Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 227: Can you be TOO flexible?
Episode Date: January 28, 2016Foam rolling, static stretches, dynamic stretches... what's best? And is it possible to overdo it? Sal, Adam & Justin break it down for you. Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Learn more abo...ut Mind Pump at www.mindpumpradio.com
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, pop, mind, up with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Welcome to Mind Pump, you're listening to Salda Stefano. I'm here with Justin Andrew. Yeah, yeah, yeah, Adam Schaefer
Who who and they always hand some dog eggie Douglass for Doug. We haven't done that a long time
I know that's why did it can we do can I do the Instagram plug right now to you know?
I called Doug the repeater and nobody called like
Tell me out on the repeater that was such a weird name the repeater
Repeater that was such a weird name the repeater. Yeah, I don't know why every once in a while your one-liders are like
We know for everybody said that sounded funny, but I'm not sure what the fuzz that meant. It's a real thing
So yeah, no Instagram. Uh, we have it. We have not been doing that. We have not telling people we are on social media actually
You can find myself at mine pump atom at on Instagram. You can find sal to Mind Pump Adam on Instagram.
You can find Sal de Stefano at Mind Pump Sal, Sal deeznuts, de Stefano.
Yeah.
And you can find Justin Andrews at Mind Pump Justin.
Now we do post lots of.
Just in your mom.
Wow.
We post a lot of information on our Instagram.
So different stuff that you might have here on the show.
Not really, just you do.
Well, I don't wanna see bad about you guys.
I don't wanna shit on your guys.
Handles or anything.
What, my?
Basically, basically everything you need.
Basically, one of us has a lot of good content.
On our Instagram pages.
One of them's a little bit humorous.
I just feel so serious all the time. I I'm so serious.
I just say,
man,
cool shit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I just look good.
Constantly.
Yeah.
That's pretty much all I show these apps.
Yeah.
So Adam, you're going to tell us something about mornings that you hate.
Oh, do you know what's, uh, this, this, you guys ever, um, do you guys take your shit
on the regular basis on a regular time?
Like it's like you said. Yeah. It's on a regular time, like it's like your set time?
Oh, yeah, it's not a cycle.
So, what's your time real quick?
Ooh, when do you guys shit?
This is 8 a.m.
You're 8 a.m. for sure.
Wow, that's late.
It is.
Yeah, aren't you in the road at 8 a.m.?
Oh, I guess it doesn't matter.
It's after the client and then like the coffee kicks in
and then boom, run for the motor.
No, so mine is at six, probably then boom. Run for the motor.
So mine is at six, probably around six, 30 in the morning.
So I wake up, I drink a glass of water right away.
And then I go boom, and that's usually
when you'll see me do a post on Instagram.
That's because I'm shitting.
It's a stinky post.
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm shitting everybody.
Yeah, it's so funny you say that
because I always tell my buddies
that they're gonna be shit for not like return their attacks.
I'm like, I haven't shit yet today bro. Wait. I think Instagram isn't scratch and sniff
What do we do before right before the toilet like just read the back?
I feel time now bro. I used to read the backer. I used to read that shampoo bottles
Yeah, when it was around me like yeah, remember that shit
Like you'd be lucky if there was like some kind of like national geographic or a Victoria secret cat like
Oh, I saw I saw a meme one time and it was like forgot your phone and the guy
It was a meme of a guy on the shitter and he was like he's reading the back of the air freshener
I'm like, oh my god, that's so true. That's back in the day, bro
Because you got nothing
I'm like, fuck, no phone, what do I do? I'm gonna think thoughts in my head right now. Let's read all the chemicals that are in this air freshener
So let's see, here's the thing back when you were a kid, so you're like, 10, you'd go over people's houses
and they wouldn't censor the magazines
and next to the shit it, right?
So you'd go in there and you'd sit down, you're 10,
and you're reading Cosmo Palt and how,
how to give your man a mind-blowing orgasm.
So I would read these all the time, bro.
I'd go to the bathroom and just read these articles on.
So are they true?
That's where you get that.
So they true.
