Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Sam Visnic on Mobility and Massage For Happier Joints and Muscles
Episode Date: March 17, 2021“Hey bro, we’ve been stretching for an hour, can we start lifting now?” “Yeah right! We’ve only stretched our quads so far. It’s time for the hammies!” Conversations like this happen bet...ween gym buddies everyday across the iron kingdom, but luckily I’ve never been part of one. In fact, many people in the gym have noticed I don’t stretch much, and asked what my mobility routine is. I’ve touted the benefits of a daily short yoga routine, but beyond that, I don’t do any stretching in the gym. This may be surprising, because over the past decade or so, mobility work has become all the rage for lifestyle bodybuilders, powerlifters, professional athletes, and Crossfitters alike. Some people spend half their time in the gym just preparing to lift. Why is it so popular? Is it really necessary? To help explore the benefits of mobility work and find out what it can (and can’t) do, I’ve invited Sam Visnic onto the podcast. Who is Sam, you ask? He’s a certified massage therapist, expert on corrective exercise, and the founder of Release Muscle Therapy, where he specializes in helping people become pain-free through movement evaluations, techniques to re-learn proper movement patterns, massage, stretching, and more. In this episode, Sam and I chat about . . . How do you get started with a mobility routine (and whether you need to) How and why people became obsessive about mobility Finding balance between mobility work and training How mobility can improve nagging aches and pains and why pain might not be caused by lack of range of motion Common pain problems and causes with the squat, deadlift, and bench press How to test your ankle mobility Foam rollers, massage guns, and other gizmos And more . . . So, if you want to learn all about mobility work and how you can start nipping aches and pains in the bud, listen to this episode! Timestamps: 7:05 - What are your thoughts on mobility work? 12:47 - What is your approach and how do you find a balance between gaining muscle and attaining mobility? 38:29 - What are some of the exercises that tend to create the most common problems? 41:38 - How can someone determine their ankle mobility? 45:21 - How about the bench press and its relation to shoulder pain? 47:41 - What are your thoughts on rotator cuff exercises? 56:22 - What are your thoughts on massage guns and foam rollers? 1:09:44 - Where can people find you and your work? Mentioned on The Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ Sam Visnic’s Website: https://releasemuscletherapy.com/ Sam Visnic’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/releasemuscletherapy/ --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I'm your host, Mike Matthews.
Thank you for joining me today to learn about mobility work, which has become all the rage
these days for gym goers and athletes of all stripes, lifestyle bodybuilders like me and
probably you, powerlifters, professional athletes, crossfitters, and so on. I don't know
what your gym is like, but in my gym, there are always at least one or two people who seem to be
spending at least half of their time there getting ready to lift weights, doing mobility work,
massaging, massage, gunning, stretching, using bands, balls, and so forth.
How useful is all of that stuff though?
Why is it so popular?
Is it necessary?
Should you be including some mobility work in your routine?
Well, to help answer those questions, I invited Sam Visnick on the podcast, who is a massage
therapist, an expert on corrective exercise, and the founder of Release
Muscle Therapy, where he specializes in helping people become pain-free through movement evaluations,
techniques to relearn proper movement patterns, massage, stretching, and more. And in this episode,
Sam and I chat about how to get started with mobility work, how to create a mobility routine that actually
makes sense, and whether you need to or not, because not everybody needs to be doing this
stuff. We also talk about how to find the right balance between mobility work and actual training,
and some of the common problems that cause issues with the squat, the deadlift, and the bench press, and how to correct them.
We talk about foam rollers, massage guns, and other gizmos, and more. So if you want to hear
a good overview of mobility exercise and mobility techniques, and if you want to learn how you can
use them to maybe get rid of some aches and pains or improve your performance
in the gym, then I think you're going to like this episode. Also, if you like what I'm doing
here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my health and fitness books, including
the number one bestselling weightlifting books for men and women in the world, Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger, and Thinner, Leaner thinner leaner stronger as well as the leading
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appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, and if you want to learn time-proven and
evidence-based strategies for losing fat, building muscle, and getting healthy, and strategies that
work for anyone and everyone, regardless of age or circumstances, please do consider picking up
one of my best-selling books, Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for
Women, and The Shredded Chef for my favorite fitness-friendly recipes. Hey, Sam, welcome to my podcast.
Hey, Mike, thanks for having me here.
I'm pretty excited.
Yeah, yeah, thanks for taking the time.
I was just saying, you know, off-air
that this is a discussion that I was looking forward to
because it's something that I haven't beaten to death.
I'm always looking for new nooks and crannies
of health and fitness that are interesting to me
and that I think will
resonate with my crowd because, I mean, I would say this applies, this is true for me and probably
for many people listening. If we were looking at it purely through the lens of, all right,
what do we need to know to get what we really want or what we most want out of this stuff,
which is just going to be a body that looks good, that feels good, that functions well,
free of disease, and that is
going to allow us to live a long, enjoyable life. Well, I mean, I certainly know more than I would
ever need to know just for that. And a lot of people also, you don't need to know that much,
at least the fundamentals. So I'm always looking for other interesting things that fit into,
maybe they're not part of the 20% that gives you 80%,
but maybe they're part of all the stuff out there that can provide the last maybe 20% of
additional muscle or strength gain or health and vitality or whatever it is that we're talking
about in relation to wellness. And so in your case, I am looking forward to talking about mobility.
It's very much a trend that's been the case for years now. It's something that I have written
and spoken about a bit here and there. I would not consider myself much of an expert on it,
but I do know some stuff and I do a fair amount of experience with it firsthand and working with
other people. And also talk about dealing with pain, especially chronic pain, which is going to be, I mean, that's just part and parcel of lifting heavy weights consistently
over a long period of time. I do think that you can avoid major injuries. I mean, I've avoided,
I've had a couple of minor injuries, but nothing that has done more than maybe prevent me from
squatting or deadlifting for a couple of weeks while my back
got back to normal or something like that. But RSIs, repetitive stress injuries, are kind of
part of the game. It can be hard to avoid that. And I'm sure many people listening are dealing
with at least aches and pains, at least little nagging problems that don't fully go away,
or maybe they've sustained injuries in the past or had problems in the
past that they're trying to prevent from returning.
And so as these are a couple of topics that you not only know a lot about, I mean, this
is what you do for a living is help people deal with these things.
Here we are.
And I'm looking forward to hearing your take on mobility, on dealing with pain and preventing
pain.
And then we can also, if we have some time,
talk a little bit about some of the popular gizmos like massage guns and vibrating foam
rollers and stuff like that. Yeah. I absolutely don't mind diving into the weeds with you on this
stuff, especially when it comes to actual practice. And that's kind of my specialty.
Yeah. So let's start with mobility. Since I've been active in the fitness space as a
professional, I guess the book is Becoming a Supple Leopard, right? And many people have
asked me, they've gotten the book and they've reached out to me over the years asking like,
okay, there's a lot of stuff in here and there are a lot of big words. What do I do? How do I
just put together a routine that makes sense for me? Do I even
need to be doing any of this? What are your thoughts about mobility work as many people
understand it? Well, this kind of goes back. If you want to think about how this all kind of has
started, it helps to kind of get a big picture view. A lot of this kind of changes in the
strength training or the fitness community started happening around the mid to late nineties. None of
this stuff existed. There was no functional training, these sorts of things.
A lot of it was just going to the gym and lifting weights, right? That's what people did.
And you did exercise with a full range of motion and you stretched, these sorts of things.
Something started to happen out of the, into the mid to late 90s, which is there started to become
this kind of merging of the physical therapy realm with fitness. And I was around when this first happened, I remember in about 99, 2000,
when I was working at one of the big fitness chains, National Academy of Sports Medicine was
coming in and, you know, they were teaching us about postural dysfunction and how you have to
correct, you know, muscle imbalances. And this is why people were getting injured and this whole
thing. So we started this process of looking at posture and movement, saying that someone's shoulders
are rounded forward. These are the muscles you need to stretch. These are the muscles you need
to train, et cetera. And what started to get lost in all of this, and this is still kind of what
we're trying to figure out today, is that these corrective processes of whether you're trying to
address a shoulder problem
or postural issue, muscle imbalances, we're always there as a means to supplementing what
somebody was trying to do with their fitness, right?
Which was the person needs to just improve their aerobic endurance or cardiovascular
endurance.
They need to get stronger, do basics.
They need to be able to do pushups, squats, and so forth.
So these corrective kind of activities, if we can call them that, the goal on these was to support being able to do
those regular fitness goals. But somewhere along the lines, what happened is, is that all of those
corrective kind of activities started to kind of become the sole focus of someone's program.
