People, listen to me: YOU NEED TO STRETCH DAILY. It is
crucial for so many reasons. Flexibility training will: A) improve postural
alignment. B) Increase movement efficiency and athletic performance. C) Improve power. D) Relax muscles.
E) Reduce chances of injury. F) Enhance
recovery. Is any one of those not appealing to you? Then ask yourself, why
aren’t you doing it? You should stretch 15 minutes a day at a MINIMUM. And, guys in particular, get out of your
comfort/ignorant zone and take a yoga class.
Sometime around age 30, muscles begin to lose their
elasticity. Range of motion through joints begins to decrease. But you can
prevent and even reverse that unwanted aging process. I always tell my clients to
think of their body as a rubber band. The more it can stretch, the more power
it can produce. If your muscles and tendons, which essentially are like bands,
cannot expand, you’re being robbed of power, even in something as routine as
walking.
What happens when you run? The hip flexor’s main function
there is to lift the knee toward the chest. But again, if that band of muscles
is tight, you won’t have the knee lift you need to be an explosive runner.
Furthermore, due to the tightness, you’re expending more energy with each and every
stride because your muscle is working that much harder to get your thigh up to
90 degrees. So that lack of flexibility will lead to not only loss of power, but
it will erode your endurance.
Another example of the debilitating effects: I have an older
client who’s extremely tight though his chest. As a result of those restricted
muscles pulling him forward, his shoulders and back are hunched and he can’t
raise his hands anywhere near to straight over his head. If a robber told him “stick
‘em up,” this guy is in trouble! So what does he do to get his hands overhead?
He compensates by jerking his arms up - using momentum instead of muscle - and
by thrusting his hips forward and going into excessive lumbar extension. That’s
a faulty movement pattern and, like many, it’s one that puts the body at high
risk for injury.
Although I had no idea at the time, my back injury years ago
was a direct result of tightness through my hips and hamstrings. Once I fixed that,
not only did my back pain disappear
(despite an orthopedist telling me I was going to need surgery), I literally got faster at
40. If I knew decades ago what I know now, I might have challenged my homeboy and
sprint champ Kippy Andrade in the 100 back in high school! Not to toot my own
horn, but I do a lot of things now that I couldn’t do 20 years ago and I
attribute most of that to greater flexibility/mobility and gaining an
understanding of how the body truly works - and then training it in that
fashion. So it’s good to see fellow trainers like Mitchel Black and Michael
Raymond regularly incorporate mobility drills as part of their workout and group
classes. I’m going to say it again: it’s CRUCIAL.
So stretch before and after working out. It’s actually more
important to stretch AFTER a good long run or bike. Before activity, focus more
on dynamic stretches (with multi-planar movement with a brief hold of only a
couple of seconds). Post-workout is when you want more static stretches
(holding for at least 20 seconds). And don’t think a couple of pre-workout toe
touches and arm swings is sufficient. That’s barely a start. Stretch your quads,
hips, groin, obliques, chest and more. Move to get ankles, shoulders, wrists,
etc… more mobile. Incorporate integrated stretches that hit multiple body parts
at once. Running, cycling, lifting or whatever you might be doing for exercise
is great. But if you want to be lithe and limber – and explosive - you’ve got
to stretch. Otherwise, your body is slowly becoming less efficient and less
elastic, well on its way to becoming more elderly, with all the accompanying
aches and pains. You want that? Then get
to stretching! If stretching helped me
stave off surgery, think what it could do for you.
P.S. And for the record, I will dust that Kippy Andrade
today! J
SPREADING THE HEALTH!!!
ROBERT HADDOCKS CPT, CSCS is a personal trainer at Lifetime
Fitness in Woodstock. Send any questions or comments to robhadd@hotmail.com