The Hidden RISK of Stretching That No One Tells You About!

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  • Опубліковано 26 гру 2024

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  • @hokiepokie
    @hokiepokie Рік тому +313

    I have the exact opposite problem, haha. Years of heavy powerlifting made my muscles strong but also tight and inflexible. It also taught me to hold my breath during the most difficult moments. Yoga is an amazing way to balance out the heavy strength training I do, just like a little strength training will be an amazing balance to flexible yogis :)

    • @gyffjogofl7676
      @gyffjogofl7676 Рік тому +2

      Me too

    • @syrus3k
      @syrus3k 11 місяців тому +3

      What gets me every time is just how bloody hard yoga is lol

    • @CursedWheelieBin
      @CursedWheelieBin 10 місяців тому +5

      It’s not actually your muscles that are tight.
      It’s the membrane (fascia) around them that tightens up, in order to hold them in place, because your brain knows that you’re only strong within whatever your bench/squat/deadlift range of motion is.
      It’s also why certain powerlifters develop that walk as though they’re carrying watermelons under each arm. No, it’s not because they’re lats are heuuuge.
      I noticed when I increased my range of motion that that Frankenstein walk went away

  • @LauraWellsFitness
    @LauraWellsFitness Рік тому +356

    So glad you made this video. I struggled for years with hamstring and hip issues and kept stretching my hamstrings thinking that was the issue. After a pretty serious hamstring strain teaching kickboxing class I couldn't walk, sit or stand without pain. Finally went to a really great physical therapist and he told I needed to focus on strength for my hamstrings and that's changed everything. He also mentioned he saw yoga instructors all the time for "yoga butt." Love your content!

    • @neilhughes3823
      @neilhughes3823 Рік тому +10

      Same for me, just substitute karate for kickboxing and I ended up with the same injury. It took months to heal properly.

    • @bonsiecat9858
      @bonsiecat9858 Рік тому +10

      Oh my god... i thought that it was just me experiencing this "yoga butt" I thought that I had torn my hamstring muscle while doing my splits...

    • @HYPOXiX
      @HYPOXiX Рік тому +6

      Strengthen and stretch at the same time, that’s the only way for a body optimization

    • @savage.4.24
      @savage.4.24 Рік тому +4

      Happened to me at 16. Im now 33 and it did take AWHILE for it to recover

    • @Padraigp
      @Padraigp Рік тому +1

      Totally. I tried years of stretching my hams and made nó progress and then I started instead to strengthen ...immnotnsure exactly whatnits called but instead of stretchingnthe back of my leg i was pushingnthe frontnof my leg upwards...at first on the ground pressing against my hands for resistance and then standing up lifting my leg up as we had done in ballet Years ago. And suddenly with the front being strong the back was able to relax and not be taking all the weight. I didnt realise how weak the front of my legs were. A few weeks of that did more for my has relaxing and being able to stretching and elongate than Years of stretching ever did. I also strengthened my butt and other things along the way and now if I want to stretching something instead of that I do the opposite and push to strengthen the opposite muscle i guess. It worked for My shoulders too. I wanted to stretch it the way my other arm would stretch and actually just pressing in the opposite direction and strengthening the outside muscle helped the others to relax and become normal. Unfortunately my physio didnt give me those and the ones he gave me were stretching at the very point which was so weak and so tight and it didnt help at all.

  • @esvedra2419
    @esvedra2419 Рік тому +17

    The yoga teachers I follow keep emphasising to never push or pull muscles pass the edge. Yoga is a brilliant and safe practice if you leave the ego behind.

  • @samday6621
    @samday6621 Рік тому +84

    Finding the balance between strength/flex, challenge/restorative, up/down, needs to be focused on with each pose, every moment….while clearing your head of any other thoughts…..it’s tricky.

  • @bunterakete
    @bunterakete Рік тому +194

    I remember Adriene mentioning to not always keep your legs completely straight when stretching the hamstrings, because then all the "pull" is on the ends of your muscles. Instead she suggested bending the knees a little because that supposedly stretches the mid part of the muscle. Not sure if that is actually true, but what you said reminded me of that. Super interesting, thank you!

    • @thenayancat8802
      @thenayancat8802 Рік тому +8

      I don't think that can be true, the muscle and tendon are each single pieces that are connected; you can't really tension just one part of that

    • @shaylorcyclingwahoo
      @shaylorcyclingwahoo Рік тому +37

      That’s more to do with not stretching the sciatic nerve. When the legs are straight you’ll feel the pull down the whole leg into the calf. That’s the sciatic nerve. Bending the knee isolates the hamstrings, but not specifically the mid muscle.

    • @MattMcConaha
      @MattMcConaha Рік тому +1

      ​@@thenayancat8802 I'm not going to say this is the case because I don't know the physiology well enough. But hypothetically if bending your joint (knee) allows your muscle (hamstring) to be less firmly pressed against the bone (femur), then there could be less friction between the bone and muscle, and such friction difference would change the evenness of the stretch within the muscle.

