Find Your Edge: Training, Sports Nutrition & Mindset Tools for Triathletes, Runners & High Achievers Chasing Performance & Longevity

Hypermobility in Athletes: How to Train Smarter for Longevity Ep 126

Chris Newport | Tri Coach, Sports & Longevity Nutritionist and Exercise Physiologist at The Endurance Edge Episode 126

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0:00 | 36:26

Hypermobility affects far more people than we realize — especially endurance athletes. Chris sits down with physical therapist Holly Burt, who explains what hypermobility really is, why it’s often missed, and how it impacts joints, digestion, recovery, and injury risk.

We cover:

  • Hypermobility vs flexibility
  • Why stretching can make symptoms worse
  • Strength training rules for hypermobile athletes
  • Injury prevention in endurance sports
  • Pilates, stability, and body awareness
  • Training for longevity, not burnout

If you’ve ever felt “tight but bendy,” injury-prone, or frustrated with your body — this episode may be the missing link.

Learn more and get Holly's info here: https://www.theenduranceedge.com/hypermobility-endurance-athletes-strength-training

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Welcome And Holly’s Soapbox

SPEAKER_01

All right. Welcome back to the Find Your Edge podcast. I've got Holly Burt here with me. And I am so excited to hear about your lovely soapbox. So before you even introduce yourself, what is your soapbox about hypermobility? Give us just like a little tease and then we'll talk about you and we'll get along.

From Ballet To PT: Spotting Hypermobility

SPEAKER_02

So I feel like it's something that so many people are walking around this planet with, and yet they either have no idea or they it's getting missed, or it is the overall arching umbrella for a plethora of health problems that they have. And so for me, it became this like this thing that I can spot when someone walks in the room. I'm like, oh yep, they're hypermobile. And they're like, what, what? Um, and it has opened so many doors for people. So my soapbox is mainly just along the lines that it's something that I feel like is starting to get some chatter, but for a long time has been overlooked.

SPEAKER_01

So love it. Okay, cool. So Holly Burt, welcome to the show.

SPEAKER_02

And tell us about yourself. Um, I'm a physical therapist. Um, I have a wellness center called State of the Art located in Raleigh in the Five Points area. We actually just moved to a big new clinic. I've been practicing.

SPEAKER_01

Beautiful, by the way. Thank you.

SPEAKER_02

Thank you. Yes, got some strength classes on Monday and Wednesday nights there. Yeah, yeah. Um, little shout out. Um, I have been practicing for 16 years, going on 17. Holy moly. Um, I'm a Raleigh native, which is rare. Um, and I left, went to school, practiced my my soapbox um started when I started with the I worked backstage with the Washington Ballet in DC. And that was my first. It was so cool. And so dancers, obviously, super hyper mobile and yet very strong, you know. And so that became my passion early, early on. And then it started filtering into what I'll call the normal population that aren't professional dancers, and I just started recognizing it everywhere. So that's my background. But yeah, I moved back to Raleigh in 2015 and um I've been setting up shop here ever since. That's so cool.

SPEAKER_01

You're like the hypermobile sensor.

SPEAKER_02

Just like if you walk in, you're like, I know it. See, I worked with a doctor and he told me that he could shake someone's hand and tell if they were hypermobile, and I thought he was just like a voodoo doctor. And now I'm like, oh, like I can see it in the waiting room. So um, yeah. So now I guess I'm the voodoo doctor. I don't know.

SPEAKER_01

You are the voodoo doctor. So good. Oh my goodness. But you know what? That is like, I love that you found your purpose and your passion.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

That is that's truly like to me, that's voodoo. That's good voodoo.

SPEAKER_02

It's good voodoo. Yeah, totally kind. I do stab people with needles, dry needles, but you know, uh still maybe it's real voodoo.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it's so good. All right. So you worked with professional dancers, and um I'm gonna give a little shout out to yourself because I know you're probably gonna be too modest to say this. But you someone recently got into triathlon and also have been freaking crushing it.

