‘Move Younger’ While Increasing Your Strength & Fitness

Aleks Salkin
4 min readSep 29, 2022

I’ve always been a big believer in flexibility training.

Notice I didn’t just say “stretching” but actual focused flexibility work that helps you expand your available ranges of motion and helps you move like a kid again — with ease, grace, resilience, and confidence to move in your own skin. In other words, stretching as it should be.

Everyone seems to find value in stretching, but all too frequently people don’t put much thought into it; it’s treated either as a warm-up or a cool-down just to hedge your bets against getting hurt during your workout or feeling ‘stuck’ in your own body afterward as your muscles seize up from DOMS (Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness) a day or two after.

And I totally get it: stretching isn’t all that sexy and it doesn’t burn a pile of calories, but it doesn’t have to, and it’s not supposed to.

Stretching is your support for the moves that *do* burn piles of calories and let you do sexy stuff (I’m talking about sexy exercise stuff, just for the record).

The old timers (i.e. old time strongmen) knew this instinctively, and as such many of them focused every bit as heavily on their flexibility and recovery as they did on their lifting, and many of them had ballerina-type flexibility to go along with their gorilla-level strength.

Case in point: British berserker Bert Assirati was known to lower himself into a full back bridge from standing and then kick up into a one-arm handstand. Not bad for a guy who weighed 120 kilos (240 lbs) and squatted over 800 lbs before heavy squatting even came in vogue.

Bert Assirati making the one-arm handstand look (almost) easy

Eugen Sandow — the Father of Modern Bodybuilding — summed it up perfectly when he said the following:

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“The radical mistake is also made of over-training, and of developing the muscles till they feel like iron, forgetting that flexibility rather than hardness is the symbol and condition of health.”

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So how can you start improving your own flexibility and reclaiming the graceful, resilient, confident, and stiffness-free movement of your youth while simultaneously increasing your strength and conditioning? There are a few ways, and here is what I would recommend:

1. Treat your flexibility like strength training.

Focus on tension and relaxation as you would in a workout, and focus on technique; don’t be sloppy. Likewise, think in terms of sets and reps, and put all your focus into what you’re doing; no scrolling Facebook or checking your email while you stretch! Unless you’re reading one of my emails, in which case you have my blessing.

2. Set aside a few days a week to work on it.

Your off days from training would be a perfect example, and much of your flexibility work can be done relatively quickly and simply.

While you most certainly can throw them in before and after a training session, I’ve found quite often that when you find yourself with less training time than you had originally thought, you end up skipping one thing or another, and that’s usually stretching. So plan some separate time for it and get it done come hell or high water.

3. Focus on stretching movement patterns.

Individual stretches for each little innie and outtie muscle is a waste of time. You wanna focus on stretches that affect entire movement patterns and regions of the body to hit a boatload of muscles all in one shot. There is definitely a time and a place for stretching and zeroing in on smaller muscles, but if you’re tight on time (pun intended), you don’t want to make that your sole focus. Keep your eyes on the bigger picture.

Don’t be a sissy. Try this at home.

The list could go on, but you get the picture. These principles will get you started off on the right foot and make sure you’re moving forward meaningfully toward better movement, less discomfort in every nook and cranny of your body, and will help keep your fitness results coming for a long time.

On that note, if you like training that:

  • Gives you more strength than it takes from you
  • Improves your stamina and resilience simultaneously
  • Powers-up every nook, cranny, crevice, and corner of your Soft Machine

Then you just might like my 9-Minute Kettlebell and Bodyweight Challenge.

As the name indicates, it’s just 9 minutes long, and it’s designed to be done WITH your current workouts — NOT instead of them.

How?

By harnessing the power of your body’s gait pattern (i.e. walking pattern) to unleash the strength ALREADY hidden inside you — via movements like crawling, loaded carries, and more.

Even cooler:

Many find that it actually amplifies their strength in their favorite kettlebell and bodyweight moves, like presses, squats, pullups, and more.

And best of all, it’s free.

How free?

I’m talkin’ freer than the 4th of July, my friend.

Get thee thine own copy here => http://www.9MinuteChallenge.com

Have fun and happy training!

Aleks Salkin

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Aleks Salkin

International kettlebell & bodyweight trainer, foreign language enthusiast, soon-to-be-badazz bass guitarist. https://www.alekssalkin.com/