    • @thenayancat8802
      @thenayancat8802 Рік тому

      @@MattMcConaha That would probably mean more of the stretch in the middle, rather than the ends

    • @FrekeOne
      @FrekeOne Рік тому +4

      Bending forward with straight knees gave me a knee injury. Now I always bend the knees a little.

  • @gabyintothewild
    @gabyintothewild Рік тому +143

    I learned I was suffering from yoga butt thanks to one of your Instagram post about this a few years ago, and you even answered to my comment and recommended I started strength training... which was the beginning of my fitness journey! You changed my life Liv, keep being awesome 😊❤✨

    • @Livinleggings
      @Livinleggings  Рік тому +19

      That’s amazing, I am so so happy to hear that 🥰🥰🥰

    • @makarov9480
      @makarov9480 Рік тому +1

      ​@@Livinleggings i strech hips after workout, but after like a hour after workout they again tight, are my hips weak and not tight?

    • @JustAPingwin
      @JustAPingwin Рік тому +3

      @@makarov9480 depends, are you only stretching your hip? Are you doing the stretch correctly? Aren't you overstretching? Do you dtrenghten your hip regularly? Keep in mind, muscles can tighten when too weak or at an incorrect posture for extensive amount of time. If you are experiencing pain and such see a physiotherapist.

    • @colecoleman1499
      @colecoleman1499 Рік тому

      So we shouldn't stretch hamstring at all .I am a runner and find upavishta konasana after a run a must do for hams.

    • @makarov9480
      @makarov9480 Рік тому

      @@colecoleman1499 i notice after jogging my hamstrings more tight, and my back pain is worse should i stop cardio?

  • @bebe4choco
    @bebe4choco Рік тому +94

    Thank you for highlighting this.. actually in ashtanga (traditional) training (I’ve been a practitioner for over 7 years), we always put an emphasis on strength of the quads and engaging the calf muscles and we always bring awareness to protecting the hamstrings.. for beginners, my mentors taught me this and now I try my best to pass it on to my students is staying longer in poses like utkattasana (chair pose), warriors, uttita hasta padangushtasana (hand to big toe one leg balance)
    It’s always about finding that point connecting balance, strength and flexibility and never over stretch… also in iyengar philosophy, over stretching or obsessing about flexibility is a form of ego that we need to get rid of first before we are ready to embrace the yoga path

    • @mereen750
      @mereen750 Рік тому +1

      How are you going to get more flexible if you don't push the limit. What makes you more flexible is muscles breaking apart from stretching

    • @evadamole
      @evadamole Рік тому +10

      @@mereen750 That's what I thought, and I went as hard as I could, pushing my limits, so that I'd get my splits for a performance. It just resulted in not being able to stretch at all for a few weeks after said performance, and then I had to be super careful in positions that were way more shallow than where I'd initially started. I eventually got my splits again a few years later through strengthening and gentle stretches every other day at most, and I've been able to maintain my flexibility ever since.
      I was easily the most flexible person at my yoga teacher training, and luckily, our trainers emphasized engaging muscles especially in certain deep asanas. We were also encouraged to slowly come out of positions that felt uncomfortable or "wrong" - so many teachers will tell yogis and yoginis to just keep going deeper and harder and breathe into the pain, no matter how bad. In my experience, it's important to listen to our own bodies. Sometimes during my practice, I stay in a shallow position or do the "easier" version of a stretch because that's what my body needs that day.

    • @sebastienmariat3299
      @sebastienmariat3299 Рік тому

      Well said❤

  • @Holly_Unleashed
    @Holly_Unleashed Рік тому +99

    I had the same injury from a very popular, IG influencer yoga teacher physically PUSHING down on me while in the same pose. It took me a year and a half to heal!

    • @piiinkDeluxe
      @piiinkDeluxe Рік тому +3

      Is she actually licensed?

    • @Holly_Unleashed
      @Holly_Unleashed Рік тому +3

      @@piiinkDeluxe Yes, a top yoga teacher in Los Angeles

    • @piiinkDeluxe
      @piiinkDeluxe Рік тому +6

      @@Holly_Unleashed damn. I'm sorry that happened to you!

    • @luchirimoya
      @luchirimoya Рік тому +10

      ​@@Holly_Unleashed she should get her license revoked then, or at least a very bad review from you, sorry that happened :/

    • @DiamondsRexpensive
      @DiamondsRexpensive 3 місяці тому +4

      ​@@Holly_UnleashedGirl say the name. Say it. It could save someone out there.

