Elbow Rehab and Hanging Like a Monkey – Why?

January 5, 2015 Chris Duffin Strength Training, Training Tags: , , , , , , , , 5 Comments

By Chris Duffin

If you watch my weekly video’s you have likely seen my hanging by one hand from a pull-up bar and asked “why”. Its’ not because I’m hoping someone will toss a banana at me, although with my current diet I would probably be quiet happy about that. As with most things I do there is a reason and it may be something of relevance to you as well.

In seeking to overcome some long standing elbow issues that were beginning to significantly impact my deadlift I was referred to Ido Portal. Ido has some interesting concepts worth exploring. One of which is hanging. This is primarily done for shoulder health, which in my case with the use of the ShouldeRök™ is not necessary.

However the tractioning on the elbow from both directions was worth exploring. I had already been doing static holds with a barbell for the last couple years to work on my grip strength and desensitize my thumb for the hook grip. With that in mind I wasn’t expecting much from the hangs and was surprised at the difference I found. In this case I began doing full passive hangs letting everything relax and hang. Doing so I found that even the grip became more challenging than when just holding on in an active movement such as a pull-up. With the passive hang everything is stretched from lats, scap, tricpes, biceps, and all the muscle of the lower arm and fingers.

I quickly transitioned from doing static holds to doing passive hangs and within a month had switched to one arm hangs. It wasn’t until the single arm hangs that I began really feeling a difference in my arm. The extra force as well as the dynamics of the hang put a lot more force and traction on my elbow from both directions. Grip also made a dramatic leap forward as I progressed with the one arm hangs. There has to be something with pulling on everything through that entire chain that helps over working the grip in isolation. This has been the first time I’ve made significant progress on regaining my grip strength since the first of my elbow surgeries 3 years ago.

In summary there are three things the single arm hangs to do for me all with one movement:

  • Elbow Traction / Elbow Rehab
  • Grip Strength development
  • Pain tolerance development
  • Hook grip maintenance (keeping thumb desensitized)

If you’re not a ShouldeRök™ user it will also benefit your shoulder health as well

From a logistics standpoint I did the single arm passive hangs 3-4 days a week for 3-4 sets of approximately 20-35 seconds each. Essentially till I had a dramatic drop off in grip strength or increase in pain levels beyond tolerance. To develop to that point I was doing 2 arm hangs until I could consistently hit 2-3minute holds with 5-7minutes total per session. I was doing this on the same frequency as noted. According to Ido some people may need to start with an Active Hang which he describes if they have shoulder health or mobility issues.

Currently I am disappointed in myself as I have fallen out of the habit of doing them after GPA worlds and the following Holidays. I will be adding a pull-up bar at my home to facilitate working these consistently into my program again.

A thanks goes out to Dr. Philip Snell for pointing out this path to me. Make sure to check out his websites myrehabexercise and fixyourownback.

5 Comments

  1. Chris Clendenen 7 months ago says:

    Chris,

    I am curious, do you hang from the bar with your shoulder lax or out of joint or do you want to try and hold scapular retraction and depression? Thank you for these articles as well. Very interesting

    Chris

    Reply
    • Chris Duffin 7 months ago says:

      I do a full dead relaxed hang but if you have shoulder issues you can retract for an active hang to eliminate the pain. But various versions of active hangs are also used by others for development purposes, however I don’t do them…. particularly on a single arm hang.

      Reply
  2. Paul 4 months ago says:

    I started swinging and hanging like this just for the craic durig my warm-ups. It wasn’t a concious thing at first until I noticed my shoulders just felt and performed better. I’ve had multiple dislocations at both the G_H joint and A_C joints from rugby. Now as well the relaxed hangs I also incorporate scapular retraction and depression and some brachiation as well as jumps to the bar both single and double arm, from a stop and running. But I’m only 92kg!(190lbs)

    Reply
    • Chris Duffin 4 months ago says:

      Thanks for sharing Paul! Don’t forget to take a look at my ShouldeRok as well!

      Reply
    • Paddy 4 months ago says:

      Was not expecting to be reading about the craic here!

      Reply

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *