Peruse

15458 enriched chunks

The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_01 19:55–19:58
Increase magnitude will shrink the space.
force magnitudetissue mechanicsmovement preparation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_06 20:42–21:06
So we use delay strategy to change the connective tissue's behavior, making it yielding. And we use shape change or movement position change to change the muscles' orientation.
connective tissue behaviormuscle orientationshape changedelay strategy
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 14:16–14:17
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 10:25–10:26
Down and forward.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_01 13:29–14:08
Yes. So it's going to gradually change towards an overcoming representation, isn't it? Okay. All right. But again, it's a gradient. You got to see it. You got to see it as it's changing. Okay. I move my center of gravity up over my foot. I got to start increasing the amount of pressure down into the ground. Okay. So that's a higher pressure representation. So I'm going to move. So eccentric got me there, but now I got to start pushing down into the ground. And I got to capture the IR position of the pelvis. I got to capture more IR going down into the ground as my body passes over it. What will happen to the muscular orientation of the anterior outlet on that side?
eccentric-overcoming-concentric gradientground reaction forcepelvic internal rotationanterior outlet muscular orientation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 20:05–20:10
Yeah, I get that. I'm not going to get relative motion with a trade-off max deal.
relative motionjoint mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 15:26–15:34
Okay. But so when you would put [it] under the ischium more for a wide than an arrow?
ischial pressurerear foot positioninginternal rotationfemoral orientation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 3 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 15:57–16:46
And again, tremendously helpful under most circumstances, especially for a human such as yourself that has lifted heavy things for a really long time because you've created adaptations in your connective tissues to make them stiff. There's a benefit to lifting heavy things with stiffer connective tissues because they're harder to deform, they store more energy, and release more energy per unit of deformation. So again, to lift heavy things, that's a good thing. After a while, it can become interference. You've created a position and, like I said, a shape that allows you to demonstrate internal rotation. You've created a more effective connective tissue behavior that you needed under that circumstance to store and release energy versus something that's stiff that actually was interference, okay? And that did not allow you to efficiently store and release energy.
connective tissue adaptationsenergy storage and releaselifting mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_06 11:05–11:10
Right. Yeah. To regain it. Yep. Longer same lines.
shoulder rehabilitationinternal rotationstrength training
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 16:24–16:24
Okay.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 21:30–21:59
I have a quick question about a bias towards an inhalation strategy. When you say someone is biased towards a strategy, does that mean they can't move further into that direction? For example, if somebody was biased towards inhalation, they actually can't inhale further because they've already essentially used a part of their inhalation, or they're in the opposite direction and have a huge ability to exhale.
inhalation biasmovement strategiesrespiration mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 21:35–21:36
Definitely.
foot mechanicsground contactmetatarsal heads
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_00 25:09–25:14
Well, I think of it more as the dominant bones movie.
hip mechanicsinternal rotationbiomechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 22:59–23:12
Lines are good. OK. So to improve, you've got to have more access to the internal rotation to pass through that range, right? So like I said, it sounds like you're on the right track.
internal rotationrange of motionsquat mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 18:17–18:25
Delay that thing before you would do anything to come back on their helical angle is to get that foot on.
helical anglefoot contactbiomechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_01 17:44–18:20
Understanding that. That's why the chessboard becomes important because the chessboard shows you the relationships as to why you got that measure based on traditional techniques of measuring. I don't think you have the distributed measure of internal rotation at the hip joint. I think you got a big measure, but guess what moved to get there? You see it? It's like, you gotta be really careful with that because you make the assumption, oh, I don't need to worry about that measure at all. It's normal.
measurement techniqueship joint mechanicsmovement assessment
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 16:18–18:12
Good morning. Happy Wednesday. I have no coffee in hand and it is perfect. All right. It is Wednesday. That means that tomorrow is Thursday. And as usual, 6 a.m. tomorrow morning, Coffee and Coaches Conference Call. Great people, great questions, a lot of great discussion of late. People are really catching on to things and asking deeper and deeper questions. So please join us 6 a.m. Eastern Standard Time tomorrow morning. The link will be on my professional Facebook page and I will see you there. Okay, digging into today's Q&A. This is from Samus, and Samus has a really good question. He's been watching some of the videos and seeing the changes that are possible with some of the interventions that we do and seeing these immediate changes, so his question was basically: how fast can you make these changes and how do you know how fast you can make these changes? So this is a discussion of some of the constraints. We have slow-changing constraints and we have fast-changing constraints. Typically in real time, what we're doing is we're manipulating the faster-changing constraints. And we talk about that as how we separate those out. And then there's an element of experience that has to go with this. This is the time factor. And this is where you're going to gain that specific type of knowledge that's going to allow you to make these changes and shift probabilities in your favor. So this is actually a great question for a lot of people, especially young coaches that are just beginning to learn and understand how a lot of this movement actually takes place. So thank you, Samus, if you would like to participate in a 15-minute consultation, please go to askbillhartman@gmail.com, askbillhartman@gmail.com. Put '15-minute consultation' in the subject line so I don't delete it. Please include your question in the email. Everybody have an outstanding Wednesday, and I will see you tomorrow morning, 6 a.m., Coffee and Coaches Conference. Let's go.