  • @Ricardojoglar
    @Ricardojoglar Рік тому +9

    I’m pro damcer and your knowledge has helped a lot. Years ago, a dancer routine comprised a lot of misunderstandings, empirical wrong concepts, overstretching, no lifting, etc…a lot of injuries, traumatic and chronical, were caused by all that. Thanks God things have been chamged and you play a special
    role, thank you

    • @ashley-fk6dp
      @ashley-fk6dp Рік тому +1

      hey i apologise in advance for being long winded .just read your comment im a 33 year old male ..when i was 21 and a half i got into a modern dance academy it was my goal to become a dancer ...the main method they used to train us was ballet ..so i did loads of ballet classes beginner classes and advanced classes all day long mate prior to me getting into this academy i had no no previous experience in anything athletic or dance related none i just happened to have good proportions and i was slim and posessed a modicum of potential but i lacked mobillity and flexibility and had no idea how to train my body i jusr copied the typical stretching excersises modern and ballet dancers do .did abdominal excersises yoga and pilates plus the classes..... i never really managd to get flexible and mobile enough for a dancer or any other type of athlete for that matter that requires flexibility i developed problems in my kness right elbow and wrist ...ligament damage in my right knee and right ankle specifcly ...plus back issues ....as for my career i only made it as far as semi proffesional before injurys issues with concentration and performance anxiety brought me down ....im sorry if its daft to ask you via the youtube comment setction but there are so many different training modalitys for strength slash flexibility ,mobility and injury rehab .. i find the sheer variety overwhelming how should i go about trainng and treating my body ? because its so exauhsting figuring out how to train around injurys .. what would you do in my position ?

    • @Ricardojoglar
      @Ricardojoglar Рік тому

      @@ashley-fk6dp Hi, I do apologize for this extra late reply. So..,a LOT of dancers have these injuries, as athletes do. I would suggest you look for a physiotherapist, one who deala with athletes in pro clubs, their abilities and knowledge are daily put to test as they deal with all possible injuries caused by different sports, some very tough to heal, what is better than being treated by those who deal with average public. Rest, eat healthier, take timw to be healed and you’ll be ok: I went through that many times (plus being a dancer, I sail, climb and swim), so you can guess how many injuries…) and it works. This channel is fantastic, keep watching and you’ll be fine!

    • @ashley-fk6dp
      @ashley-fk6dp Рік тому

      @@Ricardojoglar thank you very much

  • @farrahlipsham5533
    @farrahlipsham5533 Рік тому +28

    Yes! It’s all about BALANCE 😊
    I was the opposite, I was mainly a strength exercise person so would get injuries from not relaxing and stretching out my muscles! Now I’ve added yoga and mobility I haven’t had any injury in YEARS.
    Vary our exercise just like our diets for the best health ❤

  • @alidolally4851
    @alidolally4851 11 місяців тому +2

    Fellow instructor here - altho much older than you. Been a FitPro for 40 years and now specialise in Healthy Ageing - alongside my regular and very varied work. May I complement you. Just found you via some happy algorithm and I’m so impressed with your knowledge & competence. I’ve learned , re- learned and been reassured of my own competency and currency from you - plus you’re a joy to listen to and inspiring to observe!
    Thank you 🙏🏼🤗

  • @rimaalsekait
    @rimaalsekait Рік тому +16

    OMGGGGG!!! I am just starting my stretching / mobility journey and this video has saved me some "potential" injuries! I am binging on your channel right now! Great great content!

  • @KristinChronicles
    @KristinChronicles Рік тому +2

    7:14 ~ strengthening movement/ exercise recommendations

  • @Kaska_W
    @Kaska_W Рік тому +10

    I'm glad you speak out loud about body dysmorphia 💙

  • @mrsbootsworkouts
    @mrsbootsworkouts Рік тому +29

    I am 47, and about 2 years ago I watched some youtube videos on how to do a straddle split, and was trying to get into straddle split. I ended up injuring my hips :) Luckily, I have recovered now, and am continuing my journey at my own pace :)

    • @HYPOXiX
      @HYPOXiX Рік тому +4

      Needs to be slow and controlled!

  • @cinnamongirl3070
    @cinnamongirl3070 Рік тому +10

    Love my yoga practice, but couldn't imagine just doing yoga without also lifting, walking/hills, hiking. Glad you made this video to bring awareness to more people.

  • @Alice_Walker
    @Alice_Walker Рік тому +7

    Thank you, I've been doing yoga on and off for over a decade and I've never heard anyone talk about this. Going from here to a hamstring strengthening video!

  • @nicoleflo
    @nicoleflo Рік тому +7

    So important!!
    For me it was when I started ballet as a teenager and - as a very non-flexible person - stretched for my splits every day. With NO knowledge of needing to strengthen also.

  • @beto.aveiga
    @beto.aveiga Рік тому +12

    I don't do yoga, but I'm a soccer fan. I was doing stretches for my hamstrings stiffness and it wasn't getting better at all. This video you made makes sense. I started to workout functional, with different exercises and it has improved my hamstrings. Both stretching and strengthening must be made regularly and carefully to avoid injuries. Thanks for the video!

  • @thenayancat8802
    @thenayancat8802 Рік тому +2

    Great to look at mobility exercises (flexibility with strength in the full range of motion) rather than just flexibility/stretching.

  • @gabrielapessoa255
    @gabrielapessoa255 Рік тому +10

    thank you so much for this video! I had this exact problem last year because I only stretched and didn't do any strength training. I ended up having to do months of physiotherapy and couldn't do yoga for a long time. now I no longer feel the pain and I balance yoga with weightlifting at the gym, with lots of exercises focused on the hamstrings. and for a long time I didn't know what it was and nobody talked about it, so thank you again for sharing this, lov your channel!

