Women’s Health

Why Stretching Matters: The Real Science Behind Your Body’s Balance

A person showing the science behind why stretching matters

This is very unfortunate. 🤦🏾

Beware the information you take in on social media and the interweb (yes, I know the irony here). I recently saw a post from a “trainer” I know is new to the profession — not certified, and barely trained — claiming boldly that you don’t need to stretch.

Ummmm… no.


Science says yes, and for multiple important reasons. Let’s break this down so it’s not just a rant — but a chance to learn.


1. The Hill Muscle Model

First, there’s the Hill Muscle Model, a foundational concept in muscle physiology. It explains that muscles behave like a system of contractile and elastic components — meaning they can both shorten and stretch.

If you ignore the elastic part of this model (the part that allows muscles to lengthen and absorb force), you’re essentially forcing your body to operate with only half the system functional. That’s a recipe for strain and injury.


2. Biotensegrity and Structural Balance

Your body isn’t a stack of bones held together with tape. It’s a dynamic, balanced system governed by biotensegrity — a term describing how tension and compression work together to create stability and fluid movement.

Think of it like a geodesic dome: it’s not rigid, but it’s strong. Your fascia, ligaments, and muscles maintain that tension network. When one part becomes too tight or too loose, the entire structure compensates — often in inefficient or painful ways. Stretching, when done appropriately, keeps this system balanced.


3. Fascia Health and Soft Tissue Quality

Your fascia — the connective tissue that wraps around muscles, organs, and joints — needs to be pliable and hydrated to function well. Without stretching, the fascia becomes stiff, dehydrated, and restrictive. This limits range of motion and increases the risk of injury.

Stretching nourishes and rehydrates the fascia. It improves sliding surfaces between tissues and reduces unnecessary friction that contributes to chronic pain or dysfunction.


4. Functional Range of Motion (ROM)

Your joints and muscles are meant to move through a full range of motion. But if your body doesn’t experience that range regularly, it adapts by shrinking your capabilities.

Imagine owning a sports car but only ever driving it in first gear. That’s what happens when you skip mobility work and stretching — your joints and soft tissues lose their full capacity. Eventually, simple movements like bending, twisting, or reaching become harder, more painful, or even dangerous.


5. The Consequences of Misinformation

Here’s the real danger: the trainer who said “you don’t need to stretch” isn’t evil — they’re just inexperienced and unaware. The bigger issue is that people hear statements like that and believe them. And then they suffer.

Social media has made everyone feel like an expert. But true expertise doesn’t just come from reading a few studies or copying flashy workouts. It comes from years of study, experience, reflection, and humility — especially humility to know how much you don’t know.


6. The Pieced-Together Workout Problem

This is how we end up with Frankenstein “total body workouts” built on partial facts. The logic seems sound on the surface: if I work all my muscles, I’m doing a total-body workout. But unless that workout respects the body’s complex interconnections, neurological readiness, structural imbalances, and fascial tension — it’s not actually holistic. It’s just random movement with good intentions.

And unfortunately, good intentions don’t protect your joints, restore your balance, or make you move better. Thoughtful, informed planning does.


What You Can Do Instead

Instead of chasing conflicting advice online, study with purpose. Take in complete models that respect the body’s design — not just cherry-picked hacks that sound good in a 60-second video.

If you want to start learning what works, I wrote an ebook that distills insights from almost 30 years of work in therapy and training. It’s a great place to begin if your goals include:

  • Longevity
  • Functional strength
  • Real mobility
  • Relief from back, SI joint, or muscle pain

You can grab the ebook with the link below.

Move better. Reduce pain. Live life on your terms.


Let’s be better than social media noise. Let’s stretch — intelligently, consistently, and with an understanding of why stretching matters.

Building a foundation for a better life.

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It’s All in Your Mind

Man working out with a focused expression — representing the connection between thought, intention, and action (mind over matter)

I used to roll my eyes at the phrase “It’s all in your mind.”
It sounded dismissive — like I was just forgetting to flip some invisible switch that would fix everything.

