Quadruped Shoulder Flexion PAILs/RAILs
Beginner
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4m 36s
Strengthen and expand your shoulder flexion end range with PAILs and RAILs in a modified quadruped position — a precise, well-loaded drill that uses a vertical stick to achieve and train near end-range shoulder flexion with full spinal integrity.
In a standard quadruped position, one hand holds a stick vertically against the floor. From here, you walk your fingers up the stick — gradually increasing shoulder flexion — until you reach close to your end range without any rotation or extension creeping into the spine. The spine stays neutral and long throughout. This finger-walking cue is the key to finding an honest, stacked end range position without the body compensating to get there.
From this loaded position, the drill moves through two isometric phases: pressing the stick straight down into the floor for PAILs — using the long, stretched tissue of the shoulder flexors under load — then attempting to lift the stick off the floor for RAILs, recruiting the posterior shoulder and regressive tissue at the back of the shoulder to drive the movement.
PAILs (Progressive Angular Isometric Loading) contract the shoulder flexors — the muscles currently stretched and lengthened at end range — pressing the stick into the floor and building tensile strength directly through the tissues under load. RAILs (Regressive Angular Isometric Loading) then recruit the posterior shoulder — the short-side, regressive tissue — attempting to lift the stick off the floor and actively pulling the shoulder deeper into flexion range. Together, these contractions signal to the nervous system that this overhead range is safe, accessible, and strong, converting passive end range into active, owned mobility.
Expect significant effort through the front and top of the shoulder during PAILs as the stretched tissue contracts hard under load, and a deep, effortful contraction through the back of the shoulder and upper back during RAILs as the regressive tissue fires to lift. The spine should remain completely still throughout — no rotating, no extending, no collapsing. Build each contraction gradually, never forcing the joint. Over time, this drill builds the active shoulder flexion strength needed for pressing, reaching, overhead sport, and any movement that demands full, controlled range above the head.
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