro webinar, which is absolutely free to you.
And then lastly, if you're not already utilizing Asminepump.com, you can ask the AI tool,
and it'll point you in the right direction on how to solve this problem.
So if you have family or friends or you suffer from chronic pain, there's no reason why we can't fix this.
Now, now honorable mention, let's talk about foam rolling just for a second.
A foam rolling does have an initial pain relieving, you know, benefit.
So like you'll hear people say, oh, I foam roll my IT band and my pain and my knee is gone
Yes, that can definitely happen, but it's not solving the root issue what you're doing with the foam roller is you're loosening up
The muscle and the in the fascia here on the side of the leg
But they were tight the reason why they were tying the first place is because your body protect you your body trying to protect you
And it sees that there's a mobility issue
So now it feels better now. I go do my exercise, but I never solve the mobility issue.
This is why if you foam roll for knee pain, you have to foam roll every damn time.
You work out otherwise your knee starts to hurt you.
Does that mean foam rolling is a waste of time? No.
I think foam rolling is phenomenal before mobility.
If I could foam roll, now I can get into positions I couldn't before,
then do the mobility. The mobility is foam roll, now I can get into positions I couldn't before then do the mobility.
The mobility is where the where the magic is. It's also a great place like where you talked about
earlier where sometimes the pain and someone's knee is just purely out of a weakness thing and they
just need to practice more a great way before I go into squatting with somebody is to kind of foam
roll the hips, foam roll the calves, foam the IT, foam roll the pair of formus, get that all foam roll and then go into the movement so that they'll have better range of motion.
And better connection to movement.
Exactly.
By the way, it was primeprowebinar.com.
It will show you a lot of great free mobility stuff.
And I like that because like our program maps prime pro, you actually have Adam on there
coaching you how to do them because if you just look at a picture, yeah, if you just look at a picture,
you're not going to be able to do it right.
Yeah, perform them right.
There's a way that you have to connect to the muscles when you do those movements.
Look, if you like mind pump, head over to mindpumpfree.com and download some of our free guides.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
So Justin is at mind pump.
Justin, I'm at mind pump to Stefano and Adam is at mind pump.
Thank you for listening to mind pump. So Justin is at Mind Pump Justin. I'm at Mind Pump De Stefano and Adam is at Mind Pump Adam.
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