And yet, there I was, using all the “right” goal-setting strategies, all the visualization techniques, and still hitting emotional and mental roadblocks. When people said that line, it felt like they were missing the complexity of the struggle.

But over time, I started to see it differently.
What if “It’s all in your mind” wasn’t meant to be dismissive… but instead, a powerful truth?

That shift changed everything.

Now, I see it as a mantra for alignment — a reminder that the way I think and the way I act have to be connected. That mind over matter isn’t just motivation-speak. It’s science-backed and experience-proven.

When I hit a wall now, I pause and ask:

👉🏽 Why am I not doing what I intend to do?
Is there a real, practical reason — like not allowing enough time between work and home — instead of beating myself up with, “I just don’t have discipline”?

👉🏽 What needs to change in my approach?
Am I repeating a method that’s never worked and keeping myself trapped in the same mental loop?

👉🏽 Can I support myself better?
Would changing my workout time make it easier to follow through instead of expecting a magical burst of motivation?

That’s when “It’s all in your mind” really landed.
It’s not about pushing aside your struggles. It’s about understanding that you have more influence over your direction than you might believe.

It’s about:

✅ Setting the right kind of goals (based on values, not fantasy)
✅ Making plans that match your real life
✅ Anchoring your actions to intentions every step of the way

Because when your mind and your actions line up — that’s when change really happens.

And the truth is, where your mind goes, your body will follow.

Try it for yourself.

Try it!

it’s not just working out, it’s building a foundation for a better life.

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Fascia Stretching: What It Is, Why It Matters, and How to Do It Right

Fascia stretching showing body-wide connections — representing proper fascia stretching technique

Click on the image to watch 👆🏽

Fascia is finally having its moment in the spotlight—and it should. This vital tissue is responsible for connecting and supporting your body in ways most people don’t even realize. But while “fascia” has become a buzzword, most of the information circulating about fascia stretching is either incomplete, outdated, or outright wrong.

You might see videos or articles that apply the same old exercise routines from the ’80s and ’90s and simply call it “fascia training.” The truth? Fascia is a unique, intelligent tissue, and it demands a specific and respectful approach if you want to stretch and train it correctly.

Let’s break down what fascia is, why it matters, and how to stretch it properly using science-backed, body-respecting methods.


What Is Fascia?

Fascia is connective tissue — a living network made up of cells, fibers, and an internal matrix. It surrounds and connects everything in your body, from your muscles and bones to your nerves, arteries, and even organs.

Think of it like an interconnected spiderweb that runs from head to toe, fingertip to fingertip. It’s not just the white stuff you peel off meat — it plays active roles in:

  • Circulation
  • Structure and posture
  • Communication
  • Immune defense
  • Mobility
  • Energy transfer
  • Protection and scarring

And one of its most important features is its ability to carry fluid through microscopic tubes. These tubes — when working properly — transport nutrients and remove waste efficiently. But here’s the key: Fascia must stay hydrated, intact, and unobstructed to perform these roles well.


What Science Says About Fascia Stretching

Many people (and even some professionals) make the mistake of applying aggressive techniques like foam rolling or Graston scraping, thinking they’re helping their fascia. In reality, these methods can crush the delicate tubes in the fascial network, causing more harm than good.

Proper fascia stretching requires:

  • Respect for the fascial chains — long lines of muscles and tissue that connect across the body
  • Precise anatomical knowledge — so you know which direction and angle to stretch
  • Global tension — stretching from the tip of your toes to the tip of your fingers
  • Gentle, sustained force — to loosen the tissue without damaging it

Two methods that truly honor these requirements are Myofascial Stretching and Global Postural Stretching (GPS). Myofascial stretches target specific chains; GPS works with full-body tension and alignment. Both respect the body’s biotensegrity—its balance of tension and compression that maintains structure and function.