SPEAKER_00

Thank you.

SPEAKER_01

Um just kind of world.

Hypermobility Vs Flexibility

SPEAKER_00

The best, yes, yes, yeah. Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_01

So so good. So now, so like you're in the multi-sport lifestyle. Like it is part of your nature.

SPEAKER_02

Fully addicted. Fully addicted. I told Chris before we got started that I just did an FTP test about one hour ago. So we're gonna see how my brain is working right now.

SPEAKER_01

If that were me, I would be eating cookies while on this call and drinking probably a mocha.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, yes. This is this is some some warm, warm coffee, much needed post, post, post talk. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

So good. Okay. So tell us about hypermobility. Like, what what is it? And we know that you're the the voodoo doctor and you can sense it, but clearly other people can sense it. So, like, what is it? And why is it that so many people don't know that they have it?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, so let's talk a little bit about the difference between hypermobility and flexibility. Is something that is in your collagen, in your skeletal system. So you have two things that hold your joints together. You have muscles, tendons, the tendons are the end of a muscle, and you have ligaments. Everyone has all of those things that is universal for human beings. Um, hypermobile people, their ligaments, I say, are they overstretched like an overstretched rubber band? And they were made that way. That it it sometimes it was acquired, which I'll talk about in a second, but most of the time it is just how you are put together. And that affects not only your joints, so your bendy, if you will, double-jointed. Maybe when you were a child, you could do cool party tricks like backbend or put your foot behind your head or those sort of things. But it, you know, it also affects your gut in terms of your digestion, which you could potentially speak to, Chris, um, uh your eyes, your vision, migraines, headaches, um, your skin, the elasticity in your skin. So you start to see all these plethora of problems under what is now actually coded in the medical world as hypermobility syndrome. Finally, there's been enough recognition that you don't just have to have a genetic disorder like Ellers Damos to be hypermobile. They've figured out that there's an entire spectrum. Kind of like with autism, they figured out there's there's a whole spectrum, you know, that people can be on. Um, same thing with hypermobility. There's a whole spectrum that you could be on, and you could just be slightly above average and and not know it, right? Um it because most people I think that, oh, if you're hypermobile, you're a professional dancer, right? And that is not necessarily true. And then take that into the endurance world, we're dealing with really strong humans. And when there's strength, it can mask the hypermobility piece, you know, because you're strong. So your muscles are making up for the laxity in the ligaments. Um, so yeah, so that is hypermobility. Flexibility is more something that's acquired. You know, you're you you work to be able to touch your toes and you work to be able to stretch a little bit. So you're stretching the muscles. So you're talking about the length of the muscles, not the innate um composite of the joint.

SPEAKER_01

So, how common is this? Because I mean, I feel like I see people who are just not mobile or not flexible. Yes. Yes. So it seems like it's rare, but tell us about that.

How Common It Is And Subtle Signs

SPEAKER_02

No, it's much more common in women, I will say. Um, I mean, I would put like 60% of my caseload as hypermobile and not knowing it. Sometimes they come through the door and they know it. Um, but most of the time they don't. They just know that they're coming for for back pain or for neck pain or for this clicking in their shoulder that won't go away, that sort of thing. And then I have to teach them about their body and educate them. But I would say, I mean, I think I I truly think like half the people in the world are mobile, but I do not have stats for you. But that's just my that's just my made-up stat that I have.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Yeah. Okay, cool.

SPEAKER_02

But we're talking about on the spectrum, right? So meaning if zero is the most inflexible person you've ever seen and 10 is that gumby dancer, you you're a six, you know, so you're just slightly more mobile than the person next to you in Pilates class, but not so mobile that you really know it. But it shows up in ways it shows up in anecdotes. Like, okay, when you sit, can you not sit still? Like you can never find a comfortable position. Or is it really comfortable for you to sit on your feet in this really like funky, you know, I call them fidget, like they are fidgeters because you can't find a comfortable position because your joints are always moving. So they're these little cues that I'll ask questions and and it helps people tease out, like, oh, I didn't know that's why I did that. Or I didn't even know I was doing that. I thought everyone did that.

