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Fascia

1. Why Fascia Is Important

Fascia is the connective tissue that surrounds muscles, organs, and joints.
Long underestimated, it is now known: fascia influences mobility, force transmission, posture, and even pain perception.
A healthy fascial network ensures ease of movement – a stuck one leads to stiffness and discomfort.


2. Basics & Explanation

  • Definition: Fascia = net-like connective tissue that runs throughout the entire body.
  • Functions:
    • Structure & stability
    • Force transmission between muscles
    • Protection & cushioning
    • Perception (many pain receptors are located in fascia)
  • Trainability: Fascia adapts to stress just like muscles – movement keeps it supple.
  • Fascial health depends on:
    • Movement & stretching
    • Hydration
    • Varied stress (tension, pressure, rotation)

3. Challenges & Risks

  • Lack of movement: Leads to hardening and adhesions.
  • One-sided stress: Always doing the same movements → fascia loses elasticity.
  • Stress: Chronic stress increases muscle tone and can tense the fascia.
  • Pain: Hardened fascia can cause back pain, neck problems, or restricted movement.

4. Tips & First Steps

  • Integrate fascia training: With rollers, balls, or targeted stretching exercises.
  • Variety of movement: Different sports and movements help the fascial network.
  • Hydration: Sufficient water supports fascia elasticity.
  • Combine: Combine fascia training with mobility, stretching, and strength exercises.
  • Regular but moderate: 2–3 sessions per week are sufficient.

5. Your Next Step

Get the bestforming app and receive:

  • Guided fascia training programs with videos
  • Tips on combining mobility, strength, and relaxation
  • Routines & reminders for smooth movements in everyday life

This way, you release tension, stay flexible, and strengthen your well-being – from head to toe.

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