I don't remember what, you know,
you ever read Cosmo? No, of course not. I don't know but sad that the neat is flawless
It is like the playbook for the other team
But some of the advice that they give the women for men is like stupid
It's like tickle is tickle the back of its knee that'll totally drive them. Oh, well, it's not the point that it's wrong
The point from a name and slap them in his face the point is you're getting the you're getting the playbook
So you get to know you know, I'm saying this is what they being taught so you know,
Whether it's true or not, you're like, oh, okay, you're gonna run the ball to the left. Oh, okay, I got you. I got it.
Maybe start like seeing their moves. I read that. Yeah, why is she tickling the back? Why is she in a feather?
What the fuck in like feathers? You're like, read up bitch. That was January's edition. It's fucking March. Chuck it syrup. Sticking gross.
It's that's after food.
It doesn't matter if you put ice in your mouth before you blow me honey.
All right. So you're going to do you're going to tell us about your role.
So because of my Tuesdays and Thursdays, I so I don't have a I don't have a time.
I have a timing.
So by about the I'm like Justin more like Justin where you giving him a hard time for the eight o'clock.
I'm about three hours after I have woke up.
So the minute I wake up,
three hours later, about three hours later.
What'd you got to go?
This fucks me, man.
When I teach him Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Oh, cause you're in class and it hits you?
Yeah, well, because I had to teach back to back four hours.
And there's, and it's like,
and if I don't have to be all mic'd up,
just pinching it.
Well, what a,
I'm running girl.
Well, I submitric's speaker. What? Adam, how do I do this exercise? it well what a run girl I some metrics
speaker Adam how do I do this exercise
just you just got down your core hold on a minute
so I'm going back the part that pisses me off is
if you're right I have figured that out so I don't
so I don't have to be like that in my class now I
have to take one before and it's just when you have to,
when you have to make a shit happen or rush a shit, it is just,
it sucks. It ruins most of your day.
It really processes. It does. I mean, because there's nothing like it's a beautiful
process. You have your breakfast, your coffee sets in like Justin says,
it's time to relax. You get to to Instagram I could probably get two Instagram posts of return five to six text message text messages to clients and friends
I mean I get a lot done
During that little time right there and when it's on schedule
It just sets the tone for the day one Tuesday and Thursday
I have this problem because I'm up at four o'clock in the morning and my it's not ready. I'm not ready yet
So it's it's not ready. No, it's not it's in and and I and then I'm up at four o'clock in the morning and it's not ready. I'm not ready yet. So it's not ready.
No, it's not.
And then I might try to rush it so I can teach a class for four hours.
So here's what happens when you're a dad.
When you're a dad, sometimes you go in the bathroom instead of the toilet and you don't
have to shit.
You can get away.
You know what I mean?
You know what I mean?
But I just give it away.
And what I can do.
Yeah, every one of our male listeners like fuck you sound
Should the way to sell us all out?
Shut up. Yeah, no, it's true. It's true. And all our women listeners are like
Master bait. No, it's not the way for me. Is everything okay there?
Everything is great
Actually perfect. It's always like the right time, right after dinner.
I'm just gonna sit on the crapper.
Oh, the dishes are done.
I was in the bathroom.
Why don't you tell me I'll help you.
I would have been crazy shit to just came on a North.
So, what do you guys think about talking about fitness today?
I have something I really want to talk about.
This is twice this last week that I've been asked questions
regarding flexibility. And I think it's a great segue to talk about, this is twice this last week that I've been asked questions regarding flexibility.
And I think it's a great segue to talk about functionality.
And I think that I'm very fascinated with the whole dynamic flexibility world and doing
that now and not foam rolling right now at all.
I've been continuing that for quite some time.
And I have to say I'm pretty happy with what I see. It's working. Oh yeah. Well, so before we do that we should
we should define flexibility because there's passive flexibility and there's active flexibility.
Yes, yes, yes. And there's a big difference between the two of them. So passive flexibility would be
Adam is stretching my hamstring and I've got great range of motion in it. Active stretch
abilities. I'm stretching my hamstring myself and I'm having to use other
muscles to put it in position or at least support myself in a stretch position.
One of them is functional and one of them isn't.
