A ladder of hamstring holds that lengthen as you go: a 45-second standing fold, a minute per side in half splits, 75 seconds in a seated fold and in reclined hamstring stretches for each leg, then a closing two-minute pancake fold. Short resets sit between stages, and the whole climb takes 10:15.
Starting short and finishing long matches how hamstrings behave in practice — the first fold is exploratory, the last one is where you can actually stay. Run it after training or on its own in the evening. The rung lengths are all adjustable once you open the preset in the editor.
A short flow to take the body from sleep to ready: spine, hips, shoulders, then a long final fold. Asymmetric on purpose — each pose is held as long as it deserves, not on a fixed clock.
A six-minute fix for shoulders, hips, and neck after too long at a screen. Stand up, push the chair back, and take it slow — the goal is breath and undoing, not a workout.
Eight rounds of 0:30 dynamic mobility with 0:15 between to switch sides or poses. Keep it light and continuous — leg swings, arm circles, hip openers — and let the body decide what it needs.
Four hip-mobility stretches rotated for two rounds at 1:00 work, 0:20 release. Lizard, pigeon, frog, and butterfly — covers internal and external rotation across the round.
Three deep hip stretches, three rounds each, finished one stretch at a time before moving to the next. Group format means progressive depth — each round, settle a little lower than the last.
Four shoulder stretches rotated for three rounds at 0:45 work, 0:15 release. Pec opener, cross-body, thread-the-needle, and overhead reach — opens both anterior and posterior chains.
Three thoracic mobility drills, three rounds each, finished one drill at a time before moving on. Group format lets each pattern accumulate range — open-book, cat-cow, and child-pose-with-reach.
A focused flow for the spine — flexion, extension, rotation. Asymmetric on purpose: twists held short and even side-to-side, child's pose long at the end to settle everything down.
Long, passive holds for the hips and legs — yin-style, two minutes apiece. Settle into the shape, breathe slowly, and don't chase depth; the time does the work, not effort.
A short, supported flow to drop the nervous system before sleep. Asymmetric on purpose — the legs-up-the-wall close is the longest pose, intentionally. Dim the lights and breathe out longer than you breathe in.
Four rounds of 2:00 deep stretching with 0:30 transition between. Pick four poses before you start — one per round. Long enough to actually change tissue length; short enough to stay focused.