Quote Originally Posted by Sharla View Post
Something else I don't understand but am looking into now for my own