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Kitchn’s Delicious Links column highlights recipes we’re excited about from the bloggers we love. Follow along every weekday as we post our favorites.

If you’ve ever fallen in love with Olive Garden’s chicken gnocchi soup, you are not alone. The internet is full of different bloggers’ takes on this fan-favorite soup, which combines chicken, gnocchi, and a ton of cream into a rich, velvety soup that’s so comforting it’s basically a fuzzy blanket in a bowl. It’s difficult to go wrong with any recipe that calls for you to throw chicken, cream, and pasta into a pot and let it simmer until it tastes delicious, but this particular take on the OG classic stands out by being fast enough to cook on any weeknight.

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You might have experienced hip stiffness and discomfort after a challenging workout, long car ride, or sitting at your desk for several hours. Given that this is common challenge for fitness professionals and their clients, it’s beneficial to understand the underlying causes of hip tightness, how to address it, and how to identify if you should seek medical advice for the issue.

Anatomy of the Hips

To understand the causes of hip tightness, it helps to you where your hips are located.

Many people use the term hips as a general way to refer to the area around the pelvis. Anatomically however, your hip is defined as a ball and socket joint, where the head of the femur (or thigh bone) fits into a rounded socket called the acetabulum. The acetabulum is where the ischium, ilium, and pubis, or bones of the pelvis meet.

The articulating surfaces of the hip joints are covered in smooth cartilage, which allows the bones to glide against each other with ease during movement. The hip is surrounded by ligaments, tendons, and muscles, which hold the bones in place and prevent it from dislocating. Your hips support the weight of your body when standing, walking, running, and squatting and are responsible for the movement of your upper legs.

Spatially, you can also think of your hips as the creases, created when you sit, between your upper leg bones and the front of your pelvis. If you’ve ever experienced hip stiffness or discomfort, it was probably located around this area. Sometimes, this will also be described as tight hip flexors.

Potential Causes of Hip Tightness

While many people will describe hip discomfort or stiffness as tightness, it’s important to note that tightness isn’t a clinical term and can’t be quantified and measured. However, there are several factors that can contribute to what is often described as hip tightness.

In some cases, there is an underlying condition that is causing hip stiffness or pain. Some of these conditions include arthritis, bursitis, tendonitis, and hip labral tears. If you experience audible clicking, grinding, or ongoing pain and stiffness in your hip, which doesn’t get better with rest, then it’s recommended that you consult a medical provider for a diagnosis and treatment.

However, many of us will experience mild to moderate hip tightness without there being anything wrong with the joint. In this case, the experience of tightness is often the result of not using our hips in their fullest range of motion, and weakness or instability around the joint.

This happens because for most of us modern life requires that we sit for at least part of our day. While sitting isn’t inherently bad for your hips, if you sit in one position for long periods of time, it means that you are only using your hips in a limited range of motion.

Furthermore, you are only strong in the ranges of motion that you use on a regular basis. If a large percentage of your day is spent sitting or standing in a single position, it makes sense that your hip muscles will be weaker in the ranges of motion that go beyond those positions, which you don’t use as frequently.

It is believed that your nervous system will send a signal of stiffness or discomfort when it senses weakness around a joint to protect you from moving into a range that you can’t control, which could result in injury. Your nervous system might also send these signals when it has difficulty sensing where a joint is in space. This is sometimes referred to as a loss of proprioception and has been associated with assuming repetitive postures such as sitting [1].

This is also why stretching doesn’t always create lasting relief from hip tightness. In many cases, the issue isn’t caused by short or tight muscles, and it is possible to feel tight while having normal range of motion in the hips. In this scenario, feelings of tightness may be due to weakness and lack of movement around the hip joints.

How to Address Hip Stiffness

As mentioned above, you should consult a medical provider if you experience chronic hip pain or stiffness that doesn’t resolve with rest or worsens over time. However, many of us can use movement as a way to reduce feelings of tightness and discomfort.

While there is no one-size-fits-all solution, here are some approaches that you can explore to address hip stiffness.

Foam Rolling, Massage, and Soft Tissue Release Work

While foam rolling or massaging your tissues won’t make your muscles longer, it can create some relief if you feel stiff and sore after a challenging workout. Foam rolling also creates a temporary increase in range of motion or flexibility, which you can use to prepare your body for exercise. However, to maintain these changes, you will want to follow up with strength work to teach your body how to use and control this newfound range of motion.

Stretching

Much like foam rolling and massage, static stretching can improve flexibility and decrease feelings of tightness or discomfort. However, if you already have a lot of flexibility or if stretching doesn’t relieve the symptoms, you might want to consider layering in strength and mobility work to train your body how to control the flexibility that you’ve created by stretching.