An Example of How Fascia Chains Work

Let’s look at one fascial chain: from your heel up through your lateral calf, into the hamstring (biceps femoris), through the glutes, into your back, and out to your arm. This chain includes:

  • Lateral gastroc
  • Biceps femoris
  • Gluteus maximus
  • Thoracolumbar fascia
  • Latissimus dorsi

To stretch one part of this chain — say, the biceps femoris — you’d need to:

  1. Do the opposite action of that muscle (extend the knee, flex the hip)
  2. Align the stretch globally, with tension from feet to fingertips
  3. Stretch in sequence, respecting the full chain

You can’t isolate fascia. It’s not how the tissue works.


What Not to Do

A client once came to me after receiving Graston technique for Achilles tendonitis and plantar fasciitis. Her condition worsened — not surprising, considering the aggressive scraping tore at her already compromised fascial tissue.

We used gentle fascial techniques and specific stretches for the calves and soles of the feet. She was 90% better after one session — and 100% better within weeks.

Moral of the story: Work with your fascia, not against it.


How to Build a Fascia Stretching Program

  • Start with a specific chain — For example, stretch your biceps femoris
  • Add related structures — Include lateral gastroc, glute, lat, etc.
  • Stretch each muscle 3x for 30 seconds — This is a good starting point backed by research
  • Balance the body — Create an A program (focused chain) and a B program (balancing chain)

We’ll never be fully balanced all the time — life pulls us in different directions. But regular myofascial stretching keeps your system in harmony and functioning at its best.


Final Thoughts

Fascia isn’t something you can treat casually. It’s complex, vital, and deeply intelligent. When you stretch it correctly, it rewards you with better movement, reduced pain, improved posture, and enhanced body function.

Want to dive deeper into fascia stretching and holistic body care?
👉🏽 Reach out for a complimentary consultation

Stay tuned for more fascia-focused, science-backed content — and treat your tissue with the respect it deserves.

it’s not just working out, it’s building a foundation for a better life.

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Small Changes, Big Results: A Sustainable Approach to Health

Person progressing through 1 T8/T9 ELDOA, daily habits leading to long-term health improvements

It might be human nature to want the quick fix. I see it all the time—people show up wanting me to “fix them.” But what they often bring is a problem that’s been building for 10, 20, even 30 years, often ignored or mismanaged.

And ironically, it’s usually that quick fix mentality that got them in trouble in the first place.

If you want lasting change, real transformation, then you need a different strategy—one built on sustainable, holistic action. That means choosing stretches, exercises, and habits that re-educate your body and work with your entire system… not just hammering on one issue and hoping it’s enough.

Here’s what that looks like in real life:

✅ Take time to assess what’s really going on in your whole body
✅ Choose a 5–15 minute routine that genuinely moves you forward
✅ Let that routine show you where you need more attention—and add one more element
✅ Rinse and repeat

Most people already know this, but they get frustrated or bored when I remind them. That’s not because the method is wrong—it’s because the challenge is in their mindset.

To thrive in a program like this, you’ve got to fall in love with the process. You’ve got to find satisfaction in those tiny gains—those moments when your body feels a little stronger, a little more open, a little more resilient.

We’re not just talking about fixing a back, knee, or shoulder.

We’re talking about building a sustainable, empowered lifestyle—where your choices stack in the right direction, day after day. Where you let go of the guilt when things don’t go perfectly and still make the next best decision anyway.

This is health for life, not just weight loss for vacation.

So the next time you feel frustrated or tempted to skip a step, remember: chasing instant results only leads to burnout and disappointment.

Instead, choose to feel good about yourself today—and proud of what you’re building for tomorrow.

Set your sights on the horizon. And just keep moving toward it, one small, smart step at a time.

It’s not just working out, it’s building a foundation for a better life.

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Find Joy in Your Body: A New Way to Listen and Learn

Find joy in continuing to get to know your body.

Don’t fall into the trap of labeling what you feel as “bad” or seeing it as something your body is doing to you. Tightness, discomfort, weakness—they’re just messages. Your body is talking to you.

Attaching judgment or identity to those messages is what keeps you stuck. Instead, view each sensation as part of an ongoing conversation.

