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Fitness for Life Chapter 10 Flexibility Flexibility Facts and Improving Flexibility Pgs 155-165 What is Flexibility? Flexibility is the ability to move your joints through a full range of motion (ROM) A joint is a place in the body where two bones come together Joints include the ankles, knees, hips, wrists, elbows, and shoulders Benefits of Good Flexibility Everyone needs flexibility for health and mobility Dancers and Gymnasts need more for their routines Good flexibility improves the performance of athletes Benefits of Flexibility Stretching helps prevent injury and muscle soreness Stretching can relieve muscle and menstrual cramps Stretching improves posture Body Build and Flexibility Anatomical differences can affect flexibility Gender (females are usually more flexible than males) Age (younger people are usually more flexible than older people) Hypermobility (Double-Jointed) Having an unusually large range of motion The ability to extend a joint past a straight line Balancing Strength and Flexibility Strength and flexibility exercises should be done together Exclusive strength exercises can lead to loss of motion (muscle-bound) Exclusive flexibility exercises can make joints susceptible to injury Fitness Principles Overload: stretch muscles longer than normal to increase flexibility (you should feel tightness or a pull) Progression: as you gain flexibility, gradually stretch further and increase the time you hold the stretch Specificity: flexibility exercises improve only the specific muscles and the specific joints that you stretch Range of Motion (ROM) Exercises ROM exercises maintain what you already have Believed to be the safest ways to stretch during warm-up Static Stretching Static Stretching is stretching slowly as far as you can without pain, until you feel a sense of pulling or tension. Hold for at least 15 seconds Static Stretching can increase flexibility and is safer than other types of stretching PNF Stretching PNF (proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation) is a technique used by therapists It involves static stretching and muscle contraction PNF involves contracting the muscle before you stretch it (CRAC) Ballistic Stretching Ballistic Stretching is a series of quick but gentle bouncing or bobbing motions that are not held for a long time Should be done carefully so not to overstretch and cause injury Ballistic stretching is more appropriate for higher level athletes