Mobility and Stability Drills

You can think of mobility drills as dynamic stretching where you move your hips through full ranges of motion. These exercises usually involve little to no weight and can increase body awareness and control through the hips. Stability exercises are also typically unloaded and focus on training the smaller postural muscles that help track your joints when you move. Oftentimes, increasing stability will improve mobility. Some examples of pelvic stability exercises include neutral bridging, side leg lifts, bird dogs, and dead bugs.

Strength Training

As mentioned above, sometimes weakness can manifest as stiffness. Exercises such as deadlifts, squats, step-ups, and lunges require moving the hips through large ranges of motion with control. This can help increase body awareness, improve mobility, and strengthen the muscles around the hips to support the joints.

In Conclusion

Hip stiffness can stem from a variety of places and the best approach for addressing it is an individualized one. However, if you are unsure of where to start, a good general guideline is to move and strengthen your hips in all directions. This would mean choosing exercises that involve hip flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, internal rotation, and external rotation. This might look like practicing stability and mobility exercises as part of your warm-up and then following up with lower body strength work.

If you try some of the suggestions outline above, notice what seems to decrease stiffness in the moment and how you feel the next day. This can give you insight on what works well for your body and what doesn’t seem to be as effective. Overtime, you can use this information to figure out what your best options for both workouts and recovery might be and to better understand how your body responds to different types of exercises and self-care tools.

Resources

  1. Dr. Greg Lehman, Reconciling Biomechanics With Pain Science, Recovery Strategies – Pain Guidebook, http://www.greglehman.ca/pain-science-workbooks/

A message from GGS…

Understanding how to get more results in less time so you actually enjoy exercise and can have a life outside of the gym isn’t hard, you just have to understand the Blueprint and be willing to trust the process.

If you’d like to know:
  • How much you should exercise
  • What to do for exercise
  • How to put it all together into a plan that works for YOU

The good news? It’s simpler than you think!

Tell me how!

The post Why You Have “Tight” Hips and What to Do About It appeared first on Girls Gone Strong.

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Stress Is Growth

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Purpose stems from struggle, not from comfort.

Chronic stress is a genuine concern in our current environment. Continuous “fight-or-flight” responses and prolonged cortisol exposure plague countless individuals, and their health and body composition suffers. I wish to acknowledge that at the start. However, this article won’t delve into stress management or reduction. This article is not about taking phosphatidylserine or preventing overtraining. Some of what you will read is dead-serious, some hyperbole, and a little satire, but do not let that get in the way of the overall point: we need stress.

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When it comes to top-notch restaurants, head chefs often rack up the attention and acclaim. But ask anyone who has worked behind the scenes in restaurants and they’ll tell you: The cooks are the ones who make the kitchen run.

They know how to peel 100 potatoes while simultaneously boiling perfectly al dente pasta. They’re hyper-organized and efficient, and their demanding workload combined with their desire to prepare perfect food means they have some seriously valuable cooking tricks up their sleeves.

I know this because I was lucky enough to spend several years working in professional kitchens — and learned some of my best, ultra-practical cooking tricks from the mentors and coworkers I met in them. They taught me how to work smarter (not necessarily harder!) and many of the tips and techniques they taught me I still use today in my home kitchen. Here are 12 of them.

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In the grand scheme of things consistency always wins over perfection.

With the holiday season upon us, family dinners, never-ending temptations, samples at Costco, cookies, turkey, cheesy potatoes, and a glass of wine or two, it is no wonder that most people pack on the pounds at the end of the year.

 

Most of us blame our “falling off the diet train” as an issue of willpower. I want to discuss the concept of willpower—what it is, and what it’s not—and what it means for gaining muscle.

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While you can make your own pumpkin purée, most of us turn to the canned variety at least a few times during this season. And inevitably, it always seems like no matter what you make, there’s always going to be leftovers. Here are some ideas for using up that last half cup (or less!) of pumpkin purée.

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Wire grids are an organizational basic, which can then be outfitted and customized to suit any space in your house. They are one of the most versatile tools around, and also happen to be pretty affordable.

Here are a handful of ways to hang and use them all over the place.

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It’s Friday, everyone! And that means another Primal Blueprint Real Life Story from a Mark’s Daily Apple reader. If you have your own success story and would like to share it with me and the Mark’s Daily Apple community please contact me here. I’ll continue to publish these each Monday as long as they keep coming in. Thank you for reading!

Primal eating was not a reality for me for a very long time, I did not even hear the words until I was 27. But flash back to when I was 12-years-old, and had just found out that I was 203.2lbs. I remember that number so clearly because of how hard I sobbed that day on the scale at the doctor’s office. When my 8th grade self saw that I had crossed in to 200+lbs, I immediately I lost any self worth. Media in the 90s made it clear that being fat was social destruction and meant that you were “less than.” Living in this culture of perfectionism, I continued to eat and cope with my “imperfections” with sugar addiction and exuberant amounts of terribly processed foods.

