Great episode! My most nostalgic cereal were those mini boxes that came in a pack of 8- 2 rice crispy, 2 fruit loops, 2 corn pops, and 2 frosted flakes. The boxes had perforations on the side so you could use it as a bowl and a lot of the time the milk would end up leaking everywhere. My parents would buy them when we went camping and it was the only time we were allowed "sugar cereal".
Hey Bill, thank you so much for all the content. I've loved watching all of your Reconsider videos. I have an issue with some of the language used in this one. I think it's appropriate to say that your model does not need to be modified to resolve mechanical issues with hypermobile individuals. I don't think it's appropriate to say that these individuals should be treated like a normal clinic patient except under extreme circumstances given: their altered psychographic profile, altered gut function (which will almost certainly alter mechanics), and where they sit within their constellation of hyermobile comorbidities. Genetically speaking, these spectrum disorders are incredibly challenging to diagnose and most people will not satisfy the genetic criteria for an official diagnosis. At the very least the reps/sets/recovery periods should be altered for these individuals even after being brought back into their base of support. I don't mean to nitpick, but I appreciate your preference for extreme specificity. I see primarily chronically ill hypermobile individuals. Your model has been a career-changing tool for me in working with this demographic. I think it's important to caveat your advice with at the very least addressing altered recovery, if not sensitivity for dealing with someone who has an altered capacity for stress.
Hey Bill - love your content and I am part of UHP+. Ok so I am understanding narrow with 90 degree left hip ER as a spinal compensation, I am trying to intervene and I actually want to see them lose some of that early hip ER if I am successful? Guess I have not been successful yet. Could you give ideas - since you alluded to having someone with no hip IR in this video and 90 degrees of early hip ER and then you did one quick intervention and they went back toward "average" hip measures. Please tell of this intervention! at 4:10 in this video you explain a specific case that I am wondering that intervention. (Check is in the mail to IFast)
Hi Bill thanks for all the content. Do you have any additional videos that talk about how being stuck in extension messes with the nervous system? My pt said my diaphragm “doesn’t move properly” #malepelvicfloorissues :(
Great content! Would you put someone with kyphosis in the same category as scoliosis, in terms that kyphosis usually comes with curvatures in 3 dimensions?
@@BillHartmanPT in developmental cases, can the compensatory ER space become so large that getting out of it becomes impossible with some drastic external facilitation? you've mentioned relative motion is easy and effortless, but I wonder if the opposite becomes true for this population including the hypermobile, like how the elderly consume less energy paradoxically walking on an incline vs decline due to balance
@@dalepeters5010 I had a Jethro bowl as well. Perfect size for a full size box of Frosted Flakes. I always found it funny that each box only had one serving in it. :)