And admittedly, you know, when I was into this, I became lost in this as well. It was like,
you know, when somebody came in, we were starting right off the bat with doing movement evaluations. And even when people didn't
have problems, you know, they didn't have a back problem or a knee problem. Here we are showing
them that they had all of these issues, you know, hip flexor tightness, you know, this is going to
predispose you to back issues and so forth. And it really just started kind of implanting these
ideas into people's heads that they needed. They had, there were something wrong with them, first of all, and two, that you needed to do all
of these things to fix them because otherwise they were going to be at risk. And, you know,
over time, that functional movement and that paradigm started kind of bleeding into athletics
and sports. And there was a lot of functional training that, you know, that started to
basically pull athletes away from doing training, like regular strength training that was actually
preparing them for their sport and making their central nervous system stronger.
So there's tend to be kind of like this backlash against this because athletes were oftentimes
getting weaker and so forth because they were spending too much time doing this stuff.
Mark Ripito has been on my show to rant about that several times. And I know Dan John has
voiced similar positions about D1 level strength and
conditioning, quote unquote, when it's more like hopping around with BOSU balls and doing a lot of,
it's like combining six or seven different modalities into one as if that makes for a
better athlete. Yeah, that's been a huge problem and it's still an issue. And a lot of us who have been really in the thick of this has kind of grown out of that,
especially when you've been involved more with strength coaches. One of my mentors was Paul
Check. I originally did some of my initial exercise certification work with him. And funny
enough, how Paul's gotten a reputation for being like an excessive corrective exercise guy, but
Paul's not really like that. He tells you to deadlift, to squat. I mean, he's doing the big stuff, but in his educational information, it's almost all
the kind of therapeutic kind of elements. So people kind of misinterpret that. But again,
that's kind of like where it leads to a lot of confusion. So here we are as the years have gone
by and these two kind of differences of opinions have really split the industry. You've got this
more corrective,
you know, constantly fixing everything physical therapy approach. And on the other end, you've got the guys saying that stuff's useless. We just need to get stronger and these things will work
themselves out. Whereas usual, you know, the truth and the best approach is somewhere in the middle
of those things. And that's where it becomes kind of challenging when you get a new thing that comes
out, like Kelly Starrett came out with his book on supple leopard, which is very mechanically oriented. And that came out in CrossFit where
you have this big group of the population that is now doing these kinds of routines that might
be a little bit more advanced than what they're prepared for. Maybe they don't know how to power
clean squat. Now they're doing all this stuff. They're starting to get injured a lot more.
And now he came in at the right time in the CrossFit community as a physical
therapist and say, hey, you know, you've got to keep up with all of this stuff.
And these things might be the reasons why you're having issues.
And so then it became like this thing where it was like a reemergence of this mechanical
model in a different way.
So I think it definitely has gotten people aware of the scope of things that you can
do with your
body to improve range of motion and mobility and joints, get you to squat better and so forth.
But it's also kind of like led further a little bit down that path of people becoming excessively
focused on that stuff. Or just overwhelmed and confused. I mean, I hear from a lot of those
people again, I still do, but over the years I've heard from many, many people who there are just so many things. I mean, in that book in particular, it's encyclopedic and it's very technical.
And even if they are not afraid of doing some experimentation and doing the work,
they're just trying to go about it as efficiently as possible. And okay, so yeah, my shoulder could
be a little bit better. And I have like 14 different things to choose from. Should I just
like start doing them randomly or how do I go about it? And so what's your approach and how do
you recommend people find that balance between the lifting, the getting bigger or getting more
developed in the case of women? They don't necessarily think about trying to get bigger,
but gaining more muscle definition, gaining more strength, working on their physique, so to speak, and then supporting that with maintaining, I guess,
there's different ways that you could look at it. It could be maintaining structurally sound joints
or maintaining good tissue mobility, make sure everything is moving the way that it should.
And at some point I'll jump in and share my own little anecdote with this type of thing. And what
I've worked out for me that actually did make a difference in my training because
I had tried many things previously that just didn't really make a difference.
I didn't mind taking the time if there was going to be a benefit, but I couldn't tell
myself that I really noticed any difference.
So a lot of it just kind of fell by the wayside.
Yeah.
And, you know, I'd say that in putting this in the context of pain, because for me, most
people are not coming to me for just optimization. That's not really my market.
Every once in a while, I have some people ask me about that, but most of the time they're coming
in because they're saying, Sam, I got this acher pain. And again, let's say in the athletic active
population where their primary problem is my back is hurting all the time and I can't do anything.
Okay. So that's not that person. Let's say we're saying, Sam, I'm active. I'm going to the gym on
a regular basis and I have these goals, but you know, I've got this back problem or the shoulder
problem and it's really hindering my ability to do something. So, and that's the context in which
I will kind of go forward with this discussion. So the first thing is, is that we have a tool,
right? We have mobility work or we have, you know, whatever else that we're going to use.
The tool's job is to get us from point A to point B, right? So it's a transition or a bridge.
So doing mobility
work for the sake of mobility work, again, for me is kind of almost pointless. My question is,
what are you trying to accomplish with this? So let's say, you know, we have to look at everything,
first of all, with looking at someone's training program is what is the outcome? And what do you
actually want to do with this? So look, we can separate this into two camps and make it easy.
Number one, let's say this, the goal is more recreational weekend lifters. You just
want to get some gains, put some size on, be lean. So let's say there's some general aesthetic
schools. So let's say hypertrophy, right? So when it comes to hypertrophy, we have a certain set of
recommendations that are going to go with achieving that outcome, right? We probably want to pick some
big exercises, include as much muscle mass as we possibly can, repetition ranges and so forth that
are going to go with that.
On the other hand, let's say we're going to look at something like it's a very specific performance goal.
So let's say, for example, we've got a lifter that comes in who wants to improve his squat,
right?
So this is a different goal.
It's going to require a different set of parameters to achieve that goal.
But one of the key defining factors is going to be like, what types of movements do we
have to select to achieve that goal?
In the hypertrophy realm, we have a lot more flexibility. We know that we can do a lot of different exercises and exercise variations, a lot more repetition ranges. We can get away with a lot
more to achieve that hypertrophy goal versus like when we're trying to increase the squat.
You increase the squat, you have to squat, right? So if somebody has pain in the squat, let's say
they have back pain, you're going to have to do certain things that are a lot more specific to that because you
can't not do that lift because that lift is the goal. So in hypertrophy, if somebody's going to
come in with that and they've got pain when they bench press or something else like that, oftentimes
it's about what do we need to do here? Is the bench press itself vital for increasing your
hypertrophy? And in most cases, I would say probably not. We can pick some alternative exercises or modify that exercise
in particular so that we don't aggravate or sensitize those already sensitized nerve tissues
that are actually giving you pain. So it's easier to modify that. So that way we're going to do
a little bit more of exercise and movement modification. And there might be less direct
mobility drills associated with that. And there might be more corrective exercises that we might
use in that circumstance, but certainly some mobility work might work. On the other end,
again, with the squat, let's say I'm having a problem getting depth into my squat. Let's say
there's ankle range of motion limitation. We've got mobility problems in the hips. Then there's
going to be some very direct mobility things that are going to need to be done in order to free up those movements in order to do
that squat. So again, when somebody comes in and say, what's the goal here and what can we get
away with? Because the reason why we do this is because people oftentimes get very carried away
with, again, going too much mobility work where their entire session ends up looking like a
physical therapy
session and they're not actually doing any work. 20 minutes of rolling around and stretching before
they get under the barbell kind of thing. That's right. And it's unnecessary, especially again,
if somebody comes in and the goal is they've got aches and pains associated with certain movements
and the goal is hypertrophy. And I'm like, look, let's get all this mobility stuff out of here
that you don't need. Let's get it down to the basics so that maybe the goal is to eventually get more pressing
activity in here with less problems with your shoulders.
So you might only need two or three things here.
Let's modify the exercises, get the pain levels to go down, work on this stuff, and then we're
good to go versus that person with that real specific lift.
We might spend a good chunk more time on mobility things that are necessary to fix that
individual lift. So again, you've got to look at the goal here and the context of the situation,
and that gives you an idea of how much of that mobility work you're really going to need to do.
And you had mentioned that if somebody is not experiencing, let's say, any pain or movement
restrictions, then if you are programming their training, it sounds like you wouldn't include any mobility
specific work in the program. Is that more accurate than accurate? Is that going to be
generally more the case than not? Yeah. And here's how I would do this. And we always think about
mobility as somehow like stretching or isolation movements, but I think about it as movement.
