2026-03-22
If there’s one thing I’ve learned over the years, it’s that the most powerful exercises aren’t always the most complicated or the most intense.
They’re the ones that teach people how to connect their body.
That’s exactly why silk reeling has become such a valuable tool in how we coach movement. And honestly, a lot of that has been deepened through conversations and shared ideas with Cory Cripe of Fitness Lying Down. Cory has done an incredible job of helping people understand that movement isn’t just about muscles, it’s about integration.
Silk reeling embodies that idea better than almost anything we do.
One of the biggest mistakes we see in training is that people try to create force from the wrong place.
They muscle through movements with their arms or isolate muscles instead of understanding that real strength and real power comes from the ground.
Silk reeling forces you to slow down and feel that connection.
That’s not just philosophy, that’s how human movement is supposed to work.
In DVRT, we talk all the time about “ground reaction forces”, but if people can’t feel how to use the ground, it doesn’t matter how many cues you give them.

Silk reeling gives them that experience.
Another reason silk reeling is so powerful is that it lives in diagonal, rotational patterns.
This is where it lines up beautifully with what we know from PNF (Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation).
PNF has shown us for decades that:
When we use silk reeling, we’re not just “moving”, we’re training:
This is huge for both performance and pain.
Because here’s the reality…
Most injuries and chronic pain issues don’t happen because someone can’t do a perfect squat.
They happen because the body can’t control rotation and transfer force efficiently.
Silk reeling teaches exactly that.

We throw around the term “functional strength” a lot, but what does it really mean?
To me, one of the best ways to think about functional training is: Using the least amount of effort to produce the greatest amount of force
That’s efficiency.
And efficiency is what most people are missing.
People aren’t weak because they lack strength. They’re “weak” because they leak energy:
Silk reeling cleans that up.
Because it’s slow, intentional, and continuous, it forces people to:
That’s where real strength starts to show up.
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This is where things get really interesting and really important.
When we look at chronic pain, especially something like low back pain, we often see:
Silk reeling gives us a way to address all of that without forcing it.
It creates:
And most importantly, it builds confidence.
Because when people feel like they can move well again, pain often starts to decrease.
Not because we “fixed” a tissue…
But because we improved how the system works.

One of the most overlooked aspects of silk reeling is the role of breath.
When done correctly, breath isn’t an afterthought it’s integrated into the movement.
This has two huge benefits:
Breathing helps regulate intra-abdominal pressure, which is critical for:
Instead of over-bracing or holding tension, we get a system that can: Stabilize and move at the same time.
Breath also plays a massive role in calming the nervous system.
For many clients, especially those dealing with pain, their system is already in a heightened state.
Silk reeling, combined with intentional breathing:
Now we’re not just training the body…We’re influencing the entire system.
At the end of the day, silk reeling isn’t just an exercise.
It’s a teaching tool, It teaches people:
And when you put all of that together…You don’t just get better workouts.
You get better movement, better performance, and often, less pain.
We don’t need more complicated exercises.
We need better ways to teach people how to use their bodies.
Silk reeling is one of those tools that, when applied correctly, can bridge the gap between:
And that’s where real change happens.
Find out MORE of the impact of our Myofacial Integrated Movement concepts with 30% off ALL programs with code “virtual” HERE
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