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Ruth Performance Lab

121 members • Free

2 contributions to Ruth Performance Lab
My strain Recovery Philosophy
My Strain Recovery Philosophy Context: @Marco Mar and I recently had a conversation about our approach to recovery after strain injury. We talked at length about the principles underlying the approach I used during my grade-2 hamstring tear this summer from sprinting. These are the same things I’m focusing on with my quad tear now. Main Pillars: 1. Blood flow early and often: - BFR is the best lever I’ve found for speeding return to training and reducing atrophy. - If BFR isn’t available, cyclical work can still be used to get a “flush” effect started. - BFR can be started as soon as DAY-1 post injury as long as there is not pressure directly on the injured tissue 2. Train around the injury, aggressively - Keep training the athlete as an athlete. This is important for both mental and physical recovery. - Maintain hypertrophy around the injury training any and every muscle group you have safe access to. - Maintain general capacity while the injured tissue catches up. (note: I like to use a “train the systems” approach during the early phase of rehab. Maintaining blood volume with Sauna, building respiratory muscle endurance with Breathe Way Better, keeping aerobic fitness on the non-involved ergs) 3. Contralateral training is a MUST - Train the healthy side hard in the same pattern you’re trying to restore (but don’t overtrain it!). - Training the healthy side keeps neural patterns active which makes the return-to-play process MUCH faster. - Keep “touching” the injured side with the safest version of that same pattern. (note that in many cases this will be handled by the PT, but is still a must) 4. Visualization integrated into training & rehab - Visualization is “free volume” for the brain. - No tissue cost + positive transfer to movement patterns. - Can be integrated during rest periods of rehab work. ------------------------------------------------------------ General takeaways 1. The fastest recoveries I’ve seen happen when we keep the athlete training, not when they take time completely off.
My strain Recovery Philosophy
0 likes • 27d
Can BFR be used in this case? "Advanced degenerative changes – tendinopathy and enthesopathy of the supraspinatus tendon, linear calcifications, bone erosions, calcifications also in the infraspinatus enthesis. The physiotherapist recommended only isometric work until muscle failure."
1 like • 26d
Perfect. Thanks Coach
Program Design Review
I’m looking to pilot test a very brief program design review video series. The basic concept is: a coach submits a week or 2 weeks of programming for an athlete (along with context / athlete details / bullets re: intention) and I will film a short voice-over video (15min max) talking through my thoughts on the program, highlighting things that I think are creative solutions to problems and identifying places for possible upgrades. My plan would be to house these inside the skool platform and maybe eventually share clips from them on social media. Is anyone interested in submitting a program for a pilot review? If so, just drop a response here and I’ll reach out directly.
0 likes • Dec '25
i'm interested
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Piotr Kołodziejczyk
1
4points to level up
@piotr-natury-3551
Fiance, Father, Coach and Athlete

Active 2d ago
Joined Dec 16, 2025
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