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I made this post to share a practice with anyone who might be experiencing muscle pain. I know it's cool to talk about medicines or pills or topical drugs to apply to ease pain, but this post isn't going to be anything like that. I want to share an "awakening" I had into the power of the practice that I'm about to share.

The practice is called Myofascial Release (MFR), which has been known in sports science, and among fitness and physio experts for some time. I don't think it gets enough attention, so I'm going to do my best to talk about it and share it to you in this nutshell.

Essentially, MFR is a practice of self-massage that helps maintain your structural integrity and longevity. By applying sustained pressure to specific points in your muscles (trigger points or knots) you can release restrictions in the fascia, the tissue that wraps around your muscles. When this tissue becomes tight or dehydrated, it can cause pain, limit range of motion, and stunt your ability to move efficiently. Fascia behaves like a spiderweb, so a restriction in your foot can manifest as pain in your knee or lower back.

Lets do this:


Tools:

This practice requires only a few tools that you can pick up for a 1-time investment of about $125:


What The Tools Do:

  • A Foam Exercise Mat: This is your work surface. It needs to be big enough so you can move 2-3 meters on a floor. You can generally get workshop mats that link together and set up a nice square area.

  • A Foam Roller: This is what you're mainly going to use to compress your fascia/muscles. It provides a long thin surface area that is good for wide areas or large muscles, from back, arms, forearms, legs, calves. It is designed for larger muscle groups and flushing out metabolic waste.

  • A 5lb Basketball Medicine Ball: This is what you'll use for more focused compression in specific areas, which can apply to all muscle groups. It can be used for areas requiring broader, deep-pressure weight.

  • A Lacrosse Ball: This will give you the highest compression focus, or for smaller muscle groups (feet, hands, temples, jaw, neck). Its small surface area and high density make it perfect for targeting deep-seated areas where large rollers cannot reach.

  • A Yoga Block: You'll use this to help leverage your body weight.


What to Know:

The practice has a few basic rules:

  • Start gentle if you're new: You will be sore!

  • Use weight and leverage: You're going to focus putting as much of your body weight on your muscles as you can handle. Leverage comes into play here because you need to angle yourself to get the pressure on weird places where you might have pain. Essentially a yoga block can put you up higher so the pressure on a ball or roller can do more work at different angles. You're not always going to be leveraged though, some things work fine without leverage.

  • Apply direct pressure: Find a tender spot and hold. The goal is to sink into the tissue, not rub it rapidly like a massage gun might.

  • Breathe in and out as you do this: Deep, rhythmic breathing helps your nervous system exit "fight or flight" mode while on the tender spot, and allow the muscle to actually relax under the pressure.

  • Spend 45-90 seconds on a specific knot: your goal is to keep pressure applied until the pain abates, or until you feel the tension begin to dissipate.

  • Always stay on soft tissue: Never apply pressure directly over a bone or a joint.

  • Always pay attention to the pain: If you experience sharp, shooting neurological pain (numbness or tingling), stop immediately. You are likely pressing on a nerve, not a muscle. Shift the ball a few millimeters until you find that "hurt-so-good" discomfort characteristic of a tight muscle rather than an aggravated nerve.

  • Combine this with exercise: If you combine this with exercising consistently, you're going to be going places!


The Routine:

My best advice is to adopt a "bottom-up" flow, starting from your feet and working your way toward your head or shoulders. This helps release the tension that travels up your posterior chain.

Always spend more time on the spots that are the most sensitive. The pain you feel is the tissue telling you where the work needs to be done. Stay there, breathe, and wait for the release.

  • The Feet (Lacrosse Ball): Place the ball under the arch of your foot while standing or sitting. Roll slowly from the heel to the toes. Once you find a particularly tender pain in the fascia, hold it there and curl your toes to work the tissue.

  • The Calves and Hamstrings (Foam Roller): Sit on your mat with your legs extended over the foam roller. Lift your hips up to sit on the yoga block and use your arms for leverage. Roll from the ankle to the base of the glutes. If you find a knot in the calf, cross one leg over the other to double the pressure.

  • The Glutes and Hips (5lb Medicine Ball + Yoga Block (or Foam Roller)): Place the medicine ball on the mat and sit on it, targeting the side of the hip. Use the yoga block under your opposite hand, or lean on a Foam Roller for stability and leverage. Lean into the ball to sink deep into the glute muscles. This is one of the most effective ways to release lower back strain.

  • The Thoracic Spine/Upper Back (Foam Roller + Yoga Block): Place the roller across your upper back. Support your head with your hands, keeping your elbows tucked in. Use the yoga block under your hips if you need to change the angle of the roller to hit the tight spots between your shoulder blades. Gently arch over the roller to open up the chest.

  • The Pectorals/Shoulders (5lb Medicine Ball): Lie facedown, placing the medicine ball under your upper chest near the shoulder joint. Lean your body weight into the ball. This is a game-changer for anyone who spends all day at a desk or behind a steering wheel. Use the yoga block under your free arm or forehead to keep your neck comfortable.

  • The Forearms (Foam Roller + Lacrosse Ball): Place your forearms across a smooth foam roller on the floor or a sturdy table. Lean your body weight into it, rolling from the wrist to the elbow. To get smaller/deeper muscles use the Lacrosse Ball instead. This is vital for anyone who lifts weights or spends hours on a keyboard.

  • The Bicep/Tricep (Foam Roller + Lacrosse Ball): Use the Foam Roller on the floor. Lie on your side, and position the roller under your upper arm. Roll slowly to flush the tissue. For deeper work on the tricep, use the Lacrosse Ball against a doorframe, leaning into the muscle to pin the tissue against the bone.

  • The Jaw (Lacrosse Ball): While lying on your mat, or simply pressing with your hand, place the Lacrosse Ball on that muscle part of your cheek/jawline. Simply apply steady, gentle pressure and gently roll. Open and close your mouth slightly while holding the pressure to release the trigger point.

  • The Temples (Lacrosse Ball): This requires extreme caution. Use the Lacrosse Ball with your hand only and roll it lightly to encourage the fascia along the side of the skull to soften. Many people find that once the jaw releases, the tension in the temples dissipates automatically.


Frequency:

Consistency is important here. You can do this practice before bed or pre- or post-workout. Once you have probed all your muscles and dealt with every knot you can probably maintain with just one round of 45 minutes per week or as needed.


My Awakening:

I had been dealing with muscle pains for a long time. I came across this practice around 2022, when things were going crazy, and I was spending way too much time on the computer and not exercising or taking care of myself. I didn't realize it over the years, but I was building up knots from being a keyboard warrior, and this practice helped me relieve and reset those painful knots. My awakening moment to this process came when I had a tight spot for years that prevented me from exercising in a certain way, with limited weight. But after targeting the problematic area with this practice, the exercise the following week allowed me to lift 5lbs more, with good form. I'm not going to lie, it was the awakening moment, because it felt like I was upgraded to a machine in comparison to what my body was doing before. I was pumped and doing full reps of clean form, with no pain afterwards. Essentially it removed what was limiting my success.

I hope this helps someone.


Disclaimer:

I am not a sports fitness expert, just some internet stranger who you shouldn't blindly trust. I found this out on my own out of necessity, and it worked wonders for me. You should talk to someone who knows about this to see if they can confirm it for you before you start, and maybe work directly with someone who practices this so you don't hurt yourself if you've never done this before.

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