SPEAKER_02 29:41–30:47
Well, because that, because that's all the overcoming and yielding only describes connective tissue behavior. It's nothing to do with the muscles themselves. Okay. So, okay. Let me, let me, let me clarify. Wrong. Muscle, when I say muscle orientation, so that's concentric versus eccentric orientation. Okay. Describes a position of the muscle. Yes. Okay. The connective tissue behaviors either yield, they are expanding to absorb or distribute energy, or they are overcoming, which means that they are compressing where they are releasing energy. Okay, so again, that's one of the challenges is like you have to separate the two because they don't do the same thing. And a lot of people, they make an error is that they associate those connective tissue descriptors with muscle behavior and that is not the case because they have to be separate. Connective tissues don't change muscle position. That's one of the key elements in understanding this. It's like they are managing the potential and kinetic energy that we use to move through space.
connective tissue behaviormuscle orientationconcentric versus eccentric orientationenergy management