  • @tami.41
    @tami.41 Рік тому +4

    I had this exact thing TWICE! It happened while stretching in dance class at drama school. I got the injury on one side and six months later on the other side. It took forever to heal and I lost a lot of flexibility. I never understood why it happened because both times I was warmed up properly and I had done these stretches before. So thank you for this video! It explained a lot!

  • @casuarinagirl8067
    @casuarinagirl8067 Рік тому +17

    Wow! Thank you so much. I am 55 and I have always followed my own intuition in terms of exercise after learning the basics. The last six months or so I felt the need to move in a way that incorporates the things you were talking about. I try to always listen to my body and it sees me moving jumping, sometimes picking up some weights and generally looking quite weird, but I move in a way that makes me feel good. This was so interesting Thanks for sharing 💪🏻🥰

  • @chris-yw4yp
    @chris-yw4yp Рік тому +5

    At last! Someone who said the truth about how to train your muscles properly. Im very happy that you share it!
    I have been at that situation and i found the solution after 1 year of wondering, searching and visiting physiotherapists.
    You cannot do strength or stretching only, to save time. The recipe is simple. Strength + Stretch = good habits for health body. You have to do both...

  • @hehunches
    @hehunches Рік тому

    You're a gem, ehlers danlos guy, hypermobile yet locked up by scar tissue. I love the way you opened up about your journey. Inspiring. I think life should not be so painful.

  • @vroomzy1
    @vroomzy1 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for the clarification of stretching vs strengthening and how we need both. I'm a runner and have recently done a couple of your videos and like how I'm much less stiff. But this cautions me to not neglect the strengthening exercises. Great video

  • @DoodleBoon
    @DoodleBoon Рік тому +2

    Your channel made me start working on strength late last year! You literally saved my butt thank you!!!!!

  • @veganchambers6281
    @veganchambers6281 Рік тому +8

    I cannot thank you enough for this video , literally I have this problem right now , trying to get a forward split thinking my hamstring needs more stretching ! Wandering why it’s always a niggling pain. Off to do more research. Great content definitely my favourite yoga influencer 👍 honest sound realistic advice

  • @ymmm-yogamovementmeditatio9507

    You are pointing out what many of us have discovered. The teacher who got me into strength training was Kathryn Bruni-Young. She experienced exactly the same thing. Some in the yoga world are in an "unbridled pursuit of flexibility", as Leslie Kaminoff said!

  • @tammyjones8894
    @tammyjones8894 Рік тому +2

    I am so glad you made us aware of this condition because my hamstrings were becoming so flexible to the point where I was thinking am I over doing this. I get injured easily as well and so I backed off with the hamstring stretches and would like to think just in time!

  • @ianmcgraw5873
    @ianmcgraw5873 Рік тому +1

    I've had this in my left hip for like 2 years on and off and I could never figure out what it was!! Thank you for sharing this!!

  • @samrarizwan2249
    @samrarizwan2249 4 місяці тому

    i am a seventh class student and i am not much flexible but seeing your videos i feel confident and in a week by seeing your videos i can definitly feel that i have improved thank you really really much for the perfect guidance

  • @charliedarejackson108
    @charliedarejackson108 4 місяці тому

    Love this. Hamstring injuries have a lot to do with, quad, hip flexor and glute strength and flexibility.

  • @JohnsonSmithson
    @JohnsonSmithson Рік тому +4

    Excellent video. I've restarted doing the 3 stretches to reach the toes you've showed. Today I've finally been able to touch my toes sitting with my legs straight and I'm almost doing it standing up. Thanks a lot!

  • @tatumthetater-tot9556
    @tatumthetater-tot9556 10 місяців тому

    This advice is actually very important. I watched this before my daily stretching for the splits, and was going into it thinking I knew the risks. I guess I didn't. I am now stuck way further off the ground. I am also an Irish dancer and can't kick over my waist without a lot of pain. Make sure you are actually aware.

  • @pansatsujin
    @pansatsujin Рік тому

    That was the final argument against not doing RDLs.
    Thanks for sharing your experience!

  • @JaguarNZ45
    @JaguarNZ45 Рік тому +4

    Omg! I'm an ex ballet dancer that is continuing with yoga and yep, this sounds all to familiar! thank you so much for raising a discussion on this and clarifying!❤👏👏

  • @deej9697
    @deej9697 Рік тому

    Today I watched some of your videos and am now a subscriber. What is significant to me is that you are not only very knowledgeable, but you seem to be sincerely interested in the success of the audience.
    I detect no pride saying “Look at how strong, flexible, and in shape I’m in.”
    Or, that horrible attitude sometimes seen in instructors that says “I am going to kick your butt into shape!!! I don’t care how much it hurts!!!”

  • @connieyoga8267
    @connieyoga8267 Рік тому +1

    I went through the same thing years ago and no one really knew how to help me either! It took about 5 years for me to fix it bc I didn't know what to do!! Finally I realized that I needed to strengthen and man did that feel better. Now I limit the amount of forward folds I teach and try to add in posterior strength. Thank you for posting!!

