Prone Shoulder Flexion Lift-offs
2m 2s
Develop active shoulder flexion strength at end range with this prone lift-off drill — a focused, low-load movement that directly challenges your ability to generate muscular force at the very top of your overhead range, where most people have little to no active control.
Lying face down with the body long and arms extended overhead, you hold a stick with both hands in shoulder flexion, with the stick resting on yoga blocks to set the starting position at or near your passive end range. The block height is key — stacking blocks higher brings the stick closer to your end range, making the lift-off harder and more demanding. Lowering the blocks drops the stick further from end range, making the lift more accessible and allowing more active range to be expressed. Start lower and stack up as your active range improves.
The prone position removes postural cheats that are common in standing or seated overhead drills — there is no arching of the lower back, no shrugging, no leaning. The body is long and grounded, and the only movement available is true shoulder flexion. The blocks position the arms at a range that challenges what the shoulder can actively reach, creating the ideal environment for end range training. The lift-off itself demands that the shoulder flexors generate active force from a position they rarely get to work in — building the neuromuscular connection and muscular capacity needed to own that overhead range, not just passively occupy it.
Expect a deep, effortful contraction through the front of the shoulder, upper chest, and serratus anterior as you attempt to lift the arms off the blocks. The lift may be small — just a few centimeters — and that is completely correct. Height is not the goal. Active muscular engagement at end range is. The body should remain completely still throughout, with no arching or twisting. Over time, this drill builds the active overhead shoulder range needed for pressing, reaching, throwing, and any sport or activity that demands full, controlled shoulder flexion.