Do not be tense, just be ready, not thinking but not dreaming, not being set but being flexible. It is being “wholly” and quietly alive, aware and alert, ready for whatever may come.
-Bruce Lee

Just like strength, relaxation is a skill. It’s a vital skill that is vastly overlooked in the strength and conditioning world. Tension and relaxation are the yin and the yang of training. To achieve balance you must have both. If tension is the yin and relaxation is the yang, I would argue that we could all benefit from less yin and more yang.

A little story for ya…

Bud Winter Strength Coach Teaching Relaxation
Source

If you haven’t heard of Bud Winter, here is a little background. Bud is regarded as one of the greatest sprint coaches to ever live. He was a great track and field coach, but his ability to teach his athletes to relax was game-changing.

Around the time of early World War II, Bud was hired as Chairman of a research program in relaxation at Del Monte Pre-Flight School for the Navy. Many of the aviators at that time were cracking under pressure at the school and this was even before real bullets were flying.

Later, in their first combat, some of them “froze” mentally, physically or both. They lost a man and a plane . Hence a mandatory program was created that would teach all cadets how to relax under pressure. Once they got going they found that in all sports and highly specialized skills, such as aviation, the greatest enemy to peak performance was hyper-tension (not blood pressure related).

How does this apply to athletic performance?

If you have ever competed in any sport you probably remember those days when it all clicked. You couldn’t miss, every decision was perfect and making a mistake wasn’t in the cards. Everything seemed to slow down and you had sniper-like focus. I have been there and it’s an amazing feeling. Looking back to when I competed, I realized the days I was at my best were when I was relaxed, maybe even distracted until game time. I wasn’t overly focused on the game, just ready to play. I didn’t know it at the time, but I had the perfect balance of tension and relaxation.

Application:
How to Relax Before Training

I use this sequence when I practice the 5 minute snatch test and it works incredibly well. Give it a try before snatching or any workout.

Diaphragmatic Breathing

2-4 minutes of diaphragmatic breathing, focusing on staying incredibly relaxed. Keep this breathing throughout your prep.

Fast and Loose

“Shake the meat off the bone.” Let your muscles flop around. Be the opposite of tense. Let your calves, quads, arms be relaxed. Shake your hands out as if you are trying to get water off them. Shake your feet as if you just stepped in dog poop and you want to get it off.

Practice 2-3 minutes of fast and loose.

Reach and Fall

Reach as high as you can to the sky stretching your whole body out, inhale as you reach. Exhale all of your air and and collapse your body. Don’t actually fall over but finish in a goblet squat like position.

Do 5 of these.

Heel Drops

These are something I came up with (or at least I think I did). Inhale, drive up on your tip toes. Exhale and perform 4-6 heel drops. Let the heel drop push the air out of you. stay relaxed and let each strike of the ground push the air out.

Do 3-5 sets.

Relax the Jaw

Work on keeping the jaw loose to decrease tension and improve relaxation.
Source

Recent research has suggested a link between clenching of the teeth and the release of cortisol (the stress hormone). The current thinking is that as the teeth are clenched there is compression of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). This compression signals the hypothalamus which then triggers the excess production and release of a cascade of hormones including cortisol. Cortisol is the hormone released in the “fight or flight” re- sponse. If one can prevent the teeth from clenching together by dropping the jaw down and forward (putting a measured space between the teeth), it will relieve pressure on the TMJ and change the signal to the hypothalamus, preventing the excessive production of hormones (including cortisol), thereby preventing any performance-diminishing effects.

Open your mouth, keep your jaw loose and slightly forward. Move your jaw around through a comfortable ROM. Don’t force anything and just relax. You can even open your mouth and shake your head side to side lightly and let the jaw float.

Practice for 1 minute.

This stuff works, but, like anything, relaxation is a skill that needs to be practiced.

Try this out and let me know what you think!