  • @armenalexanian
    @armenalexanian Рік тому

    Great video! So many people, including me, overdo exercise and/or make unwise movements in an effort to "self-improve" or for gains of some kind. First, do no harm. Second, start slowly and progress gently. The body is like a huge ocean vessel, not like a race car. It responds slowly, gradually, over time.

  • @karlistapr
    @karlistapr Рік тому +2

    Had this injury 2 years ago and went to several physicians and no one could actually tell me what was happening 😢 I stopped stretching and it went away but luckily, at the same time, I started strengthening my hamstrings 😅 I’m fine now

  • @LillahSchwartz
    @LillahSchwartz Рік тому +3

    SO nice to see another teacher pointing to this short coming of yoga. My own 40 year yoga teaching career has let me see many loose their yoga butt and need to get it back again. I recommend much of what you have here, and also picked up a few good tips to add to my tool box as a yoga therapist working with hips challenges. thanks! Love your British accent.

  • @yogiyogi3090
    @yogiyogi3090 9 місяців тому

    I am 63 years old and have been practicing yoga for 8 years. I wish I had found this video years ago… I was so into yoga and pushed myself to the edge like some kind of competition. As a result, I got a bad hamstring tendonitis on my left thigh 6 months ago… The pain is finally gone but my left thigh is not as stretchy as before. Now, I am learning not only avoiding over-stretching but also my big EGO on yoga. It is so disappointing that I can not do some poses that took me for years to learn, but trying to take this injury experience as a part of my yoga journey and be gentle on my body and soul.

  • @MR-AK
    @MR-AK 2 місяці тому

    I've been an active athlete and I can tell you this girl is legit! Great work 🎉

  • @biatles
    @biatles 7 місяців тому

    Fell in love with Yoga June 2023, been doing it 5 times / week. 8 months in, I heard a pop on my knee during a low lunge (Ashva Sanchalanasana pose).. got a knee bursitis on my medical collateral ligament, which was caused by weak hips / gluteus medius. I'm now really struggling to fix this, whenever I feel that I'm recovered it comes back! Thank you for this video, it does show I need to put much more efforts in strength training

  • @littlegraysparrow
    @littlegraysparrow Рік тому +1

    I injured my right hamstring in yoga as well. Found out I came really close to completely tearing the tendon. I approach all forms of exercise in a much more gentle and balanced way now.

  • @yvettebjorne3731
    @yvettebjorne3731 2 місяці тому +1

    Oh, your such a smart cookie!! I haven't really been thinking because I used to be SO flexible. Now, after years of injury, I wasn't thinking. I should have just been able to jump right back into where I was, right? Wrong! Thank you for this advice. Frankly, I shouldn't have needed it! I can't wait to see my progress If I take what you're saying into consideration. Thank you!

  • @derekcraig3617
    @derekcraig3617 Рік тому

    Solid research has demonstrated that we should only stretch until we feel resistance wherever that is on a given day. Just because on most days we can touch our toes doesn't mean we should push through pain to touch our toes on days where we have less ROM.

  • @Jahefe13
    @Jahefe13 Рік тому

    I like you , get obsessed with knowledge in a given situation . Then I search for people with that knowledge. When I find the right person after time , they always feel like an old friend ,like you, Thank you !

  • @chibithemyy
    @chibithemyy Рік тому +4

    Holy moly, I've NEVER heard of this! I'm definitely adding streghtening excercises to my routines. It's quite difficult for me to recognise when my hamstring is doing the work and when the glutes, so thank you for the tips!

  • @marianapiresbr
    @marianapiresbr Рік тому +14

    This is so great! Thanks Liv! Now I understand what happened to me like 10 years ago! For me, instead of yoga it was dance (ballet and contemporary). I've been struggling with finding a balance between different training forms, but I can't deny anymore that strength training is a life saver, with fairly quick results too. This time it's my knees that are reminding me of that 😬. Thanks again for all your content!!

  • @galitshomronilevin1504
    @galitshomronilevin1504 Рік тому +15

    Thank you, Liv! I love your videos. I'm a Pilates and Qigong instructor, but I use a lot of exercises from yoga and other methods because I believe no one method is "the best".
    As my clients mainly come to my studio (only some of them run or walk), I introduce different exercises in my sessions in the hope of opening their minds and bodies to the importance of not doing just one thing over and over again...
    I love your thorough explanations - I completely resonate with them, and they enrich my teaching method!

  • @devinreed5725
    @devinreed5725 Рік тому +1

    This is why I enjoy vinyasa flow. Much more isometric moves. I suffer from this hamstring issue. Romanian deadlifts is how you fix it.

  • @jennfilice1212
    @jennfilice1212 Рік тому +2

    So glad I found this video. I’ve been struggling with a pain in my butt for the last 2 years. Not sure how it came about as I wasn’t doing yoga at the time. But after 2yrs of doing yoga and stretching it’s still there which is frustrating. So I’m glad I found this and am going to give strengthening a try.

  • @forgivence1
    @forgivence1 Рік тому

    For somebody who has a hamstring that is pulled currently and missing a day of work. This video is such a blessing. Waiting to battle and make more recipes with my dragons and watch videos on hamstrings this is a good day off to recoup.

