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FLEXIBILITY vs STRETCHING
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January 10, 2006
FLEXIBILITY vs STRETCHING

In general, we all have the impression that flexibility = stretching. That flexibility is just as simple as stretching your muscles in order to lengthen them to get a bigger range of motion. We misconceive that after stretching, we can relax our muscles, and by doing this, prevent ourselves from injuries. This is what we have been taught, educated by press, articles and books in the fitness field. There is a long-standing misunderstanding about what flexibility and stretching are all about. Flexibility, ("flex" means "bend", or ability to bend) as a bio-motor capacity, is the ability of your joints to bend during body movement. This is provided by three elements: joint mobility, elasticity of tendons and ligaments, and ability of our muscles to relax, which allows us to increase their anatomical length.

Mobility of joints is something we mostly inherit, so development of joint mobility is a difficult task. The situation with ligaments and tendons is better, because of their ability to increase their length through elasticity. However, there is a limit to both elements because of their autonomy from brain influence, which cannot regulate their state of flexibility. Muscles, on the other hand, are directly connected with the brain and their most important function is to contract and relax. Knowing this, we can assume that we can directly regulate muscle relaxation during movement. The answer is "yes" and "no" at the same time.

We'll return to this notion later to clarify what it means. But now, it is time to talk about stretching. I could not track down the origin of this term and the reason for its association with flexibility, due to the ability of muscles to relax. Perhaps, it came from a visual image of flexibility exercises, where it looks like we are pulling our muscles to make them relax. I don't think our muscles like any violent approach to making them relax. On the contrary, our muscles do not like any special efforts made to lengthen them and react to these attempts by becoming tense; the muscles contract in order to prevent hyperextension, as you can probably recall from your own experience. Nevertheless, millions of people exercise stretching, moving in the wrong direction of damaging their own muscle tissues.

Why don't our muscles work this way? - Because they obey the body’s movement as a whole, where muscle activity and relaxation is used to serve the desired movement. So our muscles contract or relax according to the body’s needs to make this or that movement, but not as an isolated function. When we just "ask" them to relax, by stretching them in a separate movement, they do not understand this action. Our brain does not allow the muscles to stretch independently without their involvement into the movement of the body. Pulling your own muscles is the straight way to injuries or to muscle soreness, at the least.

What would be the best way to develop our flexibility? First of all, do not stretch your muscles - ever. What I propose for this matter, I call, "Action Flexibility". The essence of it is very simple, work with or through your mind. Flexibility is achieved through your muscles and involves them into the movement you want to do. Muscles will, in this case, contract on their own, which will produce the movement, or relaxation in their reciprocal relationship, so that not to resist the movement being performed. Therefore, our brain makes this precise regulation about which muscle is supposed to work and which is supposed to relax. Following this simple logic, we can see, that, as everything in Nature, our ability to relax and flex, depends on how much we can focus on production of the movement, without any consideration of muscle tension, which in flexibility is supposed to relax. Take a simple test by bending forward, keeping the knees straight, in order to touch the floor with your fingers or hands. First, what will cross your mind, will be a concern about the hamstring muscle tension, which gives you a signal that this movement is a dangerous activity. This is normally what your body's and mind's reaction is - a safety issue. But you have to be free from these precautionary reactions and keep your focus on the action (doing) of what you want to do - to bend forward and touch the floor with your fingers. To put simply, worry about touching the floor, not stretching your muscles. Certainly this action requires you to overcome your basic reflex - fear, but this the only true way to develop your flexibility. Do not stretch your muscles - do the action, touch the floor!

Dr.Romanov

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Comments

Dear Michael,
Your guess is right about similarity of action flexibility with exercise where “yoga or similar where movement, breathing and focused mind is essential", but there are some differences as well.
Glen,
We can't teach muscles relax separately from the specific movement. It is something as our performance with a confidence in our known field and loosing confidence in unknown. Muscles tense when exercise is unknown and opposite, when we are familiar with it.


Dr.Romanov

Posted by: Dr.Romanov at January 12, 2006 02:47 PM

I am just a little confused! If we are to increase the ROM of a joint, I would expect that the muscles controlling the joint would need to lengthen, otherwise how would we increase ROM? I understand that "Stretching" the muscles forcibly is incorrect, but will teaching them to relax have the effect of lengthening them?

Posted by: Glyn at January 12, 2006 10:21 AM

Dear Dr. Romanov

Is your view on flexibility vs. stretching then close to Active Isolated Stretching - or perhaps closer in general to the stretching you get in astanga yoga or similar where movement, breathing and focused mind is essential?
yours sincerely
Michael Norman, Denmark

Posted by: Michael Norman at January 11, 2006 09:18 AM

Michael,
it is not wrong to do a flexibility exercise, but not to stretch muscles. You need to have a flexibility - relaxation of your muscles, but not pulling them. I'll try to follow up with some additional article on this matter.
Dr.Romanov

Posted by: Dr.Romanov at January 10, 2006 10:47 PM


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