Remember, mobility has a lot to do with range of motion and joint motion can be accomplished
with exercises.
And one of the things that, again, is probably an annoyance to me is how much time people
tend to stretch their hamstrings in particular.
And again, it's like, look, if your back hurts and you can't do certain exercises or movements,
it's kind of in the acute inflammatory phase and you like to lay down in your back and
stretch your hamstrings, that's probably valuable.
Although I don't, even me in my practice, I hardly ever give that to people. But once I can move their exercise progressions into
the realm of being able to do a Romanian deadlift, for example, the Romanian deadlift is an exercise
in a mobility drill. It's a stretch. So when you're doing Romanian deadlifts in a program,
you're actively stretching those hamstrings under load. Then you're getting that in there.
What's the need to, again, also do separate hamstring stretching and mobility work? We may not need to do that.
I've had that discussion many times over the years with people in my, I guess, in a professional
capacity, but also just people in the gym who would ask me, they just noticed that I don't
really do any stretching or any of the, especially when mobility work. I mean,
I guess it may be still, it may still be quite a thing. It's just, I work out at an empty gym,
essentially when I go. So I don't see much of what's going on. I'm happy for you. Yeah,
no, I actually, I had to change because I was going at like the noon slot and it got real busy.
There were probably 40 plus people. It's not that big of a gym. I was waiting for equipment and I
was like, okay, it's time to change. But anyway, I would show people and they would ask me, oh, so like, what's your mobility routine like? And at
the time I was like, well, you know, I squat, I deadlift, I do good mornings, RDLs, bench press,
and then show that I have pretty good flexibility. Like, you know, and I maintain that through doing
these exercises. And at the time I was also playing a fair amount of golf. And so people
were surprised that I'm not a huge guy, but I'm definitely bigger than the average guy,
yet quite flexible and able to get into the right positions you need to get into for the golf swing
and stuff. And that was only through just proper range of motion and not getting hurt really.
Yeah. And you're going to find that some people don't need to do anything at all. Like we'll
talk about this in a second here, but it is a key piece is that the natural level of kind of
flexibility and mobility people have. There's two camps. We can use that hyper mobility spectrum,
which is basically how naturally flexible and mobile people are. Someone like me,
I didn't never need to stretch. Maybe every once in a while I'll do some cash stretching or maybe
some quad stretching when I'm doing a lot of quad work, but I never stretch and I can pass every orthopedic test in range of motion.
So that person is not going to need a lot of mobility work. What they need is controlled
range of motion strengthening through end range of motion. And then they're going to be able to
be strong in those positions. But again, there's this lack of kind of like, I guess, knowingness
or awareness of what normal range of motion is and what it could be. And a lot of times you get this with people, not picking on them, but who do yoga, for example. Yoga tends to attract a lot of people who have a lot of range of motion because we tend to gravitate toward doing the things that we like to do because we're naturally kind of good at them because it's not too hard for us. So you have a lot of flexibility. And then you have people in there that don't have a lot of mobility and flexibility who end up
showing up to these classes. And now there's this norm that you look around that everybody has that
is really probably not even attainable for you. But now in your mind, you have this mentality of
how immobile you are and how inflexible you are against that standard. Whereas again, most people
when I come in, believe it or not, in testing orthopedic range of motion. A good chunk of people, and this may surprise some of your
listeners out there who have chronic pain, have normal orthopedic range of motion and passed all
the numbers in the textbooks. So I look at them and it's like, I don't even oftentimes use a
goniometer to measure this stuff anymore because I can eyeball it. And most of the time it's normal.
More often than not, I find people with too much range of motion and flexibility that I would call
them, and dare I use this word, unstable. Unstable just basically means to me that they're
not strong through that range of motion. And that may be limited range of motion of what they're
capable of, but it also could be they have excess flexibility. And in that situation, they're weak,
and that's a relative instability problem. And yet there they are continuing to chase doing these
mobility programs. And I have to pull them out of that thought process and teach them, hey, you need to get
stronger. And funny enough, you'll feel more mobile when you're stronger through those ranges
of motion. And pain can mysteriously go away too through weightlifting. Or Paul Ingram was talking
about that from pain science that of course, there's a lot we don't understand about pain.
But if I remember correctly, researchers think that it may be related to the threshold for
pain can just go up with regular and intense training. There's still whatever's going on in
your back is still going on. You're just not aware of it like you were before. And hey,
if it works, it works. Yeah, exactly. And essentially what I think we're doing here is in those situations is those receptors
in the tissue are too hypersensitive to low threshold of stimulation.
So for example, a small mechanical load at end range is triggering threat and you're
getting pain.
But let's say just as simple as a fly.
A lot of people come in with these weird kind of situations where their pecs are very sensitized
and they feel it a lot when they do bench presses and stuff.
But you take that range and let's say as we open up into a chest fly and they
start to feel that pulling sensation in the pec and that for whatever reason is sending signals
and information to the brain that something bad is going to happen, a tear or a strain.
And again, the way to work with that is, is always, you know, we call it calm stuff down,
build stuff up. So at that range, we reduce the
loading on the tissue. We start to learn how to put the brakes on toward that strain position,
and then start to learn how to feel safe moving in and out of that position and gradually at load.
Those receptors are now going to down-regulate the amount of activity or that oversensitivity
because they're now less threatened to that activity. And therefore there's a greater
capacity for tolerance. And therefore you're not triggering that alarm because those receptors
aren't hyperactive. So again, that's kind of the scope of that, the kind of work that we're doing
here and mobility kind of activity is to some degree when it works for pain is doing the same
thing. It's reducing threat, improving control in the tissues and desensitizing those nerve receptors.
But then there's also that kind of longer-term goal of somebody trying to actually like
legitimately increase the range of motion in their joint, mobilizing a joint capsule
or something like that.
And that's just more consistently doing that work gradually over time to improve that tissue
extensibility.
So again, it depends on what the outcome is.
You see a lot of these things tend to overlap as well.
Because again, I find a lot of people who are doing this mobility work and so much of it for pain are under
the mistaken concept that their lack of flexibility or mobility that they perceive that they need to
have is the reason why they're actually having pain. And that's not actually the case.
You know, I have, like I had mentioned earlier, a little anecdote to share on this point. I'd be curious as to your take. So for a while, a long time, for many years, I just focused on lifting weights and again, no major injuries, a minor injury, SI joint deadlifting and some biceps tendonitis. That was pretty annoying. So I had some RSI. And in the case of my SI joint, it was probably a bit of
hypermobility actually. Like I've kind of felt my hips shift at the top of a deadlift and I was
like, oh, that's not good. And then had some pain for a couple of weeks. But, and I've told this
story several times in the podcast, so I'll just go through it very quickly. Basically what I found
is that my hips were a little bit out of whack. So on my left side, my external rotation was quite good. My internal rotation,
quite bad. And then the other way around on the right side. So my internal was okay. My external
was quite bad. And I mean, maybe I'm exaggerating a little bit, but they were noticeably asymmetrical.
Like the external mobility on the left side, I was able to get my knee basically
down to the floor, several inches from the floor on my right side. And by working on that, by
particularly improving the internal rotation on my left side by, that's kind of hard to explain.
I still do it. I still do a couple of these little stretches, a couple stretches, a couple
of little yoga poses every day to address some specific structural issues that I've had in the past. But what I did
is this simple internal rotation, little stretch, sitting on a bench, basically putting my heel next
to me and just kind of sinking into my butt cheek and trying to get, I mean, initially I couldn't
sit it down onto the bench. I had to just kind of hover above the bench a little bit and just work
on it. And like you were saying, just get my body used to that range of motion, get my brain to understand it's okay,
you can go down. It took a couple of months to start to balance those things out. But what I
noticed is that SI joint injury that I sustained on my left side, it would flare up every couple
of months very randomly. Usually it wasn't when I was lifting heavy weights. It was usually when I
was warming up. I remember warming up with 225 on the deadlift
and I was just being kind of sloppy with it
because it's 225 and that tweaked it
and I wasn't able to deadlift for, you know,
I don't know, a week or two weeks.
I remember warming up on a squat with 185
and just up there it goes.
And after correcting that internal rotation imbalance,
that was the end of it. And my
understanding, and I came across this afterward, actually, that there is a relationship in the
literature, like it has been established that SI joint dysfunction and internal hip rotation,
those dysfunctions go together and the anatomy makes sense. I just didn't know about it.