SPEAKER_01

So yeah. Yeah, yeah. So it's almost like that's uh maybe not quite a red flag, but like an indicator. Yeah. Maybe you don't have ADHD. Yeah.

Why Tight Muscles Need Strength

SPEAKER_02

Your body just doesn't feel good and it just doesn't feel it's trying to find what is trying to find in range. So the body feels actually comfortable when it's hypermobile, it feels comfortable when it's compressed. So that could be like you sleep with your hands behind your head, or like just funky little things that the again you think everyone does, and and and unless you're but hypermobile, you don't do that. And then the other piece that I typically educate on is people are like, but okay, I I hear you saying I'm hypermobile, but why am I so tight? Like I you say I'm hypermobile, but like look at my hamstrings. Like my I like why am I so tight? And that is where me as a as a PT and then working with personal trainers and doing strength sessions, like you're tight because your muscles are weak. So your muscles are having to do twice as much work as the person next to you who's not hypermobile because they have ligaments that help them hold themselves together. And you have ligaments, but they're not doing anything. And so your muscles have to be twice as strong. So the only way they feel strong is to be tight. And so the it is the hardest pill to get my hypermobile patients to swallow, where I'm like, you know how you love to stretch and stretch and go to yoga class and you know, get tons of massages because you just feel so tight. And they're like, Yes. I'm like, is that working? Well, no. Okay. So you actually need to strengthen and that will make you looser. And they just are like, what? That makes no sense to me. Why, if it's tight, I don't want to strengthen it. I'm like, just give me a month and and go strengthen and do the trust the voodoo doctor. Trust the voodoo doctor. Like, because the way that I explain it is your body's in panic mode all the time where it feels like, okay, I can't do what you're asking me to do. And so I'm just gonna stay super tight because that's the only way I know how to hold you together. Well, if you pull and stretch on these muscles that are telling you I don't feel comfortable being loose, then they'll feel it'll feel good for a second, but then they're just gonna rebound to tight, if not tighter. So the only way to actually ultimately get looser is to get stronger, which just seems, again, counterintuitive. I shouldn't go lift weights, that's just gonna make me tighter. And it's actually like, no, actually, you will become your body will feel less tight. Um, and your hamstrings can release because now you have your core holding you together instead of your hamstrings just screaming and holding on for dear life trying to hold you together because your hips are so loose.

SPEAKER_01

So yeah, yeah. How does this manifest in different sports? And in particular, you know, endurance sports. Like, do you see a lot of runners? Do you see a lot of triathletes? I feel like also swimmers, like when I look out my office door at all these swimmers and they can just fling their arms and all, I'm like, wow, that is yeah, you know, amazing.

