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102 members Created Feb 2026

Tuck back lever: first static hold and how I got there

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Foam Rolling and Soft Tissue Work for Calisthenics

Foam rolling is one of those tools that's simultaneously overhyped and underused in specific contexts. Here's an honest assessment for calisthenics athletes.

What foam rolling does: temporarily reduces muscle stiffness and increases range of motion before training. The effect is mostly mechanical (compression on the tissue) and neural (reducing the sensitivity of the myofascial stretch reflex). It doesn't 'break up scar tissue' — that's not what's happening.

Where it's genuinely useful in calisthenics: thoracic spine extension (rolling under the mid-back before handstand sessions), quad and hip flexor rolling before pistol squat sessions, and lat rolling before pulling sessions. These are areas where stiffness directly limits performance in adjacent skills.

Where it's less useful: rolling on healthy, non-stiff tissue. If an area isn't limiting your performance, rolling it is time that could be spent on something that matters.

The protocol: 60-90 seconds per area, moderate pressure (not so hard you can't breathe), before training as part of warm-up. Use it purposefully, not as a ritual.

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