Ruthless Mobility by Dean Somerset,
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Most people will go to a gym to get stronger, lose weight and feel better. Most flexibility development is left for static stretching, even though the research on static stretching is less than favourable. Let me ask you a simple question: When you stretch, do you notice a big and sustainable increase in the range of motion available through that area? If not, do you think that stretching is actually doing anything or just wasting your time?
Most people approach mobility by doing a few arm circles before bench press, some quad stretches before stretching, and the very unfortunate crossed leg IT band stretch that only works at giving you more sciatic pain. Just like there’s a science to seeing performance improvements, weight loss, and muscle gain, there’s a science to getting more mobility, and it’s incredibly simple to use when you know how to use it.
I’ve trained all types of clients, from office workers to joint replacement patients, to chronic pain and recurrent injury clients, all the way up to pro and Olympic caliber hockey players, marathon runners and Paralympic athletes. The basic tenets held true across all of these different populations and goal sets, and I’m going to show you not only how they work but also how to make them work for you.
Mobility is something everyone needs to produce a forceful movement, whether that’s bending down to tie your shoes, reach into the top cupboard, or head-faking an opponent on the field to get enough space to make the game winning catch.
Injury prevention involves having a larger usable range of motion, with control from one end to the other. Sport performance involves using more of that range in a powerful and controlled manner. Injury rehab involves restoring healthy ranges of motion and overcoming compensations and hesitations. Each outcome has a different best method to see the desired result and can’t use a shotgun approach. Knowing how to get the best specific results possible will get you the best specific results possible.
Some people are born with the bone and joint alignment to be human versions of Gumby, and some are not. That doesn’t mean you should exist within the confines of a body with less range of motion than a clam. There are quick and easy ways to see massive increases in range of motion, and I want to show them to you.
This seminar goes through the most cutting edge techniques, science and application to increase range of motion without surgery or other invasive procedures. Taking advantage of optimal centration, neural affect, and breathing techniques to target in on limitations, as well as some additional active drills to help speed the process can help take you from stiff as a board to near Van Damme levels of flexibility, all in record time. Did I mention no static stretching required?