unknown

Yeah. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And some of that could be acquired, you know, that they at a young age took a bar behind their head and were stretching their shoulders back and they actually have overstretched their ligaments, which by the way, you can't undo. Once they are stretched, they are stretched. So if I do get younger athletes, not that I want to discourage them from being good at their sport, but I do just try to encourage them more on that strength piece than just yanking on their joints. I would say it shows up in repetitive injuries, right? Because again, you're getting a lot of friction, tendinitis, bursitis, you're getting a lot of friction in some of these areas where, again, there's there is connective tissue tightness because of that underlying weakness that we just spoke of. Um, and so I see um some issues there. Cardiovascularly, it can show up because it can affect your heart rate as well. So there may be some issues. And I again, I don't have necessarily if this is going to be individualized, but you know, a hypermobile person's zone two may be very different than someone that's not. So just understanding your own personal metrics becomes really important to not compare yourself to someone else if you're hypermobile. Um, or again, your heart rate could spike way higher than someone when you're going from the water to go up right to to run to T1, because your body has to work so hard because the vascular system is overstretched, just like your ligaments trying to pump blood. So just being aware of that like dizziness and all seeing all the pretty colors, you know, that that is potentially something that is just that has to do with the hypermobility and you may have to take a moment. Um, so that's kind of where I see it in in that population. But as far as, you know, runners and swimmers, like I said, it would be seeing some of those friction syndromes, the tendonitis, the bursitis, um, repetitive ankle sprains, you know, because you just that um there's a lack of what's called proprioception, which is the ability to know where your body is in space. Again, because there's the extra ligaments. The ligaments give your body feedback and you have really extra stretch or stretchy ligaments. So when you hit in range, you're on the ground, right? When someone else hit in in range, their body can correct itself. So I see more commonly ankle sprains, that sort of thing. Um, and so just balance training would be really important with a with a hypermobile athlete there, more so again than someone who doesn't um doesn't have that that component in their body.

SPEAKER_01

So what I'm hearing you saying is you might not just be a klutz.

SPEAKER_02

Well, me, uh, you know, I'm not hypermobile, but I and I step on pine cones as well. So I can't speak for myself personally, but yes, uh let's give let's give the hypermobile people a pass. And yes, they're not just a klutz. They just their body um is working against them in uh in a way. So yeah.

SPEAKER_01

So almost more like spatial awareness and uh strength training, balance work is what I heard, and then just some grace and space. Like when you mentioned getting up out of the pool and like seeing stars. I know a lot of people will come to me and be like, is it my electrolytes? I mean, if we get those dialed in, then probably no. There are other things that go along with that, right?

Endurance Sports: Risks And Adjustments

SPEAKER_02

It may just be if you take five seconds to breathe and let your body catch up, you're still gonna have a quick T1 because you didn't face plant, you know. Um, you know, so I don't think you need to necessarily see it as a hindrance, just like you said, it's more of a grace, it's more understanding. Um, that's you know, touching back to when you started and you're like, why is this your soapbox? I wanted to give that gift of, I want you to understand your body and not hate it, you know, and see this as something that explains instead of you having 18 things that things that is wrong are wrong with you, you only have one. And I'm not gonna say it's wrong with you, you know. It's just something that you need to change how you approach things, how you train, um, and and just give yourself um, yeah, just that that grace piece to to help you be successful because certainly hypermobile could be one excellent endurance athlete. Um just may have to work a little harder on the strength component or strengthen differently. Um, yeah. So okay.

SPEAKER_01

So yeah, so let's talk about that. Like, especially knowing the demands of what going of what goes into being an endurance athlete, it's almost like strength gets the short end of the stick. Yeah. I think that, you know, I think that all of us are on enough of a soapbox that people are making that shift, but yeah, still it's a it's a hard balance when people are like, okay, you want me to strengthen train three times a week, but then I also have to like swim so many times and bike so many times. And how many hours do I have in the day? And oh, you just have no strength like me.

SPEAKER_02

Or just work and do travel. So um yeah, yeah, I think the strength piece though, I would argue, you know, as I'm sure you'll support me on this. I mean, you know, if you have to cut down some of the other things in order to strengthen, it will carry over. Um, it'll keep you injury free, which would put you on the bench anyway, you know, if you're thinking about have trying to have a long endurance career. Um, and so, you know, but the, you know, the carryover to power on the bike or um, you know, um just again, just overall core strength. So balance and and bike handling skills and um, you know, strength in the arms, lats and triceps to be able to pull your body through the water. All of that will carry over. But specifically with hypermobility, you're gonna have better body awareness. If you have stronger muscles, that cardiovascular piece could potentially be better because you're, you know, your muscles are pumping blood up quicker to the heart and to the to the brain when you get up really quickly. Um, and so again, just having that better understanding of where your body is and being better in tune, because the other piece that I find with the hypermobile is that you have a delayed onset soreness. And I'm not talking an hour, I'm talking a day. And so a lot of times these hypermobile people, I you know, I don't feel it. So I did like 50 side leg raises instead of the prescribed 15, and now I hurt. And so counting becomes important, reps and sets become important, using a mirror for form becomes important, or even just looking around you and saying, okay, well, they're not so far forward, you know, and and they're feeling a stretch. So maybe I should back off this, you know, forward lunge a little bit or something. Yeah. Um, so so that strength component becomes just, you know, a safety piece for your body to check in, but overall just makes you a better athlete, which would again just improve the longevity of your career and I would think improve your performance.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and not only just of your career, but just in life. Yeah, a hundred percent. Like, you know, I know that we're always talking about like, oh, you can do your sport longer. I'm like, how about you just do you longer?

