Tips To Make Martial Arts Stretching More Efficient

By Donald Borah

With every one of the myriad martial arts styles out there, there's a martial arts stretching program that's unique to that particular discipline. People who practice martial arts that emphasize high kicking, such as savate, Northern shaolin, or taekwondo, you might want to exercise your hamstrings and hips with your flexibility stretches; grappling arts will need greater core strength and arm flexibility from the results of its martial arts stretching routine. If you're just starting out in martial arts, you'll need a more well rounded martial arts stretching regimen to increase your flexibility in general.

A good martial arts stretching program should include several parts to maximum efforts, as well as maintain safety. Here are tips to help keep your program of flexibility stretches both effective and completely safe.

1. Implementing a Morning Stretch

A daily morning routine of martial arts stretching can really help you accomplish the requirements of your martial arts program and advance within it. It is best to do the morning stretching routine before breakfast, and fifteen to thirty minutes should be devoted to it. It is important to include a warm-up and cool down for safety, as well as custom stretches designed to help you accomplish the requirements of your martial arts program. Static, isometric and PNF stretches are hard on the muscular system, have a long recovery time and should be left for the main stretching work-out. It is a challenge to begin, and maintain, a morning stretching routine, but the benefits are well worth the efforts.

2. Warm Up Exercises

There are specific warm up procedures to martial arts stretching, as you have a proper beginning and specific warm up regimen. As you begin your warm up period, start calisthenics, so that your muscles get adequate blood flow and your body temperature rises. In the specific warm up, do dynamic flexibility stretches that start getting your body accustomed to the specific martial art you focus on. In order to properly exercise, especially during the morning, you have to warm up properly, because your body is usually tighter in the morning and requires more stretching. As you finish the specific warm up, start your real stretching routine, as it more specifically focuses on what areas need to be more flexible to properly perform the martial art.

3. Cooling Down

Start cooling down your body after you finish the main phase of your martial arts stretching. You'll find that your cool down will look not dissimilar from your warm up, as you need to get blood flowing to your muscles to help them adjust.

4. Safety

Health and skill development is the whole idea of a martial arts stretching routine. Injuries to any part of your body can derail your progress. Follow these hints to keep your flexibility stretches safe.

* Talk to a physician before you start a stretching or training routine of any kind. You'll not only be safer when you do it, you'll have the approval of your doctor, leaving you feeling more free to make progress.

* Don't ever do flexibility stretches that cause you any pain. If you feel a sharp pain as you exercise, stop immediately; the most you should be feeling is a warm or small burning feeling in your muscle. Even the smallest amount of pain can be evidence of micro reading of your muscles, making them scar and permanently making you that much less flexible, thereby hindering your progress. If you have any sort of pain as you start stretching, talk to your physician.

* Bouncing, rhythmic and bobbing motions should be avoided when performing your martial arts stretching. These methods are called ballistic stretching, they carry a high risk of injury and that risk is not worthy an potential benefits from using them.

I invite you to use this martial arts stretching information to increase the benefit of your stretching routine by rapidly increasing your functional flexibility. - 31491

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