Is Your Stretching Regimen Helping or Harming You?

Is Your Stretching Regimen Helping or Harming You?

Stretching is a common prescription to help with back pain. At https://www.healthoutcome.org, the world’s first crowdsourcing platform to rate medical interventions, stretching is the 6th most commonly used intervention, after physical therapy, NSAIDs, heat, rest, and cortisone injections. On a scale from 0-5, stretching (rated 2.6) is the 5th most highly rated intervention after Postural Modification (3.8), Yoga (3.1), Supplements (2.9), Weight Loss (2.8), and Meditation (2.7).

 


Back pain caused by tight muscles is common

 

The Gokhale Method considers stretching to be one of many essential pieces in solving most people’s back problems. Even though stretching alone cannot give an equivalent result to that of a well-crafted Postural Modification approach, it is a good thing, and if slightly tweaked, could give better satisfaction and results in less time. If done poorly, on the other hand, stretching can harm, rather than help you.

 

A few key concepts that can help your approach to stretching are:

  1. Your hunter gatherer ancestors, with whom you share the vast majority of your genes, didn’t do stretches per se. In the course of their daily activities, their bodies were self-stretching, self-maintaining, and mostly, self-healing. It’s true our lifestyles are different from theirs, but this realization should provoke some enquiry about small modifications in our ways of moving that would enable us, too, to be as efficiently and effectively stretched out as our ancestors were.

 


This hunter gets a natural shoulder stretch from using a bow and arrow

 

  1. Not every muscle in your body needs to be super flexible. Unless you’re a gymnast or yogi, some stiffness here and there is well-tolerated, and can be beneficial when there isn’t great strength to balance extreme flexibility.

  2. Flexibility is very useful in the following muscles: hamstrings (allows pelvic anteversion and hip-hinging), psoas (allows a full length stride without a swayback), external hip rotators (allows deep hip-hinging), pecs and traps (allows normal shoulder alignment and prevents pathology in the shoulder, facilitates good range-of-motion for the arms), and calves (allows the heels to remain on the ground for an extended time in a stride).

 


Calf stretches can help achieve a healthy stride

 

  1. The reason these flexibilities are useful is that they facilitate normal human movement, which also gives a clue on to how to keep these flexibilities: PERFORM NORMAL HUMAN MOVEMENT! Hip-hinge well, stride well, maintain shoulder alignment well while moving the arms extensively, etc., and you’ll be largely covered for flexibility.

 


Hip-hinging in the garden keeps hamstrings flexible

 


Actor Shemar Moore keeps his shoulders rolled back when playing on the beach with some spare children

 

  1. If your day does not include enough movement, supplement with a few, well-chosen stretches. It’s extremely efficient to do several stretches simultaneously. It’s even more efficient if you combine this with strengthening several muscles simultaneously.

 


Stretching the psoas (enables a healthy stride) and pecs, while strengthening the quads

 

  1. Yoga and dance are two approaches to exercise that are especially efficient and effective for satisfying stretch (and strengthening) needs. Most approaches to yoga and dance could use some tweaking to “do no harm” and do more good, but it’s hard to match the possibilities with these traditional, multi-faceted, tried and true practices.

 

Dance is excellent for increasing flexibility - and strength

 

  1. Distinguish between flexibility of your muscles and laxity in your ligaments. This is a big one, folks! Flexibility in appropriate muscles is terrific; laxity in your ligaments is not! Ligaments are a type of connective tissue that connect bones and cartilage in your joints and provide stability to the skeleton. Overstretched ligaments become too loose to hold your joints together under pressure or tension. People with lax shoulder ligaments, for example, can sometimes dislocate and “pop” their shoulders back in too easily. People with lax ligaments in their spinal column are able to round their spines excessively.


    This common approach to stretching the hamstrings, done poorly, causes laxity in spinal ligaments

 


This person would be better off lying on his back and raising one leg at a time to stretch out his very tight hamstrings

 

Do you have any favorite stretches? Please share them with us! We can then talk about pro's and con's for the stretches you share.

 

Comments

Submitted by AlessioR on Fri, 10/28/2016 - 08:33

Hi again Esther, forgive me if i go personal about some exercising: my neck is going better and better and i'm now exploring the plank exercise on your book, but in this position i notice a significant scapula winging. I'm working on it, but i can't "feel something" yet. I will adress myself on the foundation course, that will work good for sure... meantime got you some tip? Thank you very much, not just for this, but for all the hope and courage you'r giving to all this people!

Submitted by AlessioR on Fri, 11/04/2016 - 12:48

Definitively the answer to my question was in the position of the shoulder blades of the great Iyengar in these pics. Your tip was under my eyes! Thank you !!!

Submitted by TimZ on Sat, 11/05/2016 - 08:36

I'm now 73, and 35 years ago I compromised my L4-L5 disc by carrying a heavy object up a steep hill. An MRI of the disc showed it has a slight bulge that for many years caused either chronic low back pain, or a right Tibialis Anterior spasm that would wake me from a sound sleep. During all those years I've seen Ortho MDs, Chiros, PTs, Acupuncturists, etc. Most were helpful, none delivered permanent cures, not even 25 hours spent over several weeks in a DRX-9000 spinal decompression machine - although that machine provided the most relief. Two years ago, while rehabbing a glute medius tendonopathy, quite by accident I discovered a permanent cure: using a gym workout machine that simply strengthened my back muscles - especially lumbar area back muscles. In all those years of seeing medical practitioners, NO ONE ever mentioned BACK MUSCLE STRENGTHENING exercises!!! It's also missing in the list of interventions in the first paragraph above. Of course mine is just an "N=1" experience that may not be generally applicable, but back muscle strengthening seems to be a missing element that many medical practitioners seem to overlook. That's a tragedy. (FWIW, the machine I use is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwHMvmKcrU0 ).

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