Flexibility vs. Mobility: Critical Distinction
Flexibility is passive range of motion—how far you can stretch a muscle. Mobility is active range of motion with control—your ability to move through a range while maintaining stability. Both matter for healthy aging.
Why Mobility Matters More Than Flexibility
You can be flexible but immobile. A gymnast might achieve extreme splits but lack shoulder mobility for overhead pressing. Functional health requires active control throughout your available range.
Joint-Specific Mobility Work
Shoulders: Band pull-aparts, wall slides, and cross-body shoulder stretches maintain overhead mobility essential for pressing movements.
Hips: 90-90 stretches, pigeon pose, and deep squatting patterns address the tight hips created by prolonged sitting.
Ankles: Calf raises, ankle circles, and dorsiflexion stretches prevent the ankle stiffness that leads to knee and hip pain.
Thoracic Spine: Foam rolling and rotation stretches counter rounded-shoulder posture.
Progressive Mobility Training
- **Weeks 1-2**: 5 minutes daily exploring available range
- **Weeks 3-4**: 10-minute sessions adding controlled movement
- **Weeks 5-8**: Loaded mobility during exercise like overhead squats
- **Ongoing**: Maintenance prevents regression
Integration During Workouts
Build mobility directly into training. Perform thoracic rotations during warm-up. Practice deep squats between heavy sets. Use loaded carries to challenge stability.
Measuring Improvements
Track specific movements: can you touch your toes, achieve a full body weight squat, or rotate your spine freely? These practical measures matter more than abstract flexibility scores.