Oh, Those Hamstrings with Bob Cooley
How to permanently increase the flexibility of your hamstrings using Resistance Flexibility
Santa Barbara, CA
May 23, 2013
Thursday, May 23rd — 7:00 pm - 9:30 pm Pacific Time
@ Yoga Soup
28 Parker Way
Santa Barbara, CA 93101
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This event is open to all ages, abilities, and levels of experience.
The only prerequisite is an interest.
This is a great way to be introduced to Resistance Flexibility.
About Resistance Flexibility
The Genius of Flexibility introduces the Resistance Flexibility™ (RF) training of Bob Cooley. Resistance Flexibility advances and unites physical therapy, yoga, personal training, psychology, traditional Chinese medicine, and Genetic Personality Type theory.
Resistance Flexibility is a unique, hands-on modality used to develop athletes and performers, rehabilitate the severely and ordinarily injured, and help people of all walks of life achieve their goals. Based on an original biomechanical and energetic analysis of the body and personality, RF achieves unprecedented results.
Course Objective
This workshop is designed to introduce participants to the concepts, principles, and practice of RF. This includes basic self stretches, basic assisted stretches, and an introduction to the physiological, psychological, emotional, and spiritual upgrades that RF can facilitate.
This course includes lots of physical activity, but you work at your own pace. Variations are taught for every exercise allowing people of all ages and abilities to fully participate.
Preview of Concepts Covered
This course will teach you new concepts about flexibility such as...
- Inflexibility is not caused solely by tense muscles, but by the dense fascia and/or scar tissue that has accumulated in and around the muscles.
- You must continuously resist and contract a muscle while lengthening it in order to exceed the tensile strength of the accumulated dense fascia which results in immediate increases in flexibility and strength.
- Most of the increases in flexibility occur when the muscle starts in a position where it is as short as possible and then lengthened, not at the end point of the stretch where the muscle is already fully elongated.
- The flexibility of a muscle is not just limited by its own health and ability, but by the shortening capacity of its balancing muscle group.
- It is commonly thought that simply weight training a muscle increases its ability to shorten, however, the ability of a muscle to shorten is dependent on its resistance flexibility.
- Range of motion does not equate to flexibility. True flexibility includes the health of the tissue and the muscle's ability to continuously and fully contract concentrically, eccentrically, and isometrically throughout that range. Extreme range of motion is often an indicator of hyper mobility potentially leading to instability and damage of the joint structures.
- Stretching is not just a physical activity, but has direct and predictable associations with the physiological, psychological, emotional, and spiritual parts of a person.
- Stretching is not just a solo activity. Maximal results require the participation of others through assisted stretching.
- ...and so much more!
Certification Precursor
This is a great workshop to take before attending a certification course, which provides a deeper learning experience.
Most everyone has made great efforts to increase the flexibility of their hamstrings. Let’s learn how to use Resistance Flexibility to gain significantly greater results at a faster rate. Create immediate, cumulative, and permanent increases in hamstring flexibility and strength using Resistance Flexibility self and assisted exercises.
There are two main reasons why it may be difficult to increase the flexibility of the hamstrings:
- First, you must use Resistance Flexibility while stretching and not simply elongate your muscles. Yanking on your muscles, breathing into them, etc. simply won’t work. In the medical literature, there are hundreds of studies that conclude that yanking on the hamstrings creates scar tissue and joint damage, while Resistance Flexibility significantly increases the functionality of the lower back, hips, knees, and ankles.
- Second, the largest mass of accumulated dense fascia and scar tissue is in the hamstrings compared to everywhere else in the body!
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