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BLog

What Is So Special about the Circular Movements in ESSENTRICS™?

10/26/2015

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Guest Post by Essentrics Instructor Betty Ng

Most workouts focus on muscles and losing fat, some also pay attention to bones, but few consider our joints. Programs such as weight lifting, stair climbing or yoga require bearing weights, which can stress and strengthen our bones. Yet these don’t necessarily condition our joints. If you Google “joint health”, you’ll see mostly websites and literature about supplements and remedies for arthritis or pain relief. Joint health seems to be an afterthought until the damage is done.

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Betty is a certified Essentrics instructor (L2, Honors 4) based in California. After chronic stress caused her body to rebel, she left her beloved NYC and a Wall Street career for a sabbatical in sunny La Jolla/ San Diego. There, she stumbled upon “Classical Stretch” on public television that ended her lifelong search for the fitness program/partner that would keep her company for the rest of her life.

In Essentrics, we sculpt the muscles and stress the bones but also condition the joints. One distinctive feature about Essentrics is the large, continuous, circular movements throughout the routine. They have roots in tai chi, ballet, and physiotherapy. We feel natural, pleasant, and incredibly good doing them because they work our joints the way the joints should work.
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Our bones are connected through movable and immovable joints. The joints in our skull, for example, are rigid and immovable. In Essentrics, we are concerned with movable, synovial joints. These joints are filled with fluid to reduce friction, much like oiled engine parts, and defined for specific motions. A typical example is the ball-and-socket joint. It is the most important and powerful type of joint because of its range of motion. Try making a fist with one hand and cup it with the other. The fisted hand can rotate with a great degree of mobility.


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The top end of the arm bone is a ball shape that inserts into the shoulder blade.
Image source: PreventDisease.com
Our arms and legs connect to the skeleton through ball-and-socket joints, and therefore enjoy a greater range of motion. The top end of the arm bone or humerus, for example, is a ball shape that inserts into the cavity in the scapula, or shoulder blade. We can swing our arms and legs in circles. If we don’t use these ball-and-socket joints to their full capability, if we don’t rotate them sufficiently, deposits will build up and the joints will become rigid. The muscles around the joints work together to make those large, circular motions and will also become stiff from fascia build up. Fascia is the film-like connective tissue that can harden from lack of movement. Joints and mobility are a classic case of “use it or lose it.

This explains why those circular movements in Essentrics feel so natural and pleasant. We are moving those joints and the surrounding muscles the way they can and should move. In one of our popular trademark movements “Caribbean Spine,” we rotate the arms and the entire shoulder joint. When we lift our elbows to shoulder height and pull forward we are also stretching and lengthening the upper back muscles such as the trapezius and the rhomboids. When we open and rotate the shoulder backwards we work the pectorals. The motion therefore not only conditions the joints but also improves our posture by increasing flexibility in the upper back and chest. This is the beauty of Essentrics’ economy and efficiency.
Try the circular movements in the Essentrics Caribbean Spinal Sequence. 

When we do the “Clock Kicks” with our legs, we keep the body steady, then isolate, kick and travel one leg around from front to back and vice versa. This is also a simple, powerful, and effective move. Many people find this circular motion challenging because they can’t isolate and lift their legs at all angles. While most have no trouble lifting the leg forward and up, for example, doing so on the side and to the back can cause many to wobble and lose balance. The motion reveals the weakest muscles in the hip and leg areas as well as rebalances them. When we unclog this ball-and-socket joint connecting the legs, we are also improving mobility and enhancing our balance. 
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This is why static stretches and holding poses do relatively little to condition our joints, which need movement. Traditional weight lifting, involving rigid, mechanical motion, stresses bones but doesn’t work the ball-and-socket joints to their full range. Pushups and tricep dips can build and tone muscles quickly but can overload the wrists. Similarly, holding poses such as the downward dog position in yoga can stretch the latissimus dorsi in the lower back as well as the hamstrings in the legs, but can put too much pressure on the compressed wrists. 

Then there is the question of impact. Certain sports such as tennis and volleyball involve full rotation of the one arm, but not both. Yet the movements also involve hitting a target which impacts the joint.  
This is not to say there is no value in doing these sports and exercises, but we simply need to be aware of their impact and balance it accordingly. In Essentrics, not only do we rotate the ball-and-socket joints fully, but we also lengthen them in the process. This allows more synovial fluid to circulate, reducing joint friction.
Full rotational motions don’t have to be challenging. In Essentrics, some of our warm up movements are very simple and easy. See an illustration of the “Figure 8” for the arms and the “Hip Cleaner” for the legs. These are “feel good” movements you can do anywhere, anytime!

Visit Betty's website to read more of her great blog posts. And don't forget to follow her on Facebook!
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    Amanda Sterczyk is a Certified Personal Trainer (ACSM), an Exercise is Medicine Canada (EIMC) Fitness Professional, and a Certified Essentrics® Instructor. She offers in-home personal training in central Ottawa. Amanda specializes in helping older adults maintain and increase strength, flexibility, and mobility. No fitness goal is too small, in her opinion. 

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​The advice and recommendations provided by Amanda Sterczyk - Author are not medical guidelines but are for educational purposes only. You must consult your physician prior to starting any exercise program.
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  • About
    • Meet Amanda
    • Amanda's Fitness Credentials
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  • Books
    • Sweat-Free Exercises for the Office
    • Balance Exercises for Fall Prevention
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    • Balance and Your Body
    • Move More, Your Life Depends On It
    • Your Job is Killing You
    • I Can See Your Underwear
    • Selfried and the Secrets
    • Bulk Orders
  • The Move More Institute™
    • 3 Days to Better Balance
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    • Get Off Your Butt!
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