For me it's just to do with buzzwords. Some people just like to fill their online videos with buzzwords
I often wonder what would happen if all the "deep front line" and "cross body connection" or whatever’s were all taken away, what would you have left?
"To attain knowledge add things every day, to obtain wisdom remove things every day".
I'm pretty sure we could boil all these lengthy explanations of things down a bit to make them more understandable.
"Explain it so that your grandmother could understand it": https://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/gr ... randmother
The other issue is that obviously, fascia exists, but a lot of people seem to attribute it with all sorts of magical properties there's little or no evidence it has. That seems to happen a lot.
Ultimately, I don't really care - everybody is free to do whatever they want.
I dunno... I'm pretty sure you're taking 17 minutes 45 seconds here to simply explain how to move your arm in a circle
In Guimberteau’s video, ‘Strolling Under The Skin’, what you see there is that the ‘fuzzy’ stuff is really dynamic tissue that is under constant change. Tissues don’t ‘slide’, there is no shear, they reconfigure with each movement. The dynamics of a cell ceases with death. Ca++ [calcium ions] flood into the cell and it stiffens — that’s rigor mortis. It starts within minutes of death, as soon as the circulating ATP [energy molecule] runs out. The ‘fuzz’ is connective tissue that is stiffened during rigor mortis, and it doesn’t happen unless you die. It occurs within minutes of death, and you can almost watch it happen. It is like snot hardening. The mucus booger that comes out of your nose quickly hardens and becomes quite stiff; at death, the mucus that connects all our tissues, does the same.
All that ‘melting the fuzz’ is conjecture based on misinterpreted observations on dead tissue. Even so called “fresh” cadavers are but poor players in the game of life.
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