  • @carolegold8459
    @carolegold8459 Рік тому

    Omg!!! I've had this for years and I've been to physio. They never had any idea what it was or what caused it. Thank you!!!!

  • @mariannabalyta2524
    @mariannabalyta2524 Рік тому +1

    I've had that injury too, and now I finally understand why! Thanks! A really important vid!

  • @b00n15
    @b00n15 Рік тому

    Lengthening AND strengthening the muscle is key. One or the other and you're in for trouble. Im glad youre all right!

  • @adeletate6640
    @adeletate6640 9 місяців тому

    OMG! How validating to hear. About 7 years ago, I heard a snack while doing pigeon prior to a Ashtanga class. It ididnt right away, but I spent two years in agony, the first months in agony. Must have torn my tendon but no one could diagnose it. I kept pointing to my tailbone butt area, and my doctor thought I was weird. I’m 99% ok now but never realized I needed to strengthen my hamstrings til right now!! Thank you 🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @oksanakaido8437
    @oksanakaido8437 Рік тому +1

    I never got yoga butt or any hamstring injuries in my years of doing yoga, but it definitely contributed to ruining my right knee, which now gets inflamed and painful quite easily. These days, I do mostly strength training and I feel such a difference in my body, now that it is both strong AND flexible.

  • @jeniwren56
    @jeniwren56 Рік тому +2

    OMG. I’ve had this for years and didn’t know it until today! Why hasn’t any doctor or physical therapist known this and helped me fix it??? Thanks for shining a light on this!

  • @keithriley9643
    @keithriley9643 Рік тому

    For several weeks I have been experiencing pain in my left buttock when sitting down for more than ten minutes. It is especially bad when driving. I have been doing stretching exercises for a few years and only now do I realise that the stretching may be the cause rather than the cure. Thank you for this video. I shall try to incorporate more strengthening exercises into my routine.

  • @АлександраСудакова-й1х

    Nice, finally somebody spoke out the thing I always see in yoga people

  • @johncrondis4563
    @johncrondis4563 Рік тому +1

    Nice, I came in skeptical but totally agree. I never adopted the only stretching and many stretches yoga styles. I always mix in strengthening and long holds rather than stretch stretch stretch.

  • @01234EP
    @01234EP 29 днів тому

    You and your channel is an absolute Gem! Thank you for this information along with the stretching routines. I greatly appreciate it 🙏

  • @ymmm-yogamovementmeditatio9507

    I started yoga at the age of 35. Before that I did a lot of fitness & weight training. I also enjoyed the stretching sensation that I got from yoga and gave up all the other activities. After about 12 years I got niggling pain in my sacrum and cracking in my hips. I started looking outside the yoga community and found some great people who told me I was overstretching/under-loading my joints. I went back to weight training and sure enough, within a few weeks my pain went away. Now I do a mix of strength training and mobility work. I'm 56 and have no joint pain. I think yoga is best for meditation, breathwork and relaxation

  • @ScottCommon632
    @ScottCommon632 Рік тому

    your videos are absolutely addicting! And with three beautiful young teenage daughters, I can't encourage them enough to follow your videos and follow your path of learning teaching and inspiring!

  • @evb1601
    @evb1601 Рік тому

    Oh, so that's what it's called. Yoga Butt. I remember the day 2 1/2 years ago when I was stretching and I felt something. As you said, it wasn't a big pain. I just felt something and then for over 1 1/2 years I was in pain and had trouble walking. I went to chiropractor practitioners, and massage and did many things myself but nothing helped. After a year, I finally found Dr. Charlie PT here on YT who explained that sometimes the answer is not stretching but strengthening. I've worked on that since and now I am finally back to a pain-free, functioning state where I can walk for hours and not end up in pain. You have, no doubt, helped a lot of people with this video and will help many more. Maybe one called, "What is Yoga Butt" might be a great idea for those that don't watch this. I am now doing your 5 most important strengthening exercises and my left side is still catching up. Thank you so much!

  • @sophiedyck697
    @sophiedyck697 11 місяців тому

    This is thrilling, I might have had this injury years ago and never really fully recovered from it. Shortly, I actually figured out myself, that if I do a certain hamstring strengthening exercise before, stretching them works much better. It would suit the information in this video. Thanks for this educational video!

  • @Claire-cj6nn
    @Claire-cj6nn Рік тому +2

    Yyyyyeeeeessss! Finally someone who adresses the subject. Mobiliiiity! 💞 anterior pelvic tilt during exercises and lack of strength end butt contraction and core strenght. Sad we had to find out the hard way. I experienced it after a lumbar fusion... 12 years ago.. and noooo one figured it out. Not 1 of the 30 physio's.. they kept stretching the thing.. ffs?! THank god things are different nowadays.

  • @87megana
    @87megana 5 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for the warning! I just started yoga and I had no idea this was a danger

  • @gestreifterpulli1541
    @gestreifterpulli1541 Рік тому +1

    Thx. I really love yoga. Hatha is great and dislike ashtanga with the full of my heart. And you are so right, since i lift weights my yoga game changed, altough i did a lot of asanas for strength before too.