constraintsmotor learningcoaching
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 3 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_06 14:40–14:44
Just because the bar travels less. Let's put it that way.
bench press techniqueleverage in strength trainingbiomechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 18:37–18:41
All right, because I try to see it yield on one side and overcome on the other.
yield to overcomepredictability in trainingcontextual movement application
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_00 15:40–15:44
Oops. And then what happens with the narrow ISA that went forward on the left and then to the right?
ISA movementpostural reorientationsacral mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 13:45–13:59
Again, this is one of the reasons why people get confused about early, middle and late representations because they're looking at the extremities and thinking, 'When I put the arm in this position, if I'm crawling, right?'
movement representationsextremity functionaxial skeletonshape change
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_06 19:29–20:23
So I usually, after the calls or after I get some ideas, I've been experimenting by just giving the activities and then seeing how different people self-organize with the activity. So one of the activities was the lateral sled drag. With the intent of promoting differential movement or starting a gradient side to side, I saw a couple of different things. One was a knee bend, like a deep knee bend when moving from the handles on the right side, you're moving from right to left, so you're pushing with the right leg. You're pushing to the right.
lateral sled dragself-organizationdifferential movementknee mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_08 15:30–15:31
What's the thorax.
thorax anatomyshoulder girdle mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 29:42–29:43
Yes.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 20:52–22:15
The need for space is different between a front squat and an overhead press. You understand that, so I just wanted to say it out loud. You have to consider the spaces that create the greatest interference under the circumstances. If I have somebody with a posterior lower compressive strategy that's interfering with the ability to access arm elevation to shoulder level, I cannot do either press or front squat without compensatory strategies. Therefore, I need to address that space first because it becomes the first level of interference when trying to move the arm through space. If I didn't have that compressive strategy, I shouldn't have trouble getting the arm into that space, at least for initial elevation. Then I have to worry about sternal compressive strategies that could interfere with end range positions like a front squat. So, where I need to put the arm in space tells me where I need to address compensatory strategies, but in a sequence from the bottom up. For upright activities, your lungs fill from the bottom up.
compensatory strategiesarm elevation mechanicsrespiration sequencingposterior compressionfront squat biomechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 11:12–11:26
I know that's what, that's what I'm struggling to conceptualize this because I understand the top-down, proximal-distal how the calcaneus is ER, but the whole foot is IRing.
calcaneus mechanicspronation/supinationproximal-distal relationshipsfoot biomechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 16:38–17:28
And it really does depend on your joint position and then the load because I was giving a friend a left foot in front split squat with a lateral load in the left hand. So I was thinking we might gain some relative motion, but when I saw him do it, it didn't look great. And I thought, wait, that doesn't make sense. So you really need to understand and play around. It takes time to know your patient and clientele to figure out the right load, and if there is necessarily load to create, that's where the stuff comes in.
joint mechanicsload applicationexercise prescriptionpatient assessment
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 3 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_08 9:57–9:57
Yeah.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_01 19:39–20:13
That's exactly right. You know how we always talk about space moving away from the middle, right? Yes. Yeah. Yeah. So that's why they have to orient. So now they don't have the segmental relative motions available to them. So they have to move their extremities outward to find a space that they can actually move in. So these are the people that have to, like when they squat, they have to move their feet really far apart or they have to toe out because that's the only space that they have available for them to move into.
joint compressionrange of motionmovement compensationspace creationsegmental motion
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 11 - Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 14:49–15:21
Now, what makes you say whether you like, I guess up until now I've just thought like, okay, measures or watching someone move, like this is where the site of compression is. And if I want to get expansion there, I need to yield in that location, but I haven't really been trying to think about the specific tissue that I'm trying to get to yield. So now how are we starting to tease out like, do I want the actual skeleton to yield? Do I want the muscle? Like how do you start to figure out which yield you're trying to get?
yieldtissue mechanicscompressionmovement assessmentexpansion