Meet the new best friend you’ll love to hate and hate to love.
You’ve heard about it, and you’ve seen it at the gym, it’s the foam roller. The foam roller is now considered an integral part of health and fitness. But is it a part of yours? Here’s a primer from the experts to get you rolling the proper way, regardless of what you’ve seen in the gym!
Benefits of Foam Rollers
Ever find yourself waking up and wondering where that new ache came from? Or, just feeling creaky or stiff navigating the stairs or getting into the car? Unfortunately, as we age, we lose muscular flexibility, which then dominos into a myriad of physical issues.
Stress magically manifests itself in our bodies, especially in our “stress containers,” which are our shoulders, lower back, and hips. Lifestyle, hours-on-end technology, over-use, and inactivity all play a part in our aches and pains.
To combat this, we must focus on increasing flexibility and decreasing muscle tension. Improve mobility through exercises such as yoga, Pilates, stretching, and flexibility exercises. After a workout, we should minimize the damage done through massage techniques, such as myofascial release, and the relief from myofascial tension is through foam roller exercises.
What is Myofascial Release?
“An alternative medicine therapy that claims to treat skeletal muscle immobility and pain by relaxing contracted muscles, improving blood and lymphatic circulation, and stimulating the stretch reflex in muscles.” Wikipedia
Basically, by applying pressure to tight muscles and fascia, pain is relieved in your ‘trigger points.’ Since most of us don’t have a massage therapist to follow us around all day, enter Self-Myofascial Release, SMR, a form of slow and controlled self-massage.
What’s a Fascia Anyway?
Fascia is a band or sheet of connective tissue, primarily collagen, beneath the skin that attaches, stabilizes, encloses, and separates muscles and other internal organs. The goal is to de-excite the surrounding fascia and the painful muscle bundle.
The Foam Roller.
But here’s the thing: To get the desired result, you must correctly use a foam roller, and hold the stretch. At the beginning of the hold, this may feel like an eternity! You will quickly learn why it’s earned the moniker’s best friend you’ll love to hate.
Are you already rolling? Chances are high you’ve only seen it done incorrectly, and are doing it wrong.
A great visual to understand is to imagine a tight, sore muscle spindle or bundle as an upset aggravated toddler. An aggressive reaction (fast or intense rolling) is NOT going to calm the situation. The goal is to de-excite; a calm, gentle demeanor and slow touch allow calming to begin.
CAUTION: Do not roll prior to consulting your physician if you have high blood pressure, diabetes, or varicose veins, as such health issues could worsen.
The Basics
- Choose a smooth non-ribbed roller for a more comfortable experience. Rollers come in a variety of styles and sizes and can be bought online or at any sports or retail big box store.
- Sit on carpet or a yoga mat for extra comfort and stability.
- Engage your core pull your belly-button to backbone (feeling as though you have shrink-wrapped your abs) as torso stability must be maintained as you move.
- Roll slowly, moving only about 1 inch per second. When you find a muscle bundle, trigger point, or ‘hot spot,’ you will know it.
- Pause and gently hold for 30 to 90 seconds. THAT IS THE CHALLENGE. Go easy, and with practice, you will be able to hold longer with pressure. The longer the hold, the more effective the release.
A comfortable place to begin and to practice core stability is on the calf muscle. Workouts and high heels do a number on us, and your calves will thank you for it.
Best Practices from the American Fitness Association/NASM:
- Begin by seating on a flat surface with the foam roller placed just above the ankle.
- Cross the non-working leg over the working leg to increase compression if needed.
- Place the hands near the hips with fingertips pointing away from the body.
- Raise the hips and slowly begin to roll the body down (so the foam roller comes up) towards the knee.
- Roll at a pace of about 1” per second until a tender spot identified. A sore spot should be something classified as 6-9 on a scale from 1-10.
- Hold on this spot for 30 seconds or until the tenderness begins to decrease.
- Identify 1-2 of these spots in the calf before switching to the opposite leg, for the posterior, tight hips, and glutes.
- Sitting on the roller, being cautious about engaging your core to maintain balance, slowly roll until you feel a tender spot.
- Pause for at least 30 seconds, with your hand firmly planted to one side, lean until you find another and pause. To go deeper, cross one ankle over the other leg above the knee and pause. Uncross return to center and repeat on the other side.
This is one relationship, although contentious at times, you will want to keep!
Primer from an expert: National Academy of Sports Medicine
Shop the Essentials
Brazyn Morph Trek Foam Roller Collapsible & Portable, $68
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TriggerPoint Grid Foam Roller with Free Online Instructional Videos, $34.99
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Gaiam Restore Muscle Massage Therapy Foam Rollers (18 inch & 36 inch), $29.99
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321 STRONG Foam Roller Deep Tissue Massager, with 4K eBook, $21.99
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AmazonBasics High-Density Round Foam Roller, $19.79
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