SPEAKER_02

Absolutely, absolutely.

SPEAKER_01

And you know, I'm feeling like I just made a quotable moment right there. I think I'm not gonna feel into that.

SPEAKER_02

The beginning of the podcast, right there, to get people to listen like that. I love it. I love it.

Balance, Proprioception, And Injury Patterns

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. I mean, and the big one of the big complaints I hear is like strength training is so boring. And I feel like you just haven't found the right playlist mix. Yeah. I mean, well, could be playlists. I mean, absolutely, music is one of those things, but um can strength training look different for somebody who's hypermobile than some, you know, like uh, and oh my gosh, I mean, how many different colors could you paint strength training? You know, you could do the bodybuilder way, you could do the um, you could use TRX, you can use body weight, you can use bands. And being hypermobile, I feel like maybe there is there a diff are there things that tend to improve satisfaction or like do you see where I'm getting at?

SPEAKER_02

Like yeah, I 100% do. I this is where I maybe have a like Debbie Downer answer, um, in just the sense that the muscle burning or the satisfying stretch, those sort of things are often absent. Because by the time a hypermobile person is feeling a really good burn in their muscle, they probably should have stopped. Uh, and so I tell, I tell those patients to use a lot of tactile feedback, meaning use their fingers. So if you're doing, let's say, a clamshell, for example, um, sideline, put your hand on your booty and feel with your hand that muscle working so that you get that satisfaction of, okay, it is firm, it is working. I just don't feel like I'm doing anything. I train with someone who is hypermobile and we do, you know, toe raises to work on um the tibialis interior, which is what can cause chin splints. And you know, she swears she can do a hundred and she doesn't feel anything. And here I I'm I'm next door, just burn it, you know? And I'm thinking you should you should stop. Like you shouldn't do a hundred of those because tomorrow you're gonna be like, man, my shins are like killing me. Why? What did I do? You know, and so I think using mirrors, using your hands, being present and counting reps and sets, you finding that that good place, but you can lift heavy. You know, I'm not saying to not do. That don't you're not a fragile, they're not a fragile egg. You know, I want the strength component, but form becomes really important. You can't sling a kettlebell around because you know you don't have ligaments that are holding your shoulder together. So be very aware of how you're moving. Um, so that that seems a little less fun because you have to, you know, you really do have to concentrate. I mean, I I preach the quality over quantity all the time. If you can only give me five good minutes, I'll take those five good minutes where you're present and you know that your core is engaged, your pelvic floor is firing, your form is good over 25 minutes where you spaced out and you know did a hundred toe raises, and you know, um now you have shin splends. So, you know, those that's that I think um maybe just using some things around you, um, maybe working out in a group, you know, that can be a little bit more fun, I think. Um, just to be aware there. We're actually trying, I don't have it yet, but I'm trying to create a hypermobile strength class because of this. Um, so that it's a group of people who can talk about their bendiness and you know still feel like they're working hard and throw in some balance training, some stuff that maybe you aren't used to doing, a lot of isometrics. Um, so strong holds, you know, you can hold a 70-pound weight and hold a lunge. You know, that's fine. So I think maybe still finding that way to challenge yourself without the conventional strengthening can be a good way to make it a little bit more entertaining.

