Quadruped Shoulder Flexion Lift-offs
Beginner
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2m 6s
Build active shoulder flexion strength at end range with this quadruped lift-off variation — a natural progression from the PAILs/RAILs drill that isolates the regressive tissue behind the shoulder, demanding it generate real force at the very limit of available range.
In the same quadruped base used for the shoulder flexion PAILs/RAILs drill, one hand holds a stick vertically with fingers walked up the stick into near end-range shoulder flexion, spine neutral and long. Here, however, the hand position on the stick is dropped slightly lower than the PAILs/RAILs setup — just enough to leave a small gap between the base of the stick and the floor, allowing a lift-off to occur. The task is to lift the stick off the floor using the regressive tissue — the posterior shoulder muscles — creating a genuine active contraction in the tissue behind the shoulder at its most lengthened position.
The hand position on the stick is the key variable in this drill. Grip too high and the arm is pushed past what can be actively lifted — no contraction is possible. Drop the grip slightly lower and just enough space is created for a small but real lift to occur. This positions the posterior shoulder tissue in its longest, most challenged state while still allowing active force to be produced — the precise condition needed to expand active range over time. The spine must remain completely still throughout, with no rotation or extension used to assist the lift. The lift comes entirely from the back of the shoulder — nothing else.
Expect a deep, effortful contraction through the back of the shoulder and upper back as you attempt to lift the stick off the floor. The lift will likely be small — sometimes barely perceptible — and that is entirely correct. This is not about range of movement, it is about quality of contraction at the edge of what is actively available. No spinal rotation, no extension, no cheating. Over time, as the regressive tissue gets stronger and the nervous system adapts, the lift becomes more accessible and the active range begins to close the gap toward passive end range.
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