Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Denis

Beyond Weight Loss

12 members • Free

Lose weight for good. Science-based nutrition, mindset, and habits for people tired of starting over.

Bulletproof Joints

1 member • Free

A community for people dealing with joint pain. Share what works, learn what doesn't, move better together.

Memberships

FitScale Academy

30 members • Free

Core Club

3.6k members • Free

Skoolers

194.9k members • Free

4 contributions to Bulletproof Joints
Welcome! Introduce yourself + share a bit about yourself 👋
Let's get to know each other! Comment below sharing where you are in the world, which joint gives you the most trouble, and what you've already tried. No judgment, we've all been there. ☺️
0 likes • 23d
@Lorraine Pepper Thanks for sharing, and sorry to hear about your back. Anything more specific?
Bulletproof Adductors
Adductors are among the most neglected muscles, especially in recreational athletes. These are the inner thigh muscles, and they're critical for both athletes and non-athletes alike. Why do they matter? ◆ Pelvic stability, especially during single-leg movements ◆ Force transfer between upper and lower body, enabling explosive athletic movements and easing everyday activities ◆ Essential for change of direction, jumping and sprinting ◆ Control pelvic rotation during rotational movements — hugely important in sport Strengthening these muscles significantly reduces groin injury risk and improves stability in both the pelvis and the knee. Training the adductors reduces the likelihood of muscular imbalances, which are surprisingly common — especially in recreational athletes. Few people pay attention to these muscles, partly because they don't contribute to aesthetics the way the glutes do. But their hidden functional role is far more important for daily life than how they look. Next time you walk into the gym, sit down on the machine with ADDUCTOR written on it (you don't have to jump straight into Coppenhagen plank, unless you're strong enough already 😉). Trust me, your body will thank you.
1
0
Most People Treat Joint Pain Backwards.
They rest until it stops hurting, then go back to normal activity, then get hurt again. The research is clear: complete rest makes tendons and cartilage weaker over time, not stronger. The tissue needs load to adapt and recover. The goal isn't to avoid pain entirely. It's to find the right amount of load that challenges the tissue without overwhelming it. That's what progressive loading is, and it's the foundation of every good rehab programme. Full breakdown in the classroom under Exercise Protocols.
1
0
Please Read | Rules and Guidelines 📜
1) 🚫 No Self-Promotion → No "DM me for..." or product/supplement ads of any kind. 2) 🔗 No Linking Your Own Community/YouTube Videos 3) 🎯 Title Specifically 4) 🔍 Search for Help First (searchbar) → Your question may already be answered in the community or the classroom. 5) 🤝 Stay Respectful 6) ❌ Enforced Clean-Up Posts breaking these rules will be removed without warning. If you ever have questions, feel free to ask. Let's build the most useful joint health community out there by sharing, collaborating, and learning together. 💪
1
0
1-4 of 4
Denis B
1
4points to level up
@bulletproof-joints-team-6459
PN1 Nutrition Student 🥗 Sports Enthusiast 🤸 Love bodyweight training and running.

Active 9h ago
Joined Feb 27, 2026
ISTJ
Ljubljana