Gregory Bader 🦍🌺

Gregory Bader 🦍🌺's avatar
Gregory Bader 🦍🌺
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Functional Patterns HBS3 @junglebiomechanics @virtualbiomechanics @junglerunners
More range of motion isn’t always better. There is an optimal range of motion for every joint. Pushing past that doesn’t make you more mobile, it often makes you more unstable. When joints are taken into excessive ranges without the structure to control them, the result is usually hypermobility, followed by joint instability, pain, and eventually injury. A big misconception in fitness is that all mobility work is good and that creating more ROM is always beneficial. Most people chase range mindlessly, stretching and forcing joints into positions they can’t actually support. That’s not mobility, that’s loss of control. Optimal range of motion comes from how well your training aligns with fundamental human movement. When movement is organized around the FP First 4, joints gain the amount of range they can control, not more than they can handle, which is what keeps them resilient long term.
Stretching is often sold as the solution, but for a lot of people it's part of the problem. Most bodies aren't just "tight." They're imbalanced. They have areas that are restricted and areas that move too much. Traditional stretching targets the tissues that are easiest to access, which are usually the loose ones, and over time this only increases instability and hypermobility in the system. Mobility comes from organization, not from forcing tissue length. The Functional Patterns training system restores balance by stabilizing what moves too much and mobilizing what doesn't, without sacrificing joint integrity along the way.