SPEAKER_01

Those were all such great tips. And what I also heard you say is wait a minute, I can do five minutes of strength training and still get something out of it.

Make Strength Training Work For You

SPEAKER_02

You know, my magic number as a PT for homework is three exercises because I have found that people will not do more than three. Yeah, they're not coming up. But I add more than three to their homework. So yes, I say give me five to eight minutes a day. That is my like that's what I tell people. I'm like that, you can do that. Like you absolutely can give me five to eight minutes of something concentrated. And then if it happens to be more, that's great. And if it doesn't, consistency is key, at least in this, in this vein, especially with the hypermobile population. But I'd say with any athlete, you know. So yes, I am saying that you can do five minutes.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Which means, I mean, I guess theoretically you could even do something like probably every day and maybe even multiple times a day. Absolutely. Absolutely.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I I tend to, I'm like, if you if you're gonna pick something, I tend to go with the core. You know, if you only have five minutes, that's where I'd like, but I'm not talking V-ups and Russian twists and you know, we're talking probably more the I'm I'm a Pilates biased person. I have that's what I have in my clinic, the reformers of the apparatus Pilates, but you don't have that at home, but just doing core marches on a foam roll or bridges or side planks or elbow planks, you know, just holding the isometric core stuff. That's typically what I say if they if people ask, what where would you focus for me? Yeah. Um, I started the center because you know, the appendages, you know, um, they can come secondary to a really strong center.

SPEAKER_01

And then almost, I mean, obviously Pilates was created by a gentleman who wanted to support injured dancers. So it seems to me like Pilates is a really great fit because yeah, there is so much from what I know of Pilates, there's so much control and focus, which also leaves me. There's a a guy at one of the gyms I go to. Listen, I'm not, I'm not workout shaming, but he comes in and he's I know that he's got a young baby, and he comes in and he's like on speed. He's like, uh, you know, this moment, this moment, it's just like, you know, lift, lift, lift, lift, lift. Like what I hear you saying is that's a really bad idea if you're hypermobile, like going through things at like warp speed.

SPEAKER_02

A thousand percent. Yeah, yeah. Again, form, form, form, form. And you'll get so much more, again, out of five really slow side leg lifts with perfect form than 30, you know, um, roquette style, you know, um sidekicks. Just in terms of the safety for your joints and your ligaments, and slow is hard and small range of motion is hard. So tiny little pulses, tiny little circles, you know, squat holes, those sort of things. That's where the challenge piece can come in. So yeah, I would much rather do a big isometric circuit with someone than yes, the the workout on speed.

SPEAKER_01

So yeah, so it almost sounds like swim bike run Pilates.

Five Minutes A Day: Core First

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. I mean, you know, in if I had my dreathers, yes. I I I think it's a great compliment as a recovery. There's a you contract the muscle and then you lengthen it. So it fits my mantra of stability before mobility. So you want to stabilize before you stretch something any any time, especially with hypermobile. But I would argue it is much more rare, Chris, for me to get a very inflexible person on my schedule. And most of the time it's an a man over 50 that like hasn't moved and has set at a desk for a really long time. So it is much more common that I have to teach the stability piece, other than I rarely give stretches for homework, except just like go lie on the foam roller to open up your thoracic spine. But most of the time I'm giving like strength day one to pretty much everyone. Yeah. Wow, that's awesome.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. So we need to do our strength training in a very directed, controlled which I mean, honestly, I feel like that's great advice for anybody. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, uh absolutely. And I will say there are a few people that I'm like, you need to go to yoga. And the the rule of thumb is if you don't want to go to yoga, you should go. If you love yoga, I'm not saying don't go, but I'm saying you probably don't need to be there. Yeah. It's just like I compare it to eating broccoli. I'm like, yeah, like a chocolate chip cookie than broccoli, you know, but the broccoli is what's good for me. That's it's the same. Like if you if you don't like to sit and really like to stretch and move, and yeah, then you probably don't need to. If you don't like to stretch and move, then you probably need to. I don't know why we're made that way, but that is how it is.

