If you're a committed weight trainer, chances are you're either stretching a lot already or think you should be stretching more. Historically, stretching has been considered one of those "does no wrong" activities, one that's been largely overlooked by virtually everyone outside of a yoga studio.
But over the last two decades or so, people have started to figure out that stretching isn't quite the holy grail of healthy training. We've learned that stretching should be implemented strategically and not just at any time, that different stretching modalities like static, dynamic, and PNF stretching have different effects, and that using the wrong type of stretch can do more harm than good.
In summary, we've come to realize that stretching is limited in its use, and is not the panacea that every perky girl in form fitting yoga pants would have us believe. And with that, I'm here to deliver the coup de grâce.
Impressively Formal Disclaimer: All information provided in this article is directed at neurologically intact and asymptomatic individuals. Clinical populations should consult with their therapist before implementing the approaches advocated in this article.
For those not quite up to date with the advances in our knowledge of stretching, here's the short version.
In line with these findings, the idea that stretching is good and more of it is better, has been replaced with the advice that we should do dynamic stretching before training and static stretching after. The dynamic stretching is intended to increase mobility and the static stretching to increase flexibility.
Moreover, it's generally accepted that we don't have to stretch every single muscle – only those that are excessively shortened as a result of training or daily activities.
This is fundamentally wrong.
To understand why, first look at what happens when you stretch a muscle. Broadly speaking, there are three mechanisms by which range of motion, passive or active, can be increased:
The following is what really happens to the above properties when you stretch a muscle:
Depending on the amount of stretching, viscoelasticity returns to baseline within about 10 minutes after two minutes of stretching; or 20 minutes after 4-8 minutes of stretching; or an hour after some seriously hardcore yoga.
As this is neural learning, like memorizing words, this is a more permanent adaptation. However, the increased stretch tolerance is lost over time and can be reinforced by repetition, much like words are gradually lost from memory and reinforced by repetition.
When you stretch a muscle, no permanent structural adaptations take place. All you do with most stretching programs is teach the nervous system that it's okay to relax the muscle a bit more when stretched.
Most of the neural adaptation actually is an increase in pain tolerance. Any increases in range of motion still present the day after the stretching are due to purely neural adaptations.
Let me emphasize for effect: You can't increase a muscle's length by stretching it.
This, of course, has far reaching implications for the use of stretching in flexibility training, warming up, and postural correction.
If you're stretching to get more flexible or mobile – I won't distinguish between the terms – its success is determined on your exact goal.
Doing just any hamstring stretch won't increase hamstring length, so it'll have limited carry-over to other hamstring stretches. You need to define exactly why you want to become more flexible, taking into account that your body's adaptations to the stretching will follow the specificity principle.
For bodybuilders, flexibility training is only useful to improve range of motion in exercises that you want to do, but currently can't do with full ROM. As per the specificity principle, you should make the stretches mimic the desired movement as closely as possible.
For example, if you want to be able to move in your grip on back squats or use a clean grip for front squats, you should just get under the bar and force your hands into position. Try to approximate the desired position and hold.
Low-intensity static stretching like this – just uncomfortable, not painful – is as effective or even more effective than harder stretching. The optimal duration seems to be about 30 seconds, after which very little further adaptations take place.
If you want to increase your ROM in a movement, like squats, the most effective way is simply to do the exercise. Ironically, it's often the most ardent haters of isolation exercises that prescribe isolation stretches for this purpose.
However, contrary to stretching, resistance training can also increase muscle length. The key is to strengthen the muscle eccentrically in its lengthened position.
If someone has short hamstrings, doing good mornings or Romanian deadlifts is more effective than any possible amount of stretching.
As for progression, you should be able to perform most strength movements within a couple sessions. If after two months of frequent stretching you still can't perform a movement, you likely have poor technique, a muscle imbalance, or soft-tissue restrictions.
If you've ruled out all of the above and are still too inflexible, you've reached your genetic flexibility limit. It's far easier and much more common than reaching your muscular potential. Some people will just never be able to squat to parallel.
Based on the findings listed in the introduction, static stretching before your training sessions is a very bad idea. Dynamic stretching is also unnecessary, though some of the most effective warm-up drills are dynamic stretches.
According to the specificity principle, you should remember what it is you're preparing your body for during the warm-up. Activate the muscles that need activating, do a few compound dynamic stretching drills, and start on your main movement. Sometimes it's enough to just do the warm-up sets of the movement you're preparing for.
Whatever you do, you should normally be done with it in less than five minutes. Warm-ups are overrated, and the empirical evidence that extensive warm-ups enhance performance or decrease injuries is weak. Furthermore, evolutionarily speaking, it just wouldn't make sense if humans needed long warm-ups.
Forget everything you think you know about tight and loose and weak muscles. Posture is mostly a result of neural programming – the relative activation of all muscles in your body determines your posture.
Stretching and strength training have repeatedly shown to have no or weak effects on posture. This makes sense, because stretching doesn't actually improve muscle length and can thus only affect posture through its neural effects.
Strength training and correction of muscular imbalances can also help, but in reality very little maximal strength is required to maintain optimal posture. Tangentially, there's also no scientific consensus on what constitutes optimal posture or muscle length.
What determines a person's posture then? By and large, lifestyle. Sports, strength training, and stretching all affect posture, but duration is far more important than magnitude regarding posture, and all such activities are thus dwarfed by your lifestyle.
It's not uncommon to see professional athletes exhibit amazing biomechanics during their performance, yet atrocious posture in daily life. This is because of the body's amazing ability to adapt in a task-specific manner.
So, if you want to improve your posture, forget about stretching and strength training. You're already achieving all you can in that respect if you follow a decent program. The real key is mind over matter. Just as when trying to lose a tic, you must become aware of it and then correct it. Repeatedly. For a long time.
In time, your posture will improve.
Soft-tissue work can also help, especially if something is really out of whack, but in the end it's mostly about neural programming. If you want to correct your posture, you'll need to just adopt the desired posture until it becomes automatic.
Stretching is one of the great myths of the fitness industry. The facts are in, the jury has deliberated, and the verdict is clear: the usefulness of static stretching is severely limited.
Perhaps it's best to abandon the term completely, since nothing is permanently stretched out during stretching. For future use, I propose we call it stretch tolerance development, or STD for short. (Or was that acronym already taken?)
Anyway, let no Testosterone-fueled man henceforth subject himself to more than five minutes of this tedious activity per day.
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