And so it's just kind of interesting in that that was a problem that I probably had for a long time. And if I would have known that,
and I would have done that, want to call it mobility or just simple stretching, if I would
have done that beforehand and corrected the imbalance in my hips, I may not have hurt my
SI joint in the first place. Maybe I would have, but it is pretty telling that since correcting
that I've yet to have it return. Sometimes I have a little bit of discomfort, but it is pretty telling that since correcting that, I've yet to have it return.
Sometimes I have a little bit of discomfort, but is that just though, is it that, or is it just
because I deadlifted a lot of weight and that's kind of what happens sometimes. But I'm back up to
a 1RM of probably low mid fours on the deadlift and I'm doing sets of two and stuff and everything's
been good for quite some time now.
So I was just curious as to your thoughts about that, because unless I would have done some sort of screen or known to look for that, I would never have thought to do some bizarre internal
rotation stretch. Well, I mean, so there's a couple of ways to break that down. And this
is where you start to come into and see conflicts in the field between what the research says and what kind of like the more pain advocates or who are less, again, moving away from
the biomechanics type say, there's some arguments in there. So, you know, when you look at my actual
work, if you came in and you saw what I do, I do an A to Z mechanical assessment. I look at people
and I'm looking for generally symmetrical positioning because I want to know what that
person's tendencies are. And that way, when I give them an exercise program or a corrective program, I'm oftentimes giving them the mirror
opposite because I want to antagonize the asymmetries to see how their body responds to
that. So, but you're going to see that these types of patterns are going to exist. The question is
whether or not they will lead to or be able to predict pain or injury. And as you could see with
a lot of research that talk about out there, looking at the
FMS, the functional movement screen and so forth, there's not a lot of evidence that
this can prevent anything.
Now in athletics, the problem is, of course, there's lots of different reasons and ways
you can get injured in athletics.
You know, you can have a wrong step when you're running or whatever, or get pushed.
You know, these sorts of things are kind of more random.
You know, you're not going to be able to predict that. And certainly it's easy to imagine how, you know,
if you pass a movement screen and, you know, you perform well in a controlled environment,
like in the gym, that that's 100% going to transfer to anti-injury on the field. Okay.
So that's a bit more complicated, but in the average gym goer, it's a lot more telling.
Like for example, it's very, very common, and you're right with what the literature shows with the sacral arc or the iliosacral mechanics, is a lack of IR, internal
rotation, in particular, which occurs on the left, which is natural to the human body, by the way,
our design. Then what that's going to lead to is we have external rotation in the left hip.
The pelvis is going to turn to the right. That means that the right hip is going to go into
internal rotation by predisposition, and human beings tend to lean on our right side because we are right groin
dominant. We love to use our right adductors. So in this case, you're already kind of predestined
to go that direction. So when you start to lift, and you'll see this with a lot of lifters,
and you'll see a classic pattern of which way they tend to shift, either number one is a result
of fatigue or number two due to load, of one RM. They're going to tend
to shift to the right. I still fight with that. I still consciously have to fight that when I get
deeper into a setter and especially when it's heavy. Again, that's completely normal. And why?
Because the right adductors are dominant and the right oblique and the abdominal wall is dominant.
So you're going to go to the position of strength. That's normal. It's like knees collapsing when
you're squatting intensely. The problem is that that should not be happening at lower percentages
of 1RM. If it does, I almost have an explanation of like why, you know, you pulled 225, it's no
big deal. It's like your nervous system doesn't take it seriously. You know, you watch the guy
who, you know, who's deadlifting or squatting 500, you watch him go pick up a 45 pound plate.
You know, he's standing on one leg, half bent, talking to someone.
He doesn't care.
He's not threatened by that 45 pounds, but that's also the position where that little
tweak or that hypersensitivity in the nerve can lock up, you know, the lumbar erectors
in that position because you just weren't paying attention.
You didn't take it seriously, you know, and then you have this tweak.
So when we do these correctives, I mean, absolutely for sure, we don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. The key is
if you have asymmetrical imbalances and you're right side dominant and you cannot load your
left side well at all, you know, these are going to be things that are going to probably predispose
you when you get fatigued or when you start to push toward a higher percentage of 1RM. Or again,
like I said, when you're not taking things seriously, you may be more likely to get these tweaks and these aggravations and so forth. So I certainly pay
attention to those things. You're never going to be as good on one side as you are on the other.
If you're right-handed, you're never going to write as well as you can with your left.
But the point is, is to try to improve that asymmetrical imbalance a little bit so that
your body has options. And to me, when somebody has chronic pain, meaning that the pain is just
constantly going, especially when it's being triggered by mechanical inputs, we call
that nociception, like positions or movements. Oftentimes what we find that when you put them
into the alternating opposite position, meaning putting them into that dysfunction on the other
side of the body, they actually cannot do it. They don't have enough strength, endurance,
coordination, et cetera. So what's happening is the body is always defaulting to that same pattern. And so you actually have to
break that by number one, relaxing and releasing that tissue, but you have to actually be able to
get people to facilitate and learn how to use the opposite pattern. And that way the nervous system,
when it kind of figures this out, says, oh, again, I don't have threat and I can use this
because this side feels stable. You're probably going to get a greater chance for actually sharing that load when you're squatting,
you're fatiguing, et cetera. Could you give a couple specific examples of that?
Okay. So let's say that, for example, somebody walks in with that same kind of issue that you
had. You're deadlifting and say, say my back went out on the left, the acute phase is over,
but this still thing's kind of nagging me. And when I squat, I put the bar on my back. I'm still
feeling this in my left SI joint. So what I'm going to do is let's say I assess that and say, this is a right side dominance,
right-handed person. So what I've got here is that classic pattern I find of some pelvis
positioned forward. It's anteriorly tilted more on the left. So the body weights go into the right.
I find a tight right adductor. So my mobility work is going to go after this. I'm going to say,
all right, can this left hip internally rotate? If it cannot, what's restricting it? Do I have soft
tissue restriction? Do I have joint mobility? Maybe that joint capsule is not rotating as well.
And so what I'm going to do is I'm probably going to initiate left internal rotation mobilization.
So I'm going to do what you did. We're going to mobilize that left hip into internal rotation.
Once we do that, this is the key piece. The key piece is you have to do
exercises to facilitate those muscles in that new position. This is where people make the mistake.
When you increase mobility, you're going to increase range of motion in a joint or whatever.
And you see this a lot when somebody gets a chiropractic adjustment or whatever, there's a
rapid alteration in that neurophysiology where range of motion can increase really rapidly and
improve. The problem is, is that the nervous system doesn't become competent in that position and learn how to
use the muscles in that position. It's going to default back to what it was doing. So again,
we see this a lot. Also get a quick example before I move on here, rear deltoid exercises.
So for example, if you slouch, when you do rear delt exercises, right, you're training
mostly this kind of mid range. Let's say if you're doing the rear delt machine, it's kind of that mid range where most of the load is happening. And there's not
a load happening at end range where the shoulder blades are fully together. So if somebody starts
working that end range and they're using that same amount of weight, they oftentimes the next
day are like, my rhomboids are wrecked. And it's like, yeah, because you're always training mid
range. And now when you train end range, you realize you were not good at that. Yeah. Yeah. It's like if you switch to some dumbbells and all of a sudden it's a, yeah, because you're always training mid range. And now when you train end range, you realize you were not good at that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like if you switch to some dumbbells and all of a sudden it's a lot harder at the top.
Yeah.
So then the person's going to default to the position where there's the greatest degree
of facilitation.
So anyway, so there's the point.
You got to mobilize the left hip into internal rotation.
Then you got to stabilize it with exercises and teach the muscles how to be competent.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
definitely check out my health and fitness books, including the number one best-selling
weightlifting books for men and women in the world, Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner
Stronger, as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef. And how does that look? I'm just curious
because I'm thinking through with my own experience. I mean, I improved the mobility
through just brute force. I mean, not that I had to kind of grit it out, but I just found a stretch.
I was like, that doesn't feel very good. I'll just keep doing this. And slowly but surely,
I was able to get it to at least about the same as on the right side. And as for strengthening,
I didn't know this point, so I didn't have anything specifically in mind. I just kept on lifting.
And so that meant doing some sort of hip hinge, some sort of deadlift regularly. I like to
alternate between trap bar and conventional and of course, squatting and so forth. And again,
I was able to progress better without any of the pain issues.
