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Tag: dynamic stretching

Posted on September 22, 2025

Stretching each day is an integral part of improving your overall health.

elitespinecentres

Stretching each day is an integral part of improving your overall health. Even if you’re not an athlete, stretching provides important benefits for both your mind and body.
Believe it or not, there is a right and wrong way to stretch.
Knowing the differences and understanding the proper technique will help you stay more energized throughout the day and can also improve the flexibility of your joints.

Posted on May 8, 2025

Stretching each day is an integral part of improving your overall health.

elitespinecentres

Stretching each day is an integral part of improving your overall health. Even if you’re not an athlete, stretching provides important benefits for both your mind and body.
Believe it or not, there is a right and wrong way to stretch.
Knowing the differences and understanding the proper technique will help you stay more energized throughout the day and can also improve the flexibility of your joints.

Posted on April 13, 2025

What Texting Does to Your Neck—And 7 Yoga Sequences to Fix It @Yoga_Journal

Yoga Journal

@Yoga_Journal

·

11h

We have a hunch that sitting too much (and staring at your phone) is doing a number on your back and shoulders. Here are 7 sequences that will help you avoid tech neck and hump back.

Posted on March 25, 2025

This sequence emphasizes stretching, strengthening, and improving mobility. #physiotherapy

Yoga-Health  · Follow

sdtoonpSerl44g12t4cal2y0r9mce0Ya4a7a3 0071t3tm:f31 e4ts5f1dt  · 

This image is a visual guide for an Early Morning Yoga routine. It presents seven different yoga poses designed to help start the day with flexibility and relaxation. Each pose includes a recommended hold time (30 seconds) and repetitions (3-5 times). The sequence emphasizes stretching, strengthening, and improving mobility.

Posted on March 19, 2025

This sequence emphasizes stretching, strengthening, and improving mobility.

Yoga-Health  · Follow

sdtoonpSerl44g12t4cal2y0r9mce0Ya4a7a3 0071t3tm:f31 e4ts5f1dt  · 

This image is a visual guide for an Early Morning Yoga routine. It presents seven different yoga poses designed to help start the day with flexibility and relaxation. Each pose includes a recommended hold time (30 seconds) and repetitions (3-5 times). The sequence emphasizes stretching, strengthening, and improving mobility.

Posted on March 18, 2025

What Happens When You Stretch? @Yoga_Journal #runners

For years we were told that we were rubber bands—that if we didn’t stretch we’d turn crusty and snap from disuse. Then we were told that tension was good and that if we were overstretched, we’d be akin to a loose and useless rubber band. And now you might be feeling more like a yo-yo than a rubber band. 

So what’s the actual deal with stretching? What does it do for runners? And when should it be utilized?  Well, that depends on what type of stretching you’re talking about. 

Static vs. Dynamic Stretching

In regards to the rubber band analogy, David Behm, professor in the School of Human Kinetics and Recreation at Memorial University of Newfoundland, describes stretching to be more of a Goldilocks scenario: “You want a tighter but not too tight muscle and tendon,” he says. Static and dynamic stretching serve different purposes in helping your body reach that homeostasis needed to keep running efficiently.  

Static stretching usually involves moving a joint as far as it will comfortably go and then holding it. A static hold can last 30 seconds or more. It’s a very effective way to increase range of motion, relax muscles, and prevent post-exercise stiffness and soreness. Hurdler stretches or kneeling hip flexor stretches are considered static. 

Dynamic stretches are controlled, active movements aimed at helping your muscles rehearse the type of movement they’ll be doing while running. This kind of stretching activates the muscle, causing it to contract and physically warm up. “It also warms up and prepares the nervous system by increasing its activity in anticipation of the activity,” says Behm. Walking lunges, leg swings, and heel to sky pulses are all examples of a dynamic stretch. 

But stretching isn’t just about your muscles and tendons. A study, published recently in the Journal of Physical Activity and Health, found that stretching can also lower blood pressure by physically stretching the blood vessels. The authors found that stretching was more effective in doing so than walking was, a common intervention prescribed for people with hypertension. 

When Should Runners Stretch?

When just fitting the run into your schedule is hard enough, you might be tempted to cut corners in your warm-up and cool-down routines. But here’s why you should consider keeping up stretching. 

Stretching Before a Run

Stretching as part of a warm-up seems to be where the most confusion comes in. It’s a common question: Should you stretch before running? 

Static stretching, when held in long durations, can actually cause you to tense up and get tighter, which is not what you want right before going for a run. “A static stretch would be great if we were about to go hold a static position for an hour. But when we’re running we’re about to go do repeated muscle firing for a set duration. We need to be getting our bodies ready for that physiological movement, not a 30 second static hold,” says Mackenzie Wartenberger, head coach of the University of Wisconsin’s women’s cross country team and assistant track and field coach.

Instead she recommends focusing on dynamic stretches as part of your warm-up routine. The idea is to push your range of motion. “It’s all about pushing right to the point where you can feel it — it should feel a little bit like you’re on the edge of that range of motion—and then immediately backing off,” she says. That process should be repeated three to five times, aiming to go two percent deeper on each repetition. “That contraction or extension depending on what movement you’re doing that’s rapid and repeated, warms your muscles up and it gets your muscles and tendons firing.”

Nell Rojas, a strength and running coach and pro runner herself, agrees that dynamic stretching should be incorporated into the mobility work in a warm-up. “It kind of tricks your muscles, neuromuscularly, to relax,” she says. “You’re not getting any lengthening in your muscles, but your body will be able to relax a little bit.” 

Behm’s research has showed that some static stretching in a warm-up is fine. Some coaches like to incorporate a static hip stretch into the warm-up, for example. “If static stretching is incorporated within a full warm-up, there are trivial effects on performance,” he says. “Static stretching can decrease muscle and tendon injuries, especially with explosive actions, but stretching does not decrease the incidence of all cause injuries.”

YogaJournal.com

Posted on March 13, 2025

This sequence emphasizes stretching, strengthening, and improving mobility.

Yoga-Health  · Follow

sdtoonpSerl44g12t4cal2y0r9mce0Ya4a7a3 0071t3tm:f31 e4ts5f1dt  · 

This image is a visual guide for an Early Morning Yoga routine. It presents seven different yoga poses designed to help start the day with flexibility and relaxation. Each pose includes a recommended hold time (30 seconds) and repetitions (3-5 times). The sequence emphasizes stretching, strengthening, and improving mobility.

Posted on January 11, 2025

Do Down Dog Every Day @Yoga_Journal #stretching

yoga journal learn downward dog

Yoga Journal
@Yoga_Journal
·

6h

Learn how to do Downward-Facing Dog Pose properly for the ultimate full-body stretch.
yogajournal.com
https://www.yogajournal.com/yoga-101/adho-mukha-svanasana
Posted on December 29, 2024

Bump up your energy by bending back – Camel Pose @Yoga Journal

Yoga Journal

@Yoga_Journal
·
38m

Camel Pose, a heart-opening backbend, increases your energy and confidence. Clothing: @CALIAbrand

yogajournal.com
Camel Pose
Bump up your energy by bending back into Camel Pose. Ustrasana counteracts slouching with generous, heart-opening stretch.

Posted on December 5, 2024

What Texting Does to Your Neck—And 7 Yoga Sequences to Fix It @Yoga_Journal

Yoga Journal

@Yoga_Journal

·

11h

We have a hunch that sitting too much (and staring at your phone) is doing a number on your back and shoulders. Here are 7 sequences that will help you avoid tech neck and hump back.

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