You could have excellent flexibility but have no strength within that range of motion
that you have and you've not only done yourself, you haven't done yourself any favors,
you've actually given done yourself, you haven't done yourself any favors, you've
actually given yourself a problem, you've actually created a more unstable, too much travel.
Yeah, it's instability.
That's the important.
And some of the worst injuries I've ever seen were from hyper flexible weak people.
And that's when joints dislocate, that's when crazy stuff happens.
Well, because it's the muscle that holds it all in that place.
That's right. That's right.
And if it's weak, but you're really flexible, you just have more things to stabilize.
I remember when I tore my ACL, my MCL, and I was really fascinated with that.
I didn't think I really did anything wrong until the fucking pain set in the next day,
but as the day of when it happened, and I remember asking the doctor that, I was like,
it just, I can't believe that I tore both those and I, it just doesn't feel like it. And he said, well, you have a
lot of muscle that you've built around there. And it's holding it in place, even without
that. Just take somebody on the other side who, you know, great flexibility, anything like
that. And that gives out. And you don't have a lot of muscle or other supporting. You're
not going to be able to hold, hold yourself up in place.
No, if you're constantly depending on your tendons and ligaments to hold joints into position
or to prevent them from hyper extending, you will injure yourself.
You want to depend on the muscle to hold things together because muscles much better at
it.
It has a better range of motion.
It gets stronger.
It stretches.
Ligaments, you can stretch them.
You can get problems.
Tendons, you can stretch them a little bit, but it's the muscle that you increase range
of motion, but you want it to be strong.
So if you get really flexible, make sure you train that muscle and it's new range of
motion as well.
Otherwise you're just giving yourself, like if I can squat down, let's say I can squat
down to just below parallel and keep everything tight.
But then I work on, you work on some kind of passive stretching
for three months.
I have someone stretching me real deep
and I get really, really good.
And I go to the squat and all of a sudden,
I'm like, I'm gonna go real deep in the squat
with the same weight that I used before
when I was squatting as deep.
And I drop in that hole with this new depth.
That weight is gonna hurt me.
Yeah, it's gonna hurt.
Because I'm not gonna have stability
within that range of motion.
So functional flexibility is the ability to,
a long-age a muscle, but with strength and control.
Almost have anchors attached, right?
So one thing that I think of when I get,
when I'm maximizing the stretch is,
I'm tensing specific areas of my body
in order to maximize where it is, like as far as the alignment
where the muscle insert an origin.
Where I wanna make sure that like, I'm lined up
and I'm tense and now I'm pulling correctly.
So I'm also staying tense to, you know, support it.
Right, and certain types of yoga are actually excellent
for this.
Yes, because you know the phrase.
A couple different, yeah, schools for that. Exactly, because you'll got to see a couple different yeah, schools for that.
Exactly, because you'll get into a stretch,
but you're also supporting your body
and having to hold yourself, and that's that.
Yeah, exactly.
And if you guys haven't done yoga,
I've done a little bit of yoga,
but I was actually kind of shocked
at how fatiguing it was also like to my muscle,
because you'd have to support yourself
in some of these standing positions,
but so requires some strength,
which is good when you're stretching.
You wanna have the ability to access that range of motion
with strength to keep you safe.
I really like this topic too,
because it's something that has evolved
in how I coach and train people.
I remember I actually is so embarrassing.
I used to tell my clients that like,
because there's different types of stretching,
you know, so in first of all, you tell people, you know, learn to stretch for the purpose,
you know, if you're active, you're corrective, and then you have dynamic,
and I used to tell people to stay away from dynamic until we would stretch you statically,
because I was concerned that you would do something erratically or ballistically and tear
something or do some like that.
Well, describe static and dynamic.
Yeah.
So, different types of stretching, static.
So static stretch is a stretch that we are going to hold for a long period of time, meaning
like 20 plus seconds.
So, like, standing on the floor, touch your toes.
Yeah, and you're going to hold that deep stretch.
Old school stretching.
Yeah.