Yeah. And that can happen. And again, it's just like, sometimes you throw a wrench in the wheel
and things work fine. I think that tends to also occur a lot more with people that number one,
they just have a behavioral problem. Like the tissue just keeps doing the same thing or the
joints and it never gets interrupted. And sometimes when you interrupt it, the system
will default into some pattern that is corrective on its own. In psychology, I look at this too. If you're going to take a behavior away from somebody like biting their
nails, okay, you can interrupt the biting the nails habit. But the question is, that's under
the assumption that if I just interrupt it, the nervous system has a default program behind that,
that it's going to go to that's better than the biting the nails pattern. But if the person's
biting your nails, you interrupt them and the nervous system doesn't have an alternate routine or something else to do to achieve the same outcome, you know,
then it's going to go back to doing that, that same thing again.
So you actually have to, I don't want you to do this, but I want you to do this.
So sometimes again, it'll correct itself.
And that's cool.
And that happens, but if it doesn't, we have to build that pattern in to teach the nervous
system what to do.
So in that case, what are the muscles that internally rotate the hip?
You know, predominantly we're looking at the groin, the adductor musculature. And second, we're
looking at the anterior portion of the glute medius muscle, which is an internal rotator.
So you have to get these two muscles to work together without that bastard that always gets
in the way, which is the TFL muscle. The TFL is always hyperactive for the most part, especially
in that situation on the left. So you'll oftentimes get when people start trying to do internal rotation exercises on the left
side, it oftentimes doesn't work because they keep recruiting the TFL. And so you'll see almost all
hip syndrome problems have that key facet of left TFL overactivity. And people oftentimes assume,
again, that's a tight IT band or whatever. But really what we're talking about is we've got to
give exercises to help teach internally rotate that hip and without TFL recruitment. And we'll try
to do those things. For me, what I do them is in pure isolation, like a level one, activate that
muscle and trying to gain control over it. And then once they can do that, then I'll progress
them upright, more complicated exercises without getting that TFL to trigger. They can train that
hip in a neutral
position. Interesting. Interesting. Transitioning to a bit more about pain and chronic pain,
what are some of the exercises that tend to create the most common problems with your clients? Like
what movements are you constantly having to address with people? That depends a lot on where
they're coming from. You know, you get people that come in who are doing, address with people? That depends a lot on where they're coming from.
You know, you get people that come in who are doing, you know, CrossFit or a lot of
function training exercises that may be a little different.
Well, let's say a lot of the listeners are just kind of, they're going to be weightlifters.
They're going to be doing a lot of strength training, probably some bodybuilding stuff
in addition to that.
But, you know, squatting, deadlifting, bench pressing, overhead pressing, and then some
isolation or accessory work for bringing all the other little muscles up, you know?
I'll see a lot of, I think the first thing that will always come in is problems with the squat,
the back squat in particular. So there's always, you know, some kind of story that comes in usually
when we look at, somebody will say, when I back squat, my low back hurts or my mid back, my
mid upper lumbar spine will hurt. But funny enough, when I front squat, I have no pain.
So we'll get that sort of thing. And there's also, which is almost a different kind of problem than
when somebody comes in and they say, you know what, Sam, I can back squat, I can front squat,
I know a problem, but when I deadlift, I got a problem. And then from there, you'll subclassify
that as you've got a sumo problem or a conventional stance problem, because those are all slightly
different as well. But almost always when it comes to those patterns, you have to address
range of motion. A lot of times you'll see in the back squat in particular,
you know, for all the talk about, you know, hip mobility and so forth, I think the fundamental
problem you see most of the time in the back squat for the most part is people have poor ankle
mobility and range of motion. So the knee can't go forward and the knee can't go forward. Then
the person sits back further and then their tailbone tends to tuck under. So they tend to round their low back, right? So we see that a lot.
And then the compensation for that is to keep opening the stance up. If you follow some experts
in the fitness industry, you see a lot of this too, where they bend it, basically their back
squats look like good mornings. And that's a common problem. Yeah. Real wide stance.
Not that there's anything wrong with that, but it's just a way of working around it versus
trying to improve the ankle range of motion and mobility to the best that you can to get that
torso a little bit more vertical.
And that torso goes vertical, you get a little bit more load sharing,
and that tends to remedy that problem.
How can someone determine their level of ankle mobility?
Is there a simple way that they can do that just right now? If somebody's wondering, like, I wonder if I have that problem, how can they know if they have sufficient ankle mobility? a wall in front of you. So you put your foot down on the ground, your foot has to be completely flat. Heel has to stay on the ground. And then you're in kind of a half kneeling position,
you know, one leg forward, one leg back. And you try to take your knee and push it all the way
forward to touch the wall, right? So can you get about four or five inches in front of the toes?
And that's a good ankle mobility test. While keeping your heel on the ground, right? That's
the... Exactly. And a lot of people will get stuck in their knee. Can you even actually go past their toe? So you can imagine what happens
in that position. If they're standing and start squatting and the knee can't go past the toe at
all, you know, it should go right. There's always the devil. Your knees are going to blow up. If
that happens, leave that one for another podcast. But, but when they start to descend, depending on
the depth of their squat, you know, and now today there's so much like, you know, so much pressure
to have these deep, deep super squats. And if you squat anything, you know, above parallel,
then you're a loser, which is not the case by the way, but you know, trying to exceed range of
motion and then they're getting down there and starting to have problems with that. So I think
that's a pretty good test. And then, you know, if you elevate your heels with a couple of 10 pound
plates, and then all of a sudden all of these issues clear up. I think that's a pretty good signal that you've got some ankle mobility problems.
Yeah. Or if a squat shoes make a big difference in this regard, right?
Oh yeah. You know, and outside of that, I would say that again, with deadlifts,
the primary problem with the deadlift for the most part is just having overly sensitized lower
lumbar extensor muscles. That can be multiple things, but I oftentimes find
that when people don't know actually how to leverage and use their glutes and their hamstrings
during the deadlift, they tend to be lifting up to the sky with their back rather than pushing
their hips forward. And in those cases, my strategy might be teaching them how to do
glute bridges, hip thrusts, and so forth via Brett Contreras' type of method, which is teaching them
how to actually accelerate that movement is pushing the hips forward rather than lifting themselves up
through the lumbar spine.
They're initiating the movement from the lumbar extensors, which is oftentimes kind of starting
to sensitize that area, whether or not that's the muscles or the joint segments and receptors
that are feeling threatened by that activity.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's a great cue.
That's one I've shared many times of just trying to push your hips into the bar as opposed to trying to squat
the weight up. Some people think about it that way, or like you're saying, really relying on
the low back muscles to just kind of lever the weight up. And then usually what we see there,
is the hips shoot up and then the back is just used as a, again, as a lever to try to get the
weight up. And that's not the
exercise. And when the weight starts to get heavy, that's when eventually you just hit a brick wall.
Yeah. We always tell people, Hey, your ass muscles are built that size for a reason.
You got to use them. There's a lot of surface area there and you're not getting everything
out of it. And you're trying to use your string bean spinal erectors to actually lift that weight.
They're really not that capable of doing it. Yeah. And I guess if somebody is feeling a lot of soreness in their lower back, for example,
after they deadlift and not feeling much in their glutes or their hamstrings, that may also be an
indicator, right? Of what they're doing. Yeah. And it's, you know, it's kind of rare. I think
a lot of people, it's pretty tough to get sore lumbar extensors from training, unless you're
actually deliberately flexing and extending your spine. Like when you're doing 45 degree back
extensions. I mean, I can't even tell you the last time I've had sore erectors.
I mean, most of them- Really? I still get it a little bit from deadlifting. Maybe I have something
to work on. That's interesting. Well, there might be some movement there. Again, I don't know. I'd
love to see it. But a lot of times when you look at it, it looks fine. We never know how much
strain is going into that tissue though. But again, it is funny having sore erectors feels,
it's very hard to distinguish from your back feeling quote unquote locked up, isn't it? It's almost the
same feeling. Yeah. Maybe it's mild then if we're talking about those types of terms, but there's
certainly after heavy deadlifting, I'll often feel a little something like it's the level of soreness.
It's actually kind of nice. You know, when you get into lifting weights, there's too much,
like my legs were too much, from the last workout.
I hadn't done good mornings in a while.
I think I got a little bit zealous on it.
I was like, this feels easy.
And then I was having trouble walking two days later.
Usually, I'll feel it a little bit, and it's nice in my back.
But to your point, I would say that over the years, yeah, from deadlifting, I've had a
lot more soreness in my glutes and my hamstrings than my back or my lower
back in particular. Oh yeah. Yeah. And especially as lumbar extensors are kind of like forearms and
so forth, they tend to just thicken and toughen up, you know, and I think over time it's like,
again, that's another one. It's like, unless you've been out of grip training and stuff for
a while, it's pretty hard to get sore forearms unless you're really going after them on purpose.
Yeah, that's true. Talk to us about the bench press and of course, shoulder issues. That's the common thing I hear about.
Well, I mean, I'd say that there'd probably be a good chunk of the problems with bench pressing
is ultimately come back to two things is number one is, you know, almost always it's in the
horizontal abductant position. That's where your arms are out to the side, classic bench press,
right? So a lot of people are getting impingement syndrome, rotator cuff problems, and so forth
there. A could of course be due to shoddy technique or bouncing off the chest, not controlling
the range at the very end.
But a lot of people I do feel to some degree from a mobility perspective, or maybe in just
the way that they're designed, are not really built to do flat bench pressing.
You know, they'd probably be better served by, you know, these people picking up the
angle of the bench by 20, 30 degrees.
And all of a sudden, a lot of these issues tend to disappear because that clears the
space in the shoulder, gives it more range of motion.
I'm a huge advocate, first of all, of using more close grip bench presses.
If you watch any of Louie's-
Yeah, I was going to mention close grip too is often a workaround.
Watch Louie Simmons.
I learned a ton.
Considering all this corrective work that I do, I spent a good amount of time listening
to high level strength coaches and seeing the kind of work that they do.
If you ever want to see, at least to some degree, if you're not in powerlifting, you
watch some of the stuff these guys do.
How do they stay lifting heavy for so long?
It's because they learn how to kind of work their way around stuff.
And it's worth kind of watching what they do.
And Louis will talk about most of your bench press is based on the long head of the tricep.
The thicker piece of the tricep toward the elbow is the bench press.
So the more you work on the close grip based work, your wide grip gets better.
So there's even a more entertaining part, which is somebody has pain doing arms out
to the side bench presses, and yet they also have weak tricep development.
You switch them to close grip.
Number one, they have less problems.
And then number two, they actually get stronger.
They go back to the bench and they perform better with less pain.
I always switch to incline first of all.
And at least I don't like really starting off with something like a 45 degree high incline.
I usually move people to 30 degrees. And I also teach them basically how to keep their shoulder
blades kind of slightly down and back and down in the sockets because they don't know how to use
their lats and really drill the shoulders down into the sockets when they press. So I like the
powerlifting versions from the corrective standpoint, because it's a real quick win
to get people to be able to bench without too much discomfort while you work on cleaning up all the other shoulder
imbalances, like dealing with their serratus muscle and their rotator cuff muscles, which
are a little bit slower to kind of build, but that way you can keep people in the gym and keep
them training with modifications without literally, again, turning their whole program into a physical
therapy regime for their shoulders. Yeah, it makes sense. What are your thoughts on rotator cuff exercises? I know that was,
it may not be as much of a thing now as it was a couple of years ago, but I remember
a lot of people asking about there definitely was a wave, I guess, of advice that if you're
not doing rotator cuff, some of these rotational exercises, you're just asking for a shoulder
injury. Well, I mean, this is where it gets complicated with the shoulder because there's a lot of moving pieces with this. I mean,
you have to realize that probably I believe in most people, a lot of the problems are that
their external rotator cuff muscles, those are the ones that were always associated with
strengthening. You grab a tubing or an exercise cable and start rotating your arm outward.
Those muscles are oftentimes overactive in particular because of the faulty positioning
of the shoulder itself.
So we beat on these things and we see like, well, the rotator cuff muscle is not strong.
You ever done rotator cuff exercises? What's the most you're going to be using on the stack?
40 pounds, maybe. Most of the time, these muscles are just hyperactive trying to stabilize the
shoulder because the other muscle groups are either not in a good biomechanical position
or they're weak as well. So on the right side, and this kind of goes in with that asymmetrical pattern, which at
some point we should nail out and I'll walk you through it.
But what tends to happen is with that left side hip problem, you go up to the right shoulder
with a right-handed person, is you see an overactive pec minor.
When that pectoralis minor, which dumps that shoulder forward, now that shoulder blade
is starting to tilt down and forward.
And now you've got a shoulder that's deleveraged and biomechanically non-positioned really well. You're
going to get a lot of strain on that rotator cuff. So here you are with a shoulder that's propping
down and forward, right? And because of that pec minor tension, and it's stuck in that position.
And here we are just beaten on the external rotator cuff muscles to get them stronger.
That's not going to work very well. So I actually find that more often than not,
just correcting the primary positioning of the shoulder by stretching out the pec minor
and teaching people how to get their shoulders back in the right position, that deloads that
external rotator cuff. Those trigger points tend to kind of quiet down a little bit back there if
they have them. And then from there, just teaching them functionally how to do those lifts again.
You can shoulder press, front press with
the shoulders in the right position, or again, mid-inclined shoulder presses. We're oftentimes
able to do that. That rotator cuff muscles are working during those activities. The problem is,
are they working in a faulty overall shoulder position? And that's just going to keep
exacerbating the preexisting problem. So again, it's not like I have to peel somebody out. I mean,
I do give people, let's say I've got somebody with frozen shoulder or something, I'm going to do some
isolation, external rotator cuff activities. It depends on the circumstance. But again,
I like to leapfrog, meaning by the end of my programs, my goal is to get people to be able
to do basic gym exercises with no problems because that becomes the therapy regime for them. And
these kind of simple mobility or isolation exercises are only initial or interim exercises to bridge the gap to those key lifts.
Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense. It's interesting that you mentioned that asymmetrical point and
how it can kind of cascade up in that example where you have any of issues in the lower body
and then that can cause issues all the way up. And I just think of, so I've had the SI joint issue on my left side and for whatever it's worth, correcting that
internal rotation seemed to put that to bed. So that's nice. And then on my right side,
I had this biceps tendonitis, bicipital groove, just aggravation in there. And it never got too
bad. I stopped being stubborn about it and got off of the exercises that were pissing
it off and saw a physical therapist and worked on, if I remember correctly, let's see, subscap was
super tight. That was part of the issue. And then I believe it was also, oh, this was years ago. So
it might've been infraspinatus, but I still have a tendency to piss off my infraspinatus and the biceps tendonitis hasn't turned back on,
but what has helped keep it at bay, and I haven't been able to do this much since COVID because I
had an office here in Virginia and some people, then we had an office in Florida. We got rid of
those offices. Now we're all remote. But one of the guys who worked with me in the office in
Virginia, he would take the massage gun and there were just a couple of trigger points that we would
hit on my right side of my back. There was a trigger point in the longissimus muscles. There
was a trigger point in the infraspinatus near the scapula. And by just working a couple of these
points and just desensitizing them, I noticed an immediate improvement in this bicipital groove,
which at the time was getting a
little bit irritated. Again, I would feel it when I would bench press. And so that's just an ongoing
thing that I have to deal with. And it sounds like it has something to do with some of these natural
asymmetrical aspects of the musculoskeletal system. And that's the thing too, is that we tend to focus
on where the area where the problem is, which is obviously completely logical, you know, is a fixing and cleaning up the imbalances in the
right shoulder. But we have to remember that everything in the body is reflexive and relatable
to other areas. So if your pelvis, let's say, for example, turns to the right, then that's going to
turn the spine at the lower portion to the right. You have to counter by turning the upper body to
the opposite direction. And then your shoulders got to go. That's how it works.
I'd have people in the past who would come in.
I'd say a lot because out of the years, I don't even remember how many, but I almost
always start at the torso at the midline because oftentimes get the most potent effects.
So I never start working with somebody with a shoulder problem or a neck problem at the
shoulder level.
I always start with the rib cage because the rib cage, when it's positioned off or asymmetrical
alters the
accessory muscle activation. So you're using muscles to move your ribs, but what sits on top
of that is your shoulder girdle. And the only thing that connects your shoulder girdle to your
body is the two joints that your clavicles connect to on the front. Everything else is muscular.
So it's going to be very responsive or reactive to rib cages that are rotated to one direction.
So a lot of times, again,
when the first rib area is not expanding really well, oftentimes because that pec minor is tight
on the right, we don't appropriately breathe into our upper chest wall on the right. And that's
going to trigger inappropriate or overactive muscles in the respiratory cycle that don't
need to be doing that activity. So point is, is that if you reposition some of these elements
lower down in the chain, some of these elements lower down
in the chain, some of those upper portions will actually reset or relax themselves because now
they're responsibly or reflexively not having to do that compensatory activity. So that way,
when you do an exercise or you do a stretch or a mobility drill, you get this magical release.
And it's really because you fixed or you readdressed the things that were below the
chain before you did that. Versus again, fighting with the shoulder when that shoulder's positioning is only reflexive
to something below the chain.
So the body is smart enough to know, yeah, that's great.
This feels better for five seconds, but I still have to go back to doing my job again.
And we fight with that as if the nervous system doesn't know what it's doing when really we
just don't know how to interpret why it's doing that.
And that's kind of the key that over time in my career, it's more like, yeah, for looking at
posture mechanics, that's stuff I knew a long time ago. A lot more of this work now is just
trying to figure out the relationships of these things and understanding why that behavior makes
the most sense to that person's nervous system. And if you can figure that out, then you can
create magic much faster. Makes sense. Makes sense. And yeah, that was my experience on working on some of these muscles.
And then that was it for the, for the bicipital groove issue.
And again, so long as I don't get too sensitized in the subscap and infraspinatus, I mean,
it's hard to say if it's that or Terry's minor, it's right in there.
and infraspinatus. I mean, it's hard to say if it's that or Terry's minor, it's right in there.
So long as I can keep those touched semi-regularly, it just seems to make the bench pressing okay and the overhead pressing okay. Yeah. We basically just do what we can. We don't always know.
I don't want to put it out there that I know how to fix every single thing, but the point is you
can always do more with it the more you figure out what's going on. But at least at default,
what we do is we maintain things and we keep things healthy with the things that we know how to do and the things that work. And
a lot of times that's good enough. As long as you don't do things to keep aggravating it,
then you can move forward with your goals. And that kind of circles back to what we talked about,
which is how far do you go with this stuff? Well, that depends on what you need. Is it good enough
to keep you active and doing the things that you love? Then great, we're done.
Yep. And that's really where I'm at. Even though I take my fitness pretty seriously,
like I understand that there's not much muscle and strength left for me to gain. I do enjoy
working out. I like pushing myself. I like lifting, but I'm in a maintenance mode for the rest of my
life, really. So if I can just do that, I'm happy. If I can maybe make little bits of progress here and there, enjoy my workouts, not get hurt, not have any major pain issues, then I'm happy. So that's
it. That's my goal. Right, exactly. And it's like, well, if you can't bench press and you're
reconsidering whether life is worth living because you can't bench press, that's a different kind of
goal. And you're going to spend a lot of time going after that, but that's probably not the
case for most people. Yeah. Yeah. Let's talk about gadgets. What do you think about massage guns? Those are obviously
very popular right now. Vibrating things like foam rollers and little balls. And those are the ones I
get asked the most about. Foam rollers, including some of the fancier ones and the percussion guns.
I'm not going to lie. I love gizmos. It's my thing. And I feel like I'm a little bit of an early adopter though, because I want to throw that out there. My first percussion
machine, when I started doing this work, I think I've had it for almost 18 years. So for a long
time, I've been using percussion and the company that was called VibraCuster was using it as a
chiropractic tool. So percussion therapy has been around for a long time. Dr. Robert Fulford,
I think it was the first one. He was an osteopathic doctor like in the 60s, I think, or something like that was using
percussion.
But, you know, so that you can imagine was kind of odd when you see this now, like every
single person you go to Best Buy and there's percussion devices being sold.
It's kind of interesting considering we've been using it for so long.
That's the case with so many things.
What a lot of marketers do, I mean, intentionally, they go back because they know that with generational shifts, you know what I mean?
They know they're looking intentionally back.
We have 50s, 60s, let's say 40s through the 60s for things that were once popular.
And that proved that there was something there that resonated with people and that you have a whole new market for that you can introduce it as breakthrough.
I believe that's where we're at with the keto raw milk and cod liver oil, right?
What was the last one?
Cod liver oil.
Oh, cod liver oil. Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Some holistic health practitioner from the 70s probably yapping about that all the time. But
it's funny to see, talk to people how some of these things make these comebacks. Does it work?
Yes, it does. If you set proper expectations for it, you understand what you're using it for.
I mean, it's all of these things we have to remember are just kind of fit into the category
to me of what I say is a sensory stimulation.
It's input into the system.
And we're just trying to give the nervous system input.
We have hardware, you know, and we have software.
We have the hardware, which is our joints, muscles.
You can think about it like that.
But then you have the software, which is the joints, muscles. You can think about it like that. But then you have the software, which is the brain that updates how it's responding and dealing with these different components of our body. And we figure things out and we make sense of the world around us through sensory input.
It's going to hit certain receptors in the tissue.
It's going to flood those receptors with information.
I mean, the brain is going to have to figure out what to do with that information.
And either it's going to have a negative response.
I mean, I've had clients who tell me, hey, Sam, can I pay you an extra $25 this visit to not use that percussor on me?
Because they hate it.
They don't like the feeling.
And then there are other people that will literally like, can I pay you to just do this
over my entire body for an hour?
People have different responses to sensory input.
And also it's how you're using them under what context.
So I find that for me, for example, percussion, a lot of the ways that it's being used generally
out there, not that it's wrong, but I just don't think that there's that much you get
out of it.
So for example, first of all, and you did a marvelous job covering this on your podcast
when you went through the research on the tools and so forth.
It was really great.
I learned a lot of stuff from that. So I don't dive into the research on some of this stuff
because for me, I kind of already am like, all right, this is sensory input and I just kind of
move on. But every once in a while, I do take a look at that stuff. So great that you did the
homework for me. Yeah. Again, it was something I was just getting asked about so much. I was like,
okay. All the time, right? I have the companies reaching out to me. They want me to promote their
trinkets. Yeah. And I'm not above that. And I'll tell them, I say, you-
No, no, no. Actually, I'm going to add to, I don't know exactly when, because there are just
more important things that my developers are working on, but I want to bring back this
recommendations section that I had on my previous website, which was Muscle for Life, which I merged
into Legion and just gave Legion all of the content. I should have done that a long time ago, finally got around to it. But I had a
section on Muscle for Life of just recommendations. And of course there was fitness stuff in there,
like what shoes do I like to squat in? What shoes do I like to deadlift in? Usually the same,
but sometimes I just prefer a flat sole for the deadlifting. What straps do I like? You know,
it's just things that people would ask me about. And then other random things too, because I would just get asked for book recommendations
and, oh, in that one picture, what jeans are you wearing?
So I would just throw stuff that I like in there and I'm going to bring that back over
at Legion.
And I do like using the percussor.
I don't spend too much time and I have my little spots that I hit and I just do it in
accordance with what I discussed in that.
I think it was a Q&A or whatever in that podcast. When I have that section of the website up, sure,
I'll reach out to the companies and say, hey, I'm going to promote your stuff because I like it.
Do you have an affiliate program? Because I might as well, if I'm going to make them money,
I might as well earn a commission. I'll be open about that, but I'm not going to promote anything.
I don't really care about the commission. It's just, if I'm going to send a bunch of people
their way, why not make a little bit of money? That's how I think about it at least.
Yeah. And I'll do the same thing, but I'll tell them what my two rules are is that number one,
I'm going to be honest in my review. So if I tell you that I don't think this stuff is good for this
and I'm not going to value tarnish my reputation. I honestly don't even want to bother doing reviews.
Like I just get stuff, I'll pay for it. And then when I like it, then I'll put it up and I'll reach
out. Like, I don't even want to commit to, okay, I'm going for it. And then when I like it, then I'll put it up and I'll reach out.
Like, I don't even want to commit to,
okay, I'm going to go through the whole process
and do a review.
I would rather, okay, my compromise would be
if I want something
and I can get the company to send it to me,
I will do the review.
If I end up liking it and using it,
otherwise I'll just send it back to them.
And I don't even want to bother with it at all.
Oh yeah, totally.
And the other rule of thumb is, is that, and again, I'm not going to hawk
your narrative if I don't believe in it.
Because again, we know that there's just like, these massagers are not probably releasing
fascia.
They're not doing none of this stuff.
And I wrote an article on my website.
I would talk about that, which is, there's just no, there's no recent evidence that really
supports that we can do anything meaningful with fascia, especially in the short run.
You know, in the long run, maybe, who knows, but it's not really relevant to us.
This is altering neurophysiological behavior.
And that is good enough.
You know, I know people, we care that it works, but, you know, we got to ditch some of the
stories on this stuff.
So I think that with that, you know, you use these tools and it doesn't matter what it
is.
I have a lot of different gadgets and gizmos.
You're not really like vibrating foam rollers and so forth, but I am a fan of certain things that I like. I probably have about five different percussion massagers.
Some of them are really expensive in the three grand range and they just do different things.
I use them for different body parts and probably for a different number of different reasons. But
I would say this just as my general disclaimer, hands-on therapy, when you're in the hands of a
good therapist is far superior to anything that any of these
tools can do. My experience, just to interject quickly, is a good massage therapist is far
better. I will take a good massage therapist over anything I can do myself, period.
Absolutely. And if you're in Canada or in the UK or whatever, if you find yourself a good manual
osteopath, I mean, it's completely different. But when you're self-treating, it's different. You get the
sources of sensory stimuli. I do find that in some cases, these tools may have the advantage.
And in one in particular, I use a tool that has high-speed vibration. It's very superficial.
And it's basically an anesthetizing tool. It numbs an area pretty quickly. And I will use this on
nerves that are, I would say, superficial nerve entrapment at the skin level, scar tool. It numbs an area pretty quickly. And I will use this on nerves that are,
I would say superficial nerve entrapment at the skin level, scar tissue. It will desensitize it
very quickly. These tools are superior in that regard, but you could also use cupping and
stretching the skin and so forth. It just takes longer. A lot of time in my sessions, when I got
55 minutes with a client, the goal is to how much therapy can I get done in that amount of time.
So I'm not going to camp out in an area for 10 minutes with a tool when I don't have time for
that. So I have to get things done faster and pick and choose what I use. And that's where I'll have
so many tools and I might use one for a couple of minutes. But people go, well, you used percussion
on me. And sometimes, again, it's like three minute treatment. It's maybe that much because
I'm going to move on to hands-on. But again, so to me, I don't like camping out on muscle groups with percussion.
I've used a lot of it.
I mean, it does work, but to me, it takes a lot of time.
But most of the time, I'll add sensory input while moving.
So for example, I'll put cups on and then move people.
I'll put percussion on and move them.
Because what this source of stimuli is doing is just flooding those nerve receptors with
new information.
And in particular, it can block out the sensory input, the input that you're getting from other sources. It can
disrupt the signals that the nervous system is getting through, for example, stretch receptors
or pain tissues that are generating that pain experience. So if I turn my neck to the left
and I only get about 20 degrees range of motion because I'm feeling a pulling sensation on the
right side of my neck, if I put that percussion unit on that area provided, of course, as your listeners, be careful. You don't want to
put the percussion on your neck in certain areas. But if you put it on in a certain area where that
sensory stimuli is telling your brain to create a threat, if I put it on there and I start to turn
my head repetitively to the left, my brain is getting flooded with information of both from
the percussion, but also from those
stretch receptors. It may inhibit them to some degree where my neck range of motion may immediately
improve. And that's going to be useful because it'll down-regulate some of that sensitivity.
It can immediately cause changes and also show the person that their neck is not stuck because of
some kind of scar tissue adhesion or whatever, but instead because of the behavior
of the nerve receptors, I can show people very rapidly how quickly things can change.
And then it's just a matter of solidifying those changes with doing exercises and follow-up
movements. So certainly it has value just by putting it somewhere, but with movement is
oftentimes quite a bit more powerful. And it's also a great distraction unit. So for example,
people oftentimes have
apprehension to do a manual therapy. You have to learn how to be a good manual therapy recipient.
Not everybody gets the best results on day one. You see a new therapist, they're taking your
shoulder through a new range of motion that feels threatening. You put that percussion on there,
it's a nice welcome distraction from that sensory input that might make you feel threatened. So it
oftentimes adds to the ability to go to a good therapeutic effect, especially when I'm doing passive movement
just by flooding those nerve receptors. It's like magician working their hands.
That's right. It's a sleight of hand and it works really well. And again, I tell people that I'm
doing it. I don't rest on the placebo effect. It's just, this is how your physiology and your
neurology works and we're going to leverage it to get the job done. And for anybody wondering what I do with the massage gun, again, I think it was a Q&A
probably back summer of last year, but I just have found a couple of, I go looking for little
trigger points basically, and I just use the massage gun to desensitize them. And I understand
this is an understudied thing and many experts don't agree on what these trigger points are, what causes them, but I can just vouch for how it has helped on ever in some issues with my quads.
It's helped with, with my hamstrings it's helped with, and it doesn't take much time. The devices
aren't very expensive and I've had the same one for years. So it looks like they last a long time.
And so for me, it's just one of those, not exactly sure why this works, but it seems to help. So why not? I'm sitting in my
infrared sauna in the morning. Anyway, I bring it in. I do my little, I have a little bit of an
entrapped nerve also on my left shin area, which I don't know. It's been like that for a long time.
So I do that, which was interesting. The anesthetizing effect, obviously what I have
is not what you have, but it does desensitize it. And so I just have my little spots and it seems to help and that's it.
That's what I do. I don't read too much into it. Yeah. And if something works, you just kind of go
with it. And I guess that's the difference. And you read too much and for me, discussions for
another time, but I'm very cautious of spending too much time reading what other people are saying,
especially when people are too research oriented, too, too, too much, because field, it's far too complicated. It's not that black and white.
You do things in practice that really work. And again, to me, I think it's perfectly acceptable
you ditched the narrative. But you're saying that these things, saying that they don't work,
I think is a ridiculous statement, because anybody who is actually doing this stuff in practice knows
that they're helpful. When they work, they work really well. When they don't work, you just move
on to something else. You don't build your entire practice around one source of sensory stimuli it's just not it's not
how it works makes sense see i found the percussion gun more useful than foam rolling for me i know
some people like foam rolling i know there's some evidence to support it but i just got better
results from the percussion gun and faster and i can can, again, I can stack the habit, so to speak, with my, I'm already in the, go
in the sauna and then I'm reading on my phone while I'm gunning myself.
It works.
Yeah.
Right.
Right.
And certain things just feel better for you and your nervous system responds to them.
I mean, I think that's the part that's, we always have to remember when it comes to these
kinds of sources of stimuli is that, you is that what's fantastic and allows someone to relax
and zone out and their nervous system just soaks it all in is a repulsive stimuli to other people.
That's a scale. Some people hate massage. I know. I was just going to say that. I love
massage. A good massage really makes me feel good, but I know people who hate it. They refuse to get
a massage. I'm like, how? How does that not make you feel good? They do not like it.
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. It's just the sensory stimulation and the way that it is in the
context of the environment. It's no good. And they're going to have a bad response to that.
You know, I say one of the metaphors I use my clients and like, look,
how do we know what's going to work for you? I don't, I know a direction to go. And as a guide,
but let's put it this way. If you were lining up a hundred people in a row and I put a spider in my
hand, you know, I might be 20 feet away from those people. Half of them are going to be running for
the Hills. Other people are going to be wanting to come up and touch it. You had a nervous system,
you present it with a stimuli, you're going to have a lot of varied responses. And human beings
are not that predictable where every single time source of stimulation is going to be make them
relax, make them feel good, whatever. We respond differently based on our programming and what
we've got on the inside. Yeah. Well, hey, Sam, this was a great discussion. I really appreciate you taking the time. And why don't we wrap up with where people can find you,
your work, if they want to reach out to you, is there a good way for them to get in touch with
you? Is there anything in particular you want them to know about a specific product or service?
If something you've said has resonated with them and they want to get more help from you?
Yeah, certainly. I see clients in particular in my Santa Monica office.
Pretty soon I'll probably be seeing in another area, which I'll announce as well.
But my website's releasemuscletherapy.com.
There's a lot of content there on the blogs to check out.
And I got two resources on there to check out.
Number one is my digital book.
I pulled together all the research on chronic pain and what everything currently says now.
It's a work in progress to continue expanding as I find more research out there, talk about posture and different types of pain and gives you an idea
of the principles by which I promote and I do my work. Very evidence-based, of course.
And two is my insiders group in which I put a lot of free resources and so forth in there to check
out programs, corrective drills, these sorts of things. But grab the book, check out the insiders
area, get on my list and pumping out a lot of good content here pretty soon. You want to keep
following me. Awesome. And then you also are on Instagram, right? It seems like you're fairly
active there. Fairly active. You know, when I get busy, I start seeing a lot of clients. That's
when I love in my passion, but, uh, working on getting more social content out there as well.
Yeah. That's on a release muscle therapy. You can find that there too. Okay. Awesome. Well,
Hey, this was great again. Thanks for taking the Okay. Awesome. Well, hey, this was great. Again, thanks for taking the time.
Awesome.
Thanks, Mike.
Really appreciate it.
All right.
Well, that's it for this episode.
I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting and helpful.
And if you did, and you don't mind doing me a favor, please do leave a quick review on
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That is the best way to get ahold of me, mikeatmusclefullife.com. And that's it. Thanks
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