Upon entering adulthood, the word “nutrition” alone made me uncomfortable as I did not have any real understanding of what it meant. I was taught and believed that all fat was bad and grains were healthy for my heart, that carbs were evil but these “magical” grains were somehow exempt. When I moved out at 17, I weighed 300lbs and felt miserable. My diet consisted of lunchmeat sandwiches, egg salad, coffee and fast food. I hated my body and avoided mirrors.

I decided that I wanted to make a change. Over the next several years I took the “beat my body in to submission” approach and paired it with diet plan after diet plan. I even took diet pills (now recalled) until the side effects were too much to for me to excuse. I ended up losing 60lbs of weight but at the cost of my adrenal health. I traded in the sugar for coffee and was not sleeping nearly enough for how hard I was working and training.

In 2011, I met and married my wonderful husband. He had previously been a physical trainer, and he helped teach me a lot of what he knew. It helped a lot to understand what he shared with me, but we both still had questions about the science of nutrition and biology. Over the next 6 years, together we sought out the answer for our health and wellness concerns. One of the first sources we came across (after watching ALL the food documentaries ever) was your website. That year, I attended Paleocon online and felt like I was drinking from a firehose. We almost immediately became as primal as possible in our eating and also in our lifestyle and exercise. We both experienced the amazing results. Aside from losing weight and feeling stronger, we noticed our skin and digestive issues were much improved. We were also thinking more clearly, and our sleep was much improved.

In 2015, I gave birth to my son, and over the next year I gained back all of the weight I had lost. Postpartum depression and anxiety encompassed my every day, and I began to spiral in to unhealthy eating once again. By 2016, I was nearing 300lbs again and felt so ashamed of myself. I began to go to therapy regularly and was diagnosed with CPTSD (Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder). I began working diligently with my therapist to unpack the trauma and my body responded with anorexia nervosa, which can be a side effect of addressing trauma.

I did not have a dysmorphic issue, however. At the time, I was averted by any food and my throat would restrict if I attempted to swallow. After some time, I wasn’t able to to eat meat due to digestion. However, sticking to a primal way of eating at the time is what kept me out of the hospital when it was difficult to eat. I chose soft foods, and the blender was my bestie. My ability to eat improved, and my diet since then has mainly consisted of all organic Coconut Oil, Ghee, Avocados, Eggs & Sweet Potatoes and other vegetables and some fruits.

I have continued therapy and have stayed dedicated to the same diet with the occasional deviation from my favorite bakery that offers paleo/keto options. Over the past year, have watched my weight plummet (with my Dr.’s supervision) very quickly. I stand here now today 158lbs, and my mind is still catching up with the reality of my transformation. I lost over 100lbs this year.

The combination of therapy and sticking to a primal lifestyle has led me to where I am today. I am still getting to know the woman in the mirror, but I am thankful for where I am every single day. Thank you, Mark, for providing us with a launching pad for our primal journey and for being a constant resource of information and encouragement. You are a part of my success story.

The readers featured in our success stories share their experiences in their own words. The Primal Blueprint and Keto Reset diets are not intended as medical intervention or diagnosis. Nor are they replacements for working with a qualified healthcare practitioner. It’s important to speak with your doctor before beginning any new dietary or lifestyle program, and please consult your physician before making any changes to medication or treatment protocols. Each individual’s results may vary.

The post My Mind Is Still Catching Up With the Reality Of My Transformation appeared first on Mark’s Daily Apple.

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We recently had an out-of-town guest who doesn’t live near a Whole Foods. She noticed right away that we had one and became uncontrollably excited because, she said, it meant she could bring home some of that grind-your-own nut butter. “It’s one of the best products they offer,” she added.

She wouldn’t stop raving about it, which was surprising to me because I’ve really never given the station a second thought. And lots of people I’ve spoken to since said they didn’t even realize it was an option! (It’s kind of small and tucked away, so you can easily miss it if you’re not specifically looking for it.)

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Good morning, everybody. I hope you all had an excellent holiday weekend. I’ve got one awesome success story coming up in a bit, but first I wanted to share a quick note to let you know about the blow-out Cyber Monday deal the team and I put together.

Get $10 off a purchase of $50 or more—with free shipping.

Plus, take advantage of a “secret sale” at checkout….

Yup, $10 off your order of anything you want from our Primal Kitchen® line of collagen and whey proteins, bars, oils, mayos, dressings, condiments and sauces.

Did I say sauces? Yup. I’ve got three new sauces I know you’re going to love. (Hint: they’re the perfect gift for your inner carnivore.) And I’ve even got a great “secret” deal for you on those, too….

Just click through the link or use code CYBERMONDAY to receive $10 off your order of $50+ with free shipping—and to unlock that secret sale.

Happy Cyber Monday, everyone, and wishing you a happy and healthy holiday season.

phc_webinar_640x80

The post Our Cyber Monday Deal (and 3 New Products) appeared first on Mark’s Daily Apple.

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