And you want the, what you're looking for is for your body, it's for to release, to
go to the tendon to release, and then it for to go in a corrective phase
So if you if you're simply just
stretching like stretching and going back stretching and going back or only holding for a few seconds
That would be what's called an active stretch and you're really only working on like circulation and blood flow right there
You're not really doing anything corrective
Which is where like you'll hear the term flow and flow patterns
and stuff like that. That's where that sort of, yes, out of, yes, right. And then, dynamic,
which is the last one, which is, it is, it's taking a muscle through full range of motion
and in a ballistic type movement. So what would be an example for hamstrings?
Wind meals. Okay. So wind meals would be an example for that or what are your cheerleader kicks?
Yeah, high kicks, high kicks.
High kicks.
Like a can can go under kicks, dude.
Yeah, sorry, cheerleader kicks.
Yeah, sorry.
Come on, bro.
You probably call them grape vines, too.
No, no, grape vines.
What's a grape vines?
We're karaoke's, dude.
Oh, karaoke's.
They're not grape vines.
Yeah, so that's a dynamic.
So, yeah, so those are your different stretches.
Now, like I said, I used to weigh heavily on South Mile,
so foam rolling, so I still say it.
And foam is such a bad habit, right?
I used to weigh heavily on foam rolling
and corrective or what's called static stretching
to help with all these clients that have that would be super tight.
And now I have completely eliminated both of those from my routine,
and I only dynamic stretched, and I feel better than I have felt in years by 10 plus years.
I haven't felt like this, and so it was in my early 20s.
Well, no, I mean, that being said, there is a place for the other types of stretching.
Oh, absolutely.
Like, static stretching is excellent to get a overactive muscle to chill out a little bit so that I can get other muscles to fire
Right, so I'm not having a cramp. I mean the only thing you can do is to really just sit there and try and stretch right right
So they all they do have a play well
Let's talk about it. Let's use that
Let's that's a very good point because it's I say that and then I act like I would if I was teaching a client
Okay
One of the most common syndromes found in somebody is up across syndrome, which is basically a protracted shoulder girl, which is your shoulders are
rounded forward.
So imagine somebody with like the hunchback a Notre Dame look, right?
So the shoulders are rounded forward.
Your pectoralis major, your anterior deltoise, all those muscles up front are tight and pulling
and rounding your shoulder girl forward.
So that being said, the ones that are in the front
are all overactive and the ones in the back
are elongated and underactive.
So let's say I'm coming in and I wanna fix this person,
I'm gonna work on their back today.
So we're gonna work on their rhomboids or traps
and their rear delts and their back.
I wanna try and pull that back.
Before I even get into working their back out,
I'm going to open up their chest and shoulders.
So like Sawa's saying,
or they can activate their back properly.
Otherwise, because you're gonna use static stretching.
And I'm gonna do static stretching.
You do that because in this case, I want those muscles to relax a little bit so I can retract
and squeeze my scapula together and actually start to work and fix that.
Right.
Because what it does is it weakens them temporarily, which is why static stretching is not
a good idea before you let him bench press. which is why static stretching is not a good idea
before you lift heavy bench press.
It's not dudes do all the time.
Right, it's not a good way to warm up
for heavy lifting, dynamic stretching is much better.
If you're trying to warm up,
if you're trying to correct an imbalance,
like Adam was saying, then you do static stretching.
But it's interesting, I read an interesting article
in science daily about stretching.
And they still, scientists still are not quite sure how it works and why people
increase flexibility.
But the number one theory is that it's all
about central nervous system adaptation.
It really has nothing to do with the muscle.
Like the muscle, they say, doesn't change.
It's the fact that you're central nervous.
Now, I don't know if I buy this completely.
I've heard that, I've heard that too, dude.
I've read quite a bit of articles about this too,
because I've been researching a lot
too about how the central nervous system gets involved and just how to enhance that process
and how to really rehabilitate somebody who has had an inactive muscle or has never really
felt what they need to feel in the exercise and the movement.
And so they've really found great promise in certain techniques
that help to amplify that process.
Interesting.
Yeah.
And so in terms of stretching, I'll give you an example
as to why I think the central nervous system
is playing a major part, if not the whole part,
but a major part.
Because I don't know if I buy the whole part theory.
But when you're doing a long static stretch,
you talked about it releasing.
That's the central nervous system,
just chilling the muscle out.
And all of a sudden, I have a longer range of motion.
If I could train anybody,
and I could increase the range of motion
within one stretching session,
I would go away the next day.
But I think over time, when you do that,
you're training the central nervous system
to allow that muscle to travel within that range of motion.
I like that very much.
And it makes sense, right?
When you think about it that way, doesn't it?
Yeah, it does.
I remember, like you just talking about that,
this study that they were actually showing that,
you know, over time, elderly,
that it looks like they've lost a lean muscle mass,
like over the years, if they haven't been trained,
but in reality, they've actually found that they've lost a lean muscle mass, like over the years, if they haven't been trained. But in reality, they've actually found that they've kept the mass of the lean muscle mass,
but it's that it's ability to take.
Yeah, the neuromuscular firing there has been dampened.
And so now they have less active response there.
Yeah, I think this is what gets me all a hard on for the stick mobility.
I mean, and that I'm so I'm so glad that we shout out to the stick mobility guys.
Yeah, so it's guys.
It's on the forefront of what's really functional.
That is very functional.
And I'm so glad that we incorporated as our first mod inside of our program because I think
that is something that it's already, I mean, just the little time that we've been a
part of it and around it, we've seen it already start to explode. And when we talk about topics like this, because this is recent for me, I, I, I, I's already, I mean, just a little time that we've been a part of it and around it, we've seen it already start to explode.
And when we talk about topics like this,
because this is recent for me,
I'm, this has only been going now for,
I'm on, probably seven or so of no static stretching
and no foam rolling and all dynamic.
And like I said, I mean, it's,
and I, I, I'm right with you with the theory
on the central nervous, I believe that. I believe that that's for sure true,
because I can feel, I can feel so immediately now when I even get into
the dynamic stretch, I'm already, it's, it's, I almost don't need to do it,
but I keep that pattern up. I know the importance, I can tell the importance of me
continuing just to do that. You know, it's, you know, it's crazy.
It's just came to me right now. Now that as we're talking, because dynamic
stretching is more likely to stimulate the
central nervous system than it is to dampen it.
This is really coming to me is that a warm-up, we talk about, oh, we need to increase blood
flow, we got to get the heart rate up.
No, it's not.
It's all about warming up your central nervous system.
That's what I'm starting to come to the conclusion that your warm-up is all about your central
nervous system.
Well, just think about it.
When we talked about doing the first set,
like, versus the second set where a lot of times
you feel like, oh, wow, that was easier.
Yes.
I felt better that second set.
That's right.
Because you were able to get better connected.
This is actually, there's actually a technique
to use plios for that very reason.
Yeah.
So like, if I'm gonna do a squat,
they've done a explosive jump for... Do a couple sets of plyometric jumps on a box
and by the way don't do them to fatigue
if you do, you're doing them wrong.
You just do it to focus on how high you can jump.
Then go to the squat and they find a better,
stronger, neuromuscular patterns in the squat.
So we're getting a very loud, intense signal
right away, like it's max. And then you're going in and the squat. So when you're getting a very loud, intense signal right away,
like it's max. Right. And then you're going in and doing this. Right. And it's the
more amplitude. And it's the reason why, look, when you talk to anesthesiologists, for
example, I train a lot of anesthesiologists and they'll work on people who are completely
out, you know, under drugs or whatever, you can manipulate their body way more than you
would when they're when they're when they're conscious. Like you can manipulate their body way more than you would when they're conscious.
Like you can move their leg and, you know,
these are people that are normally super, super tight.
So it's like there's central nervous system kind of shut down
and we've all heard the stories of the guy,
you know, guy or girl that'll get in the car accident
but pass out before they crash, not get injured
because their body was so loose.
So it's really the central nervous system, I think,
is the kind of a common denominator
with all this.
And warming up, really, this is just a, you know, ladies and gentlemen, this is a paradigm
shift for me, literally on air right now.
A warm-up is 100% or more, or close to 100%, excuse me, all about getting your central
nervous system ready to work out.
And so if you're going to do that, dynamic stretching makes way more sense than foam rolling and static stretching.
I have yet to try it, I know you have been at them,
but now I'm gonna start incorporating myself.
I have been religious about it for quite some time now.
And part of it's because it wasn't very long
before I noticed a big difference.
It might have been a couple of weeks before I started
to see a huge difference and then it continued.
And I just was like whoa this is
crazy right now and it's I've seen it improve my my form on my squad and how comfortable I am
sitting down in there now like it's it's been wonders for me and I really had given up kind of
in this area I really have felt like I was just gonna be this tight guy forever and not flexible and
you know I was gonna have to spend hours on the foam roll and static you know I mean the
it was getting daunting how long I was having to stretch for bro I was going to have to spend hours on the foam roll and static. I mean, it was getting daunting how long I was having to stretch for, bro.
I was having to stretch like 30 minutes.
Yeah, I was in the same boat.
And I'm actually doing the same thing.
It probably for longer now.
So it's just been like something I've been doing.
And now that I come back and think about the process of it,
like when we were talking about foam rolling and what we found out as far as
it's just compressing and
lowering that pain signal, you know, as far as like the tight muscle and the overactive muscles
concern, I could see that because my my piriformis, so we get really tight, I would foam roll it.
I would have temporary relief, right? I would have temporary relief and then later as I would go on
through my routine and I would squat and I would keep up these heavy lifts and as I was driving home I would still get that pain, that nodding that
would happen. And then me going through more of just like a dynamic stretch and then movement
in circulation and doing that process before I have not noticed that. Well, here's the thing.
So I have a theory with the foam roller. I think
the foam roller pressure in general pressure does get the central nervous system to relax
a little bit in that area. And that's why you feel like that's why you feel a muscle not,
you know, go away or you know, you know, she worked that knot out. It's gone now, type
of deal. So I think there's that. But also when you flex a muscle, the opposing muscle tends
to relax. Okay, it's called reciprocal inhibitions. So if you have a type pair of formus, and I'm doing those high kicks to stretch out my glutes or whatever, I'm getting
that my, my pair of formus, my glutes or whatever to move in a full-arrange emotion, but I'm also
activating my hip flexors and quads, which are kind of opposing. And I'm wondering if them being
active kept the, you know, the overactive muscle, less active or just made it chill out a little
bit because maybe the reason why I was hurting so often was because it was this constant
kind of state of tone.
It was it was, you know, fired a little bit.
Had to be always on.
You know, something else I think we should talk about it and you lightly grazed over it
about the, because it made me laugh because I see this a lot.
That sounds sexy.
It is.
It is.
Well, when you lightly grazed over the guy in the bench press,
I said the bench press guy, right,
in static stretching, we shouldn't do before heavy lifting.
And I don't know how often I see this.
It's very common with the guy who's,
you know, throws the three plates or more on the bench press
and he wants everyone to know what he's doing.
So he throws it on there, then he goes and he stretches
for like two minutes in between sets.
And he's doing the chest stretch against the machine.
Go get some water, go get some water.
Come back.
He's just the chest some more, you know, let everybody see how much weights on there and
then gets under there and hits it.
And he's really doing a lot of harm to himself as far as like by stretching like that and holding
that before he gets in there because that's how somebody gets injured because you're basically
sitting a signal to the muscle to relax.
And then you're going to ask you're going to put a crazy amount of demand on it and activate it like explosively.
So that's normally where somebody gets hurt and is doing something like that.
So keep that in mind when you're lift and heavy weight, you don't want to be stretching
that muscle in between sets.
No, you could do that stretch dynamically rather than holding your hand in the wall and turning
away from it.
You could just bring your arm out and bring it forward, bring your arm out and bring it forward and stretch things
dynamically.
And you might be better off, I've always had people warm up, I mean you talked about the
bench press, but do a light set of rows, do a real light set of rows and then go bench
press.
It always makes a big difference for people with shoulder mobility because it keeps
it well.
That's first move.
Think about that, that's first move.
That's like a dynamic warm up for your overactive.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, that's exactly what you're basically doing
right there.
That's right.
I mean, that's why I'm a huge, I don't know,
I've gone, I've definitely evolved my training
in that direction where I have put a lot more emphasis on.
And right now, honestly, it's been a goal of mine
to get even more versed in that because
it's because I've been someone who was so anti-dynamic flexibility.
There's a lot of moves and exercises that I don't know.
So I've been kind of experimenting with a lot of them.
I know my big area is my whole hip complex, so I'm primarily focused there, so I know
a lot in that area, but I want to even get better with opening up my shoulders and other
parts.
I've got some issues that I'm dealing with in my upper right back right now, so up in my
rhombods and trying to figure out some stuff to get that firing correctly too.
It's also, I think we also need to be clear that strength, we've said this in the past,
but I'll say it again, is the base of all physical pursuits.
It's the ultimate foundation for all of them. Because without strength,
all the other physical pursuits, it's very difficult to express them like flexibility.
If you're not strong and you're really flexible, you're just unstable. I mean, look at a baby.
Like infants are extremely flexible, but they have very little neuromuscular control and
very little strength and that makes them very unstable. And so you've got to have that strength within that range of motion to make that flexibility
work for you, to translate, because it doesn't matter if you could fold yourself in half,
but you don't get strong in that position.
When you go to lift that box and you've got this great flexibility and you try to lift
within that flexibility, you're hurting yourself.
And now think about that as far as patterns,
like, you know, if you're an athlete,
and all you're doing is training
where your knees are right under your shoulders,
and I'm squatting down,
and I'm keeping everything within these 90 degree angles,
and everything's nice and clean and perfect.
And I'm never training myself to adapt with load
when my legs a little bit further away from me, I'm
not tense in that position.
I'm just looking at pursuing flexibility for that.
You're going to have run into problems because it doesn't translate like that on the field.
And as a matter of fact, yeah, because if you have that flexibility that doesn't translate
on the field to get hurt again.
But again, when you're stretching and the static stretches, we used to teach this, when you
have someone stretching, let's say they're hamstring, and you have them flex it real quick,
and then relax it, it gets the central nervous system relaxed, and you get a couple more
inches of flexibility.
Or you have someone tense the opposing muscle.
These are techniques that we've used in the past, and the reason why they worked is because
they were all manipulating the effects of the central nervous system,
which is the most important driver for your entire body. Your muscles are secondary.
The central nervous system is 100%.
Well, you give my favorite analogy, given I use it all the time now is that, you know,
think of your central nervous because a lot of that makes no sense to most people I that probably listen
is thinking about your central nervous system like an amplifier and all your muscles are speakers.
Right. You know, I think that's such a great analogy.
Right. Because if you have a weak amp, then those big speakers aren't going to produce any sound.
You could have 16-inch woofers and hope you're going to base the house out.
But if you got some little puny little amp that ain't going to push those things that won't even push a little iPhone home,
like speaker, you're going to have to be very well.
It's funny too, because resistance training, weight training, believe it or not,
can be a very
effective way to increase functional flexibility if you do it with that goal in mind.
So, like, again, we'll use a squat as an example.
If I want to increase the flexibility of my glutes, hamstrings, my hips, I can get a weight
that's lighter than normal because I'm going to go down to a deeper, ranger motion.
And I could get into a very deep squat, not sit on my heels,
but try and keep my pelvis tilted the way I want.
Position myself so I can feel muscle stretch,
but then hold that position for a little while
with weight, so like five, six, seven, eight seconds,
and then come up and then do another rep.
And with weights, you could do that with lots of muscles, chest.
I could do a fly with dumbbells,
get into a deep, deep, deep, deep stretch and bring the
way back and just use a lightweight and practice that real...
Did you?
Yeah.
Yeah, and you can just get connected that way.
Right.
And then the second set, you do it, you know, like, oh my God, wow, like that signal's there.
And then it gets really intense.
And it increases your strength within that range of motion.
That's it.
I think we kind of answered that whole functional, you know, functional flexibility.
Yeah, I know. I said, know that is what it means really. Yeah
That's why I'm I'm excited. I'm excited for this this program to drop. I'm excited for people to see all that because for me
It's a it's a big piece of what I'm doing how I'm training and by far probably one of the coolest baddest fucking programs
I've ever true sure. Yeah, I feel like that that the mobility sessions that we added in there, which focus on some of the stuff
Yeah, are going to be kind of game-changer. Yeah, game changer for sure
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