29 Jun How To Reduce Tension With This One Yoga Class
Feeling tight and sore? Can barely touch your toes in the morning? Relieving tight muscles of their tension is a release that feels oh so good. Some may even compare it to eating an Acai bowl everyday type good.
Yagholics’s Roll & Release online classes can do just this. When feeling sore from a few too many intense Chaturangas’, a good roll around on some pressure point balls and a release through stretching it out, muscle by muscle is just what the yogi doctor orders.
What Is Roll & Release?
The basic physiology of Roll & Release is that with repetitive use, your muscles may start to hold excessive tension and fatigue in local sections of tissue.
You’ll be familiar with these as muscle “knots” in the muscles or “trigger-points” in physio-speak. On a zoomed in level, the muscle fibres are stuck in the “on” position and can’t work out how to relax. On a zoomed out level, your whole muscle loses range, power and endurance.
Pressing on these tight spots is often pretty uncomfortable. And is the type of thing you might see your physiotherapist, massage therapist or acupuncturist about. And by just letting them stay there, you may be putting the area, or others around it at risk of overload and injury.
Activating your muscles on and off through large ranges of movement (like Vinyasa Yoga) is a great way to encourage the length back into them. And long sustained loads with conscious relaxation (like your Yin practice) also helps a lot. So you’re already ahead of the curve for body care compared to other forms of exercise.
But sometimes localised areas of tension develop and are hard to shift through stretching alone. Enter Roll & Release. It’s like a physio, massage and Yin session all in one.
What Props Are Used?
Using direct pressure with balls or blocks (and even other body parts as leverage), you can massage deep into the tissues. There are various styles and forms to the way we might work the tissues in Roll & Release. But ultimately the goal is to create a local flushing of blood, lymphatics and fascial release.
This flushing allows nutrients to move in, waste products to move out, and the muscle fibres to reset from the “on” position to a more appropriate resting level.
The benefits to this style of practice, particularly to target the deep muscles of hips, shoulders and spine are huge. Almost all professional sports teams across all codes incorporate Roll & Release into their weekly schedule of training. It aids muscle recovery and healing, setting them up for better output and performance when it counts.
So yogis who also surf, play sport, CrossFit, run or do other higher loader repetitive exercises will notice the difference immediately.
What Is Difficulty?
It sounds simple enough, but anyone who has had a deep remedial massage, physio treatment or foam rolling will know it’s no walk in the park. There will often be an intense sensation involved in the work. As a result, this may trigger strong emotion, aversion and a whole lot of mind chatter.
In this sense, Roll & Release enters the realm of yoga practice. You’ll find an opportunity to sit with the experience and observe the layers. In the space of a few minutes, there are tangible shifts and relaxations in the tissue, as well as the mental grip associated with the tissues.
Most yogis will find a weekly Roll & Release will be a perfect complement to your regular practice, more so in times of intense training loads or recovery from injury.
Find a Roll & Release class that suits your tight muscle needs on Yogaholics now!
Written by Triton Tunis-Mitchell