Prone Shoulder Extension PAILs/RAILs
Joint Focus: SHOULDERS
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3m 11s
Strengthen and expand your shoulder extension end range with PAILs and RAILs in a prone position — a powerful isometric drill that loads the shoulder at its absolute limit, building tensile strength and active control in the range where most people are weakest.
Lying face down, the hands or fists are placed on the floor — or elevated on yoga blocks for those with stronger, more available extension range — loading the shoulders into passive end-range extension. Unlike the lift-off variation, this drill starts and stays at true end range. There is no room to move — the goal is maximum isometric loading at the limit of available shoulder extension, not a lift-off.
From this end-range position, the drill moves through two distinct isometric phases: for PAILs, drive the hands firmly into the floor — almost as if initiating a push-up, but without any actual movement — holding a strong contraction through the anterior shoulder and chest. For RAILs, pull the elbows straight up toward the ceiling, contracting the posterior shoulder tissue hard while the hands remain in contact with the floor or blocks.
PAILs (Progressive Angular Isometric Loading) contract the anterior shoulder — the muscles being stretched at extension end range — pressing the hands into the floor and building tensile strength and tissue resilience through the lengthened tissue. This signals to the nervous system that the stretched position is safe and strong, not a threat. RAILs (Regressive Angular Isometric Loading) then recruit the posterior shoulder — the short-side, regressive tissue — pulling the elbows toward the ceiling and actively driving the shoulder deeper into extension range. Together, these contractions create a powerful neurological and structural adaptation at the shoulder's end range, converting a position of passive limitation into one of active strength and control.
Expect significant effort through the front of the shoulder and chest during PAILs — the sensation of pressing into the floor without moving should feel intense and concentrated. During RAILs, expect a deep, burning contraction through the back of the shoulder and posterior deltoid as the elbows drive upward. Build each contraction gradually from around 20 percent effort up to near maximum — never force the joint. The body stays completely still throughout. No arching, no rotation, no movement of any kind. Over time, this drill permanently expands shoulder extension range and builds the posterior shoulder strength needed for pulling movements, postural control, and long-term shoulder health.
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