top of page
Search

YOU DO NOT NEED TO WARM UP

  • Jul 17, 2025
  • 2 min read

You’ve probably heard it over and over:

“Make sure you warm up before your workout.”

So you hop on the treadmill, go for a 10-minute incline walk, maybe the stairmaster, then hit the weights. Sounds good, right?

Well — not exactly.

Training on Treadmill
Training on Treadmill

🧠 Your Brain and Muscles Don’t Work That Way

Just raising your body temperature doesn’t fully prepare your nervous system or muscles for high performance or injury prevention.

Instead of generic warm-ups, your body needs neuromuscular activation — specific, targeted movements that engage the muscles and patterns you’re about to train.



What is Neuromuscular Activation?

It’s your real warm-up. These movements:

  • 🔁 Improve Muscle CoordinationYou’re rehearsing the patterns you’ll use in your workout.

  • ⚙️ Increase Muscle EfficiencyThey help the right muscles fire at the right time.

  • 🛡️ Reduce Injury RiskProperly activated muscles and joints are more prepared and stable.


YOU JUST DO NOT NEED TO WARM UP FOR MORE THEN 15 MINS.

Warming up

TIP: Activation Warm-Up Protocol

Step 1 – Move the Spine Dynamically

  • Cat-Cows (flexion/extension)

  • Lateral bends

  • Controlled T-spine rotation

Step 2 – Joint Rotation & Control

Controlled movement helps explore new ranges of motion.T-Spine Rotation

  • Shoulder circles

  • Hip Openers/ Rotation

  • Ankle rolls, controlled movement helps explore new ranges of motion.

Step 3 – Dynamic Muscle Prep

Feel for muscles Responding to the stretch please don't hold! Think of rubber band.

  • Hamstring sweeps (running prep)

  • Walking lunges with twist

  • Arm swings, skips, high knees, band work



BUT Why You Shouldn’t Warm Up Longer Than 15–20 Minutes


🔋 Muscle fatigue:Warming up too long drains energy reserves, affecting strength, speed, and focus.

🎯 Efficiency matters:A quality warm-up should be 10–15 minutes—long enough to prime your nervous system, but short enough to preserve performance.

🏃‍♂️ Match your movement:

  • Running? Hamstring Sweeps, dynamic stretches.

  • Squats ? Light weight same pattern


❌ Skip the Static Stretching (Pre-Workout)

Holding stretches for 30+ seconds before training can reduce strength and power output. Save static stretching for after your workout or during recovery sessions.

Instead, choose dynamic, movement-based warm-ups that increase blood flow and improve joint range.


📊 What Research Shows

  • Warm-ups done right can increase performance by 10–20%

  • Poor or excessive warm-ups can cause a 17% drop in performance

  • Muscles behave like rubber bands — a quick dynamic stretch primes them. Overstretching beforehand makes them less responsive.


✅ Real Benefits of a Smart Warm-Up

  • Increased joint mobility

  • Improved blood flow & oxygen delivery

  • Enhanced nervous system readiness

  • Elevated heart rate without exhaustion

  • Decreased injury risk with better control and coordination


🧩 Final Thoughts

Don’t just “warm up” — prepare your body to perform.

  • Keep it short: 10–15 minutes

  • Make it specific to the activity

  • Focus on neuromuscular activation and dynamic movement

  • Avoid excessive jogging, passive stretching, or fatiguing routines


Train with purpose. Move with control.


Hope this Helps

Team A1

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page