  • @nexx410
    @nexx410 9 місяців тому

    That’s a good point. My trainer always said you should never commit to one thing for too long. Switching things up is a good thing

  • @ΓιούληΔημητριάδου-ο1μ
    @ΓιούληΔημητριάδου-ο1μ 10 місяців тому +1

    Hi from Greece.. your Chanel is just amazing.. great explanation for everything we need to know about exercises .. stretching e.t.c...i am impressed 😁 great job 👍..

  • @suelawson7273
    @suelawson7273 Рік тому +8

    This was literally me, for years! It took so long to recover from, because everything you do hits the hamstring at the ischial tuberosity 😭
    Ps, ordered the new yoga mat, it's absolutely great! All my positions stick now, no fear of slipping ❤

  • @steviepii
    @steviepii 5 місяців тому +1

    Online research is so much easier than going to a doctor. It takes time, but that beats blind trust in a doctor. Proper fitness is important. Like she said, be careful of wrong diagnoses from yourself or a doctor. Listen to your body. If pain increases, stop and reevaluate why.
    Lacking core stability while doing squats, deadlifts, and leg presses leads to a herniated disc 😅. Worst pain I've been in. Stretching and going to a chiropractor was the wrong move. Physical therapy helped a bit. Working out and learning on my own has been the primary solution.

  • @felicia9615
    @felicia9615 10 місяців тому

    I’ve been doing splits stretching for a week straight and been really pushing to my limit. This video could have absolutely just saved me from yoga butt! Thank you so much!

  • @plf5695
    @plf5695 9 місяців тому

    I practised yoga for over 25 years.
    Eventually, I abandoned it, when after a neck injury I realised that it could be dangerous and switched to qi gong and tai chi becoming an expert in them.
    The most dangerous are the possibility of slipped disk from seated twists, aggravati9n of cervical spondylitis from asanasa such as the plough, and weakening on the lower back and knee problems.
    Also, although yoga practitioners say that they control breathing, they don't unless they do pranayama, which is very difficult and boring.
    Mentally obsessionsion with yoga or meditation can lead to a holier than thou attitude.
    This said, I still retain and practice some yoga postures, especially the seated ones such as Badda Konasana and the laying down ones that are very beneficial and actually essential.
    All this said, cons and pro. This is a very good, well researched channel by a very likeable lady who is passionate about her subject, Her focus on hips mobility is very useful, which is why I have subscribed.

  • @joanlynn1702
    @joanlynn1702 Рік тому

    Not sure that I’ve had yoga butt…When I started yoga 5 years-ish years ago, I thought my hamstrings were tight and kept stretching. I thought working on my splits would help and it didn’t. I realized my glutes muscles were weak and my hips were tight. When I worked on strengthening my butt and loosening my hips, I was able to achieve the splits. Your slide and glide videos were icing on the cake and now I’m super Gumby or my hubby’s description of my flexibility which has gone up 10 notches because of you. Thank you, Liv for sharing your knowledge ❤🙏😎

  • @julieyoutu
    @julieyoutu Рік тому

    Your execution of poses, is mind blowing🤌 good for you and thank you for taking us along your journey🤗❣️

  • @yehofcourse399
    @yehofcourse399 Рік тому +2

    O liv😱...you really saved my life .....

  • @KayleySexton
    @KayleySexton Рік тому

    I got a splits injury just like you! Thanks for sharing. I had to stop stretching for a long time after it.

  • @capricornia_2994
    @capricornia_2994 Рік тому

    I finally understand what happened to me and been looking for solutions. Thank you so much.

  • @kl12017
    @kl12017 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for this video! I finally committed to my Ashtanga practice, and I already suffered from yoga butt. I've been focused on form and alignment, but it's the first video I've seen that talks about the necessity of strengthening exercises. Thanks again!

  • @zzzcocopepe
    @zzzcocopepe Рік тому

    Thank you for warning people about this. I always appreciate good advice

  • @kerryjlynch1
    @kerryjlynch1 Рік тому

    Thank you for posting this informative video. As well as yoga, I've lifted weights & done a lot of running & walking for 40+ years, and have wondered if the variety helped or hurt. Every injury I've had came after ramping up one exercise too quickly.

  • @randomhominid9816
    @randomhominid9816 Рік тому +2

    Thank you so much for calling my attention to this. I just recently started Yoga and haven't really considered injuries. I do other forms of exercise including weight lifting but as it happens I've been neglecting my hamstrings and legs in general. No more though. Also, I think I will be less ambitious on progressing on stretches and take it easy. No hurries, no worries. I don't want setbacks from sport injuries. This was truly a helpful video for me.👍👍

  • @howardtowler6146
    @howardtowler6146 Рік тому

    You make absolute scenes as I am 58 I did 20 years of awkward and very heavy lifting every day all day and now my back has big problems that I try to rectify but at any time it will cause intense pain. 10 years of medicine and two back ops later it is no joke.

  • @lovemesomepollo
    @lovemesomepollo Рік тому

    Thank you for the heads up. So many ways the best-intentioned efforts can produce opposite results if you don't know all the facts.

  • @lauren9373
    @lauren9373 Рік тому

    I've never heard of this, I do a lot of stretching and some strengthening stuff. So glad I heard this now thanks!

  • @Sonia-zq9ek
    @Sonia-zq9ek Рік тому +1

    I had the very exact pop you described about 4 years ago! But in my case was attempting splits right after my weight lifting session (heavy on legs). I immediately went to the physio, he told me to never do intense stretching after weight lifting training (opposites that create risk of injury, of course 🤦🏻‍♀️🤪) and told me to do a few targeted strengthening exercises at home. I read that some people never recover from this sort of injury, so I was rather worried… But in about 2 months the discomfort faded and after half a year I could not even feel it. Nowadays it’s fully back at fit form. You do need to focus on strengthening for sure… Thanks for such an informative video!!💝

  • @meots
    @meots Рік тому +2

    Would PNF stretching help with that too? I injured my hamstring tendons 25 years ago doing martial arts and now 25 years later I still have pain. When I started martial arts all everyone wanted to do was to be able to do the splits and kick head high. I was about as flexible as a 2x4 (still am) and was constantly stretching my hams multiple times a day everyday but wasn’t doing much strength training. Pain got so bad I had to give up martial arts and have cortisone injections. I didn’t know then what I had done (and neither did my doctor) but I do now thanks to you. I’m going to start working on strengthening my hams and hopefully it’s not too late. I mentioned PNF because it seems to have you applying tension to the muscle while stretching. Thank you for such an informative channel. You are a blessing.

  • @turntablesrockmyworld9315
    @turntablesrockmyworld9315 Рік тому +1

    The problem is not that it is "unknown" it is just that yoga people try to suppress all risks of doing the activity. This problem has been known for years and the general advice has ALWAYS been the same; don't stretch without strengthening first, or strengthen more than you stretch. Yoga injuries are common one well-known yoga instructor had spinal degradation of back from doing. It is physical movement, and all movement carries risks. As one well-known back specialist states, the back only has a certain number of bends over a lifetime, so yoga for many will expedite back issues from bending.

  • @50fitness
    @50fitness 8 місяців тому

    As a fitness instructor I’ve always found it strange in yoga/Pilates classes to just start stretching straIght away when the muscles haven’t been warmed up correctly😳 . in my Pilates classes I always do a warm up . I think you videos are fantastic and you deliver them so well. They’re very educational and extremely interesting xx thank you 🙏

  • @stefanie4616
    @stefanie4616 Рік тому

    Thank you so much! I have had this pain for a few month now, since I stopped strengthening the muscles. I can't sit for long periods of time either.
    So glad you explained it so clearly. Grateful greetings fromm Germany.🤗

  • @sanjaychhabra3546
    @sanjaychhabra3546 Рік тому

    I am so glad you made this video. I have had this issue for the last one month and just could not figure out what it was. I thought I knew a lot about strength, flexibility and yoga having done these for years but was stumped with this one. I tried the nerve glide and the three stretches video and in a week it’s gone. Thanks much for doing this video and for the universe to point me to it. Now I am a fan of all your videos. 🙏🏽🙏🏽

  • @okritsky
    @okritsky Рік тому

    Thank you for the warning (safety share)! After whatching the video I'd say it's always a balance in our body of anabolic and katabolic processes. So, stertching - is tearing - katabolic. Thus we need to stimulate anabolic which is almost sleeping without enough of hormones and blood flow (work). Hormones increase when we do strengh exersise (when we strugling with decent tension - e. g. weights lifting) and those hormones can sneak into only active tissue.

  • @mtndncer
    @mtndncer Рік тому +4

    Appreciate this, my 30 years experience practicing Yoga are 21 yr old women teachers NOT doing a thorough warm up....? Every class I teach we do 10 minutes of basic warm up before even getting into downdog, than a simple Sun A but an involved Sun B that almost always includes Skandasana . I'm not an advocate of 60 minute classes but teach on occasion. The warm up takes a solid 30 minutes, than we have to warm down so how much time does that leave for Yoga in a 60 minute class? Sure I could skimp on the warm up but than I feel I'd be putting my students in harms way. Appreciate your knowledge & action as I've seen a lot of VERY, VERY knowledgeable teachers NOT do a proper warm up. Thanks for sharing & helping keep our yogis safe!!

  • @BlissologyYoga
    @BlissologyYoga Рік тому

    Oh, I’ve been working a book for the last ten years that gives people tools and insights into how not to let this happen. I’ll put you on the list to get you a copy. It’s my mission to educate people to make yoga help and not harm

  • @thewhaleinside
    @thewhaleinside Рік тому

    o my god, i messed up my hamstrings exactly the same way you did. stretching for about two years, almost daily, i got able to do splits, touch knees with my head, straight legs. now, sitting with my legs wide, i can touch my left knee with my forehead, but cant touch right toe with my hand. hope the hamstring strengthening will help a bit. thank you for your videos, very helpful