SPEAKER_01

So yeah, and coming from, I mean, I danced all through childhood and then of course got into teaching yoga. And I could see the people who, you know, they go to Denward Dog. I'm like, whoa, that is not an A shape.

SPEAKER_02

That is like a part of the the well, I have a yoga for Gothers class. So I'm making it, I'm making my male patients go. But I believe in it. So I'm I'm certainly not saying, you know, Pilates over yoga or anything like that, but I am saying you need to stabilize before you mobilize. And so, you know, that you know, just to be clear on that, I think it's absolutely has a place um and is a beautiful art. But yeah, most of the time, if you really love it, then you probably should do do something that you don't love. That's why so I'm a little bit of a Debbie Downer, and they're like, How do you make it more fun? I'm like, I don't know. You just have to do it. You just have to do it.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. I mean, I feel like it's at least better than paying taxes, right? I mean, come on.

unknown

That's that's great.

SPEAKER_01

I almost made you spit out your coffee.

SPEAKER_02

My my post-FDP, like I feel my blood sugar starting to crack the poke up and I'm like, okay, let me know.

Slow Form Beats Fast Reps

SPEAKER_01

So if someone is, if if they haven't seen you yet, because you're the hypermobile voodoo doctor and you can see it in them, right? If they haven't seen you yet and they're like, what? What if I'm a hypermobile? Like, where I am, where am I perhaps on this scale? Like, what are some of the like t top one or two steps that they can do? Like, should they go right to PT? Should they go to a physician?

SPEAKER_02

Like, what's yeah, that's a great question. I mean, I I mean, I always think I'm biased because I do this for a living. So I think just an eval with a physical therapist to understand, okay, how actually hypermobile am I? Um, when we talk about there's a scale called the bite in hypermobility scale that we're looking at shoulders, elbows, knees, you know, can you palm the floor? Those sort of things. And a lot of clients come in, they're like, I can't do any of those things, but you know, they do hyperextend their elbows, hyperextend their knees. Um, so I would say just in general, working with a good trainer or coach, you know, that can just double check your form, you know, make sure that you're not in a position where you're hyperextending your knees or your elbows. So I think it's just a little bit of just awareness. If any of the things that I've said have resonated with you, like where again, yeah, I'm a fidgeter or I do have some of those things, or yeah, when I was 12, I had this really cool party trick that everyone thought was great. Now I can't, you know, even bend over, but I I used to be able to, you know, those are some of the things that I ask clients. But I don't necessarily think you have to come to PT, but I do think you need to have some sort of support system, um, which why I love Raleigh, you know, I love Endurance Edge that the community piece is so important where I'm sure one, you'll start to notice it in everyone, um, your friends. And most of the time it's maternal, so you know, the the mom has passed it on to the daughter, and it does exist in men. It's just more rare, but it, but um, but yeah, so um I think just having that little bit of a support system and just having someone's eyes on you, you know, hey, can you watch me do this move? And then, you know, just making sure that that strength, strength, and balance is a part of your program and an important part of the program that you have some sort of outlet for doing that. So I would probably at least for a little bit dissuade like a YouTube video where you're doing it at home alone, you know, and they're they tell you you're doing a great job, but you know, they have no idea if you're doing a great job. So just to have someone's eyes on you at some point, any sort of professional that you trust, um, you know, that would probably be my my g my my advice. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

I would almost say like get a friend to videotape you doing a movement.

SPEAKER_02

That absolutely. Yep, a hundred percent. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Sometimes just seeing it, you're like, oh my god, I had no idea it was even doing that.

Assessing Yourself And Getting Support

SPEAKER_02

Or a mirror. I mean, you know, like if you have a good mirror at the gym, like watch yourself hold a plank and see, you know, how or or say, hey, can you do this for me? And then watch what they do and then be like, okay, my body does not look like that, like, you know. Um, so it can also just be or go to a class and even just look around and and and you know, because if you go like to a yoga class and and you look around and you're doing a seated twist and you're looking all the way at the back wall, but no one else is, go and kind of match what everyone else is doing, even if you don't feel it is really not satisfying, but you can kind of do a body check in that way um if you just prefer classes and you don't want or I mean, and training's expensive. So I always try to be very mindful of people's um money. You don't have um not everyone has the ability to go work with a personal trainer.

SPEAKER_01

So I do think they're just different elements that you could um I I always find that there's like different strategies. Like, you know, I've had folks who I'm like, go see a trainer once a month, once every six just to check in on your form, do some programming, and then if you're good at executing, go execute.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I have projected maintenance clients that come to see me every four to six weeks just cuz and I don't know if it's helping, but it's certainly helping them mentally. And we do a check-in and we, you know, um, I work on a couple stress points and then send them on their way. And that has that has been more common than I actually thought going into the cash-based PT realm. Um, that I have just people that come in and check in. So yeah, for sure.

SPEAKER_01

I like the voodoo doctor.

SPEAKER_02

You know, sometimes I'm like, I don't know if they don't know why they're paying me to cause them so much pain, but feel better after. Um, so um I don't know if it's because I stopped doing what I was doing and that's why they feel better, but yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. All right. So um I hear lots of mirrors and awareness and maybe not pushing yourself quite as hard as maybe you think you should be pushing yourself and uh definitely strength training, a lot of grace and knowing that maybe you're not broken, right? You just and you're not alone. And you're not alone. So many. Yeah. What are what are some other like main takeaways that you want people, certainly are hypermobile or who could tell a friend who might be hypermobile, what are the main two or three takeaways that you've got for them?

Main Takeaways And Bodywork

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. So I would say, um, you know, don't, let's see. Uh I try really hard to when a patient's in front of me and they're telling me that they're tight, I don't want to tell them, no, you're not. So um you're allowed to listen to your body. If your body's telling you that it feels tight, that's okay. Um, so body work is okay, you know, um, foam rolling is okay without going too far in in one direction. There is something called fascia that also connects your body to spider web that connects your entire body. And the fascia can be tight. Um, so cupping, rolling, those sort of things, that can play a really nice role, dry needling, you know, um to release some trigger points. So I'm not trying to say, you know, that that you're you don't feel tight. I really try to make sure that I meet patients and clients where they are. So I'd say the takeaway is if you, you know, you don't have to you don't have to tell yourself, well, uh, you know, Holly said I'm not tight. So I'm not tight. You know, it's like, well, you can still, you know, you can feel tight, but but strengthen, right? So yeah, um, I think just understanding how the body works, uh, understanding that there are different components that hold your body together and without getting too sciencey, that there's one that's working really well, and then there's one that's not working really well. Um, and that that's okay. That's just how you were made and put together, and that is fine. Um and yeah, so those those are probably the things that we didn't touch that I would that I would say. Yeah. Awesome.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Very cool. Holly, those were great tips. Thank you so much. Yeah. And tell people where uh they can reach you.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, sure. Yes. Um, email is probably the easiest. Um, Holly, um, spelled with a Y at stateofthearthealth.com is my email. Um, the website is um stateofthearthealth.com. So you also can contact me there or just look up the clinic. Um, and but there are also many wonderful um hypermobile professionals in the area. But yeah, um, I'm happy to direct um in any way, shape, or form.

SPEAKER_01

Love that. Awesome. Holly Bart, thank you so much for joining the Side Your Edge podcast. And I am so grateful you were here. Thank you so much. Yes, all right, bye, Chris. Awesome. Okay, bye-bye.