Dancers understand the importance of flexibility and alignment. Most have established practices for limbering up and spend each class carefully correcting their body positioning, working toward that magical day when muscle memory takes over and they achieve ideal posture. But many students—and their teachers—fail to consider an important anatomical player beyond muscle and bone: fascia. Learning to manipulate fascia, in addition to regular class work and stretching practices, can help dancers correct persistent alignment issues and reach unexplored levels of flexibility.
Fascia is a system of soft tissue that encases muscles, organs, nerves and more. It connects seemingly unrelated body parts along extensive, web-like lines, many of which run from the tips of the toes to the top of the head.
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Superficial back line |
Like muscles, fascia can be tight. To test this on your own body, try touching your toes before and after rolling out your feet on a tennis ball. Because the plantar fascia at the bottom of the foot is connected to fascia that runs up the backs of the legs (and up the spine and over the skull), releasing fascia in the feet can increase flexibility in the hamstrings.
Deborah Vogel, an Oberlin College faculty member, neuromuscular educator and co-founder of the Center for Dance Medicine in NYC, found that teaching students to stretch their fascia in addition to their muscles helped them progress more efficiently. If fascia is chronically tight, she says, dancers may stretch all they want without results. “It’s not that their efforts are incorrect, but there could be something else holding them back.” Similarly, the same alignment correction applied over and over again in class has limited long-term effect if a student’s fascia is restricting her body position.
Here, Vogel shares a few of her favorite dynamic exercises for stretching fascia. You’ll know you’ve achieved a fascial—and not just muscular—stretch, she says, when you feel a long line of sensation instead of a targeted point. You also may feel the stretch somewhere unexpected. A fascial stretch targeting tightness in the hamstring, for example, might be felt more along the calf, depending on the dancer’s body.
Stretches should be held for 30–40 seconds in a steady, strong pull. Vogel also warns that you should extend to just 70–80 percent of your flexibility to avoid overstretching or tearing the muscle.
Fascial Turnout Stretch
Releasing fascia in this area can soothe tightness in the hips and improve turnout.
1. Sitting in a chair, cross one leg over the other so the ankle crosses at the thigh.
2. Clasp hands together and wrap them around the top knee. Press the knee down into the hands, while sitting up as straight as possible.
3. Slowly lean forward over the leg, bending at the hip joint and keeping the back flat. Keep pressing the knee into the hands to keep the working leg’s muscles activated.
• Depending on where you are tight, you may feel this stretch in the hamstring or deep in the hip’s piriformis area. Try rotating the spine to face toward and then away from the knee to change the stretch.
Fascial Latissimus Stretch
This is an exercise for dancers with tight shoulders who get the correction, “Keep your ribs down,” when raising arms to fifth position.
1. Standing in a comfortable parallel position, bring the hands above the head and grasp the left wrist with the right hand.
3. Gently pull the elbows away from each other, activating the muscles in your shoulders and arms.
4. Bend the torso to the right, so you feel a stretch along the left side of the body.
5. Rotate the elbows so you’re looking at the floor. The stretch will shift to include the lower back.
• Try bumping the weight into the left hip and rounding your lower back for a different feeling. Vogel suggests gently playing around with positioning to find the tightest areas.
Fascial Hamstring Stretch
This stretches fascia surrounding the lateral hamstring, frequently tight in dancers.
1. Place the heel on a chair or low barre, with square hips and the knee pointing toward the ceiling.
2. Keeping the foot flexed, sickle it slightly, turning the bottom of the foot inward.
3. Rotate the entire leg inward, turning in from the hip.
4. Send the sit bone of the working side back so it almost feels like you’re sticking your butt out.
5. Strongly contract the front quad muscle.
• If your flexibility allows, lean forward to increase the stretch.