➡️ Feeling tight? Maybe that area needs some stretching.
➡️ Feeling weak? Maybe it’s time to build strength there.
➡️ Feeling frustrated? Maybe the real work is in being gentler with yourself.

As you age, expect your body to change. That’s not failure—it’s life. And if you stay curious and open, those changes can lead you to a better understanding of yourself.

This mindset shift—of being present and finding joy in the details—is powerful.

“If you go into that attitude now, you can find joy in the details.”
— from the video

When you stop fighting your body and start working with it, you’ll start to feel better in more ways than one.

So be a little gentler. Listen closely. Find joy in the process of learning your body, again and again.

You’ll go a long way.

Building a foundation for a better life.

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How to Embrace the Opportunity During Fall

SolCore Therapy and Fitness

I love fall. Always have.

The energy, the motivation, the sense that life is unfolding right before your eyes… I feel it every year, and I hope you do, too.

In fact, I hope you can build on that positivity to dream bigger for yourself and your life. Because there’s so much opportunity during fall—if you know how to lean into it.

Think about the themes we associate with this season:

  • Freedom
  • Change
  • Opportunity
  • Focus
  • Family and friends

They all carry a shared thread: they make us feel good. They bring a sense of hope, clarity, and expansion.

So this fall, focus on those positive emotions when you think about what’s possible. Ask yourself:

  • What makes me feel good, positive, and hopeful?
  • What do I do when I’m feeling those emotions?
  • How can I build more of that into my day—right now?

Because it’s not really about the leaves changing, the weather cooling off, or even the holidays.

It’s about choosing a mindset of possibility. Choosing to align with energy that fuels you. Choosing to make the next right decision—whether it’s tiny or huge.

I love the opportunity during fall to reconnect with family. I love the crisp air. I love the energy of momentum.

But most of all, I love that this season reminds us: change is natural, and growth is always available—if you’re open to it.

What are you ready to embrace this fall?

It’s not just working out, it’s building a foundation for a better life.

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Stop Making Excuses: Find Health Opportunities Instead

Man find way through challenges to find health opportunities.

I hear it all the time.

People tell me they really want to get on a program to correct their issues and stay active for the long haul. But right after they start, the excuses come in:

“My body is different.”
“I’m just too busy at work.”
“I’m always tired.”

🧐 Sound familiar?

These excuses are common — and frustrating. I’ve learned that there’s only so much I can say to push someone past them. Real change only happens when you’re ready.

But when that moment comes, here’s the shift that can change everything:

Look at your excuses as health opportunities.


Turn Your Excuses Into Empowerment

“My body is different.”
Great. That means your path is unique. This isn’t a reason to stop — it’s an opportunity to meet your body where it is, and grow with intention.

“I’m too busy.”
That’s an invitation to improve your time management. Prioritize yourself. 15 minutes a day can be a game-changer when done consistently.

“I’m too tired.”
Exactly why you need this. The energy boost from better movement, sleep, and food will shock you — and remind you what your body is capable of.


Every one of these “reasons” is actually a doorway — if you’re willing to walk through it.

If you really want something, you’ll find a way.
If not, you’ll find an excuse.

The choice is yours.

It’s not just working out, it’s building a foundation for a better life.

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5 Ways to Grow Now that Summer is Over

post-summer personal growth

Post-summer personal growth and personal health are essential—now is the perfect time to weave them together for maximum impact. As we step into autumn’s new rhythms, challenge yourself to grow in one or more of these five areas and set the stage for real, lasting change.

1. Embrace the Outdoors

As temperatures drop and crowds thin, take advantage of local trails, parks, or outdoor activities that both excite and intimidate you. Is there a hike or sport you’ve always wanted to try? Setting a concrete goal—whether it’s a challenging route or a new personal record—keeps you motivated and accountable. Preparing for those activities means pairing activity-specific training (think mobility and strength) with corrective routines that address wear and tear, so your body stays balanced and resilient for every new outdoor adventure.

2. Commit to a Gym Challenge

Fall is the time to upgrade your routines. Pick a weekly attendance goal that pushes you slightly outside your comfort zone, or try a new class that stretches you mentally and physically. Whether you add another day, take on a new program, or explore mind-body classes, this intentional discomfort leads to sustainable progress and new confidence. Remember, success comes from a mix of consistency and embracing occasional novelty.

3. Eat Whole, Nourishing Foods

After a summer of barbecues and travel, reset your nutrition with a challenge: shop the outer perimeter of your grocery store, focusing on fresh produce, proteins, and healthy whole foods. Skip the boxes, bags, and ingredient lists you can’t pronounce. Learning to cook new, seasonal recipes together as a family or with friends adds joy and reinforces healthy habits that fuel all of your other goals.

4. Deepen Stress Management Practices

Transition can spark stress. Use this time to go deeper with your mindfulness practice—whether it’s meditation, prayer, or deep breathing. If you’re experienced, read a new book or try a more advanced practice. If not, start with just a few minutes a day; small steps compound over time. Give yourself permission to slow down and reset your mental game for fall. This one shift can create ripple effects across your mood, focus, and gratitude.

5. Play!

Growth doesn’t always mean working harder—it means finding balance and joy. Remember your childhood summers and add a little play back into your life: toss a frisbee with friends, ride bikes with your kids, or set up a game night. Not only will this boost your energy levels and mood, but it trains you to appreciate movement for fun—not just obligation. Always follow up by thanking your body: take time for recovery with stretches and corrective exercises, so you’re ready to play again.

For more on building habits and maximizing results at the gym, see our Personal Training page.


As the season changes, now is the perfect time to refocus on what matters most and tap into your natural drive for growth. And if you need extra inspiration, just check out my son (age 6!) tackling a 3-mile hike down—and up—the Grand Canyon. Growth is natural for kids, but it’s still a choice for adults. Make yours count.

Building a foundation for a better life.

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How to Hit Your Goals in Time (Without Burning Out)

Solcore therapy and fitness

There might not be a magic “secret” to getting everything you want in life…

But if you want to hit your goals in time—without relying on luck or burnout—there’s one thing you can’t skip: clarity.

It starts with making a clear decision and backing it up with aligned action. Every. Single. Day.

From what I’ve seen—both in my clients and in myself—the biggest obstacle isn’t lack of ability, talent, or heart.

It’s confusion.
It’s distraction.
It’s overwhelm.
It’s pursuing 10 ideas without committing to one.

When I ask new clients what they truly want from their program, I almost always get vague answers like “to get in shape” or “fix this one thing.”

But when we press deeper—asking why they want that—it’s often the first time they’ve really thought about it. And that lack of clarity is exactly why they’ve been stuck doing random acts of movement without making real progress.

You can’t hit your goals if you don’t know what they are.

But once you do know, you can:

  • Build a plan
  • Break it into smaller steps
  • Get support from experts
  • Make room for new habits
  • Track progress and adjust intelligently

Success is not about “arriving.” It’s about aligning your life—your schedule, your priorities, your energy—with what truly matters to you.

You are already successful the moment you start doing what’s right for you.

So take 10–30 minutes today and get clear:

  • What do you actually want?
  • Why does it matter?
  • What’s the smallest step you can take this week to move toward it?

If your goals include long-term health, mobility, or feeling strong and free in your body—don’t settle for the same popular workouts that leave most people burned out and broken down.


P.S.
Once you’ve taken time to clarify your goals and realize that you want a health and fitness program that leads to longevity and a fuller life—I invite you to connect.

DM me or book a Discovery Session below. We’ll discuss:

  • Where you are now
  • What you’ve tried
  • Your sticking points
  • Where you want to go

I’ll give you personalized insights you can use immediately. And if it’s a good fit, I’ll share how we can help through:

  • Private therapy + training
  • Group classes
  • Personalized online programs

👉🏽 Use the calendar below to book a time.
Can’t find one? Email support@solcorefitness.com, and we’ll help.

Building a foundation for a better life.

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Exercises That May Be Hurting You More Than Helping

Most people hit the gym or roll out the yoga mat with good intentions. You want to get stronger, feel better, prevent pain, or look a little more like your best self in the mirror. But what you do in the name of “health” doesn’t always lead to health!

I’ve seen it firsthand, time and again. A client comes in, confused—”I’m following the routines I see in magazines, but my knees are getting worse,” or, “My back hurts after yoga, even though everyone tells me it’s supposed to help.” Every time, the problem isn’t willpower or effort. It’s that not all exercises serve all bodies—and real harm can happen when the wrong movements are forced.

Let’s look at two stories. Months back, I worked with a runner—we’ll call him Mike—who started coming to me for knee pain. Mike powered through marathons, even as a swelling lump formed on the inside of his knee. Instead of seeking an expert, he popped painkillers, got a cortisone shot, and ran harder. Finally, when the swelling forced him to limp, he had to stop. What was the core issue? Mike’s running form was repetitively compressing and twisting the knee joint, causing inflammation in the small plica folds. Even a “harmless” strength move he’d copied from a YouTuber—heavy leg extensions—compounded the irritation.

Similarly, another client (a retired teacher, let’s call her Anna) suffered from cervical instability and a family history of heart disease. Yet every morning, driven by her online instructor’s example, she did deep neck stretches, holding headstand-like inversions. For Anna, those movements meant excessive pressure on already weakened joints and arteries, risking severe complications beyond simple soreness.

Why This Happens More Than You Think

Much of our exercise culture is based on “what’s trendy,” passed-down gym routines, or social media demonstration—rarely on what’s safe (or necessary) for each unique body. What’s considered “universal” for mobility or strength can be the wrong fit: knees that collapse on squats when the hips are weak, necks twisted when posture and strength aren’t there, or overly aggressive stretching on hypermobile bodies.

Even experienced practitioners can overlook the subtle signals—mild aches, swelling, post-exercise tension—mistaking them for harmless “burn.” But these warning lights, if not addressed, evolve into bigger problems: torn ligaments, chronic pain, headaches, or even heart issues.

How to Tell What’s Good for You

Rule #1: Pain or persistent discomfort is never just “normal.” It’s your body’s alarm system. The deeper lesson: what’s safe is deeply individual.

A movement pattern that helps one person might wear down someone else. For example:

  • Forward bends can compress discs if you have lumbar instability.
  • Ballistic stretching can provoke nerve irritation or muscle tears, especially in tight, repetitive movers.
  • Holding inversions like shoulder-stands for “neuro health” can cut off nerve or blood supply in folks with vascular conditions.

This is where assessment and biomechanical knowledge come in. A movement has to be good for your body—not just popular.

What You Can Do Right Now

  • Get a simple movement screen (with a professional) before radically changing your exercise routine.
  • Pay attention: Is pain local, referred, sharp, or persistent? Don’t “tough it out.”
  • Adjust—there’s always a modification or alternative.
  • Track swelling, redness, or loss of mobility (in the knees, neck, spine, shoulders) as early warnings.
  • Never ignore contraindications—e.g., family heart disease, joint instability, history of injury—or push them under the rug.

Why Osteopathic Manual Therapy Makes a Difference

What sets apart a specialist in Osteopathic Manual Therapy? This practice combines precise movement assessments and hands-on techniques to restore healthy function, not just build muscle. An osteopathically trained expert will look at joint integrity, soft-tissue balance, posture, and how everything connects—from ankles to neck. They target root causes: subtle imbalances that, if left unchecked, turn into the big injuries nobody wants.

When you work with a pro, you learn the “why” behind each adjustment, which exercises really promote health, and—most importantly—what you personally should avoid. It’s about proactive support, not reactive “fixes” post-injury.

Remember:

  • Don’t get stuck following what works for someone else.
  • Know your structure. Modify based on your body’s signals.
  • Prevention is always less painful—and cheaper—than correction.

Ready to ensure your fitness actually supports your health? Start by exploring the difference with genuine osteopathic manual therapy, and get a tailored map for your body, not a generic chart.

It’s not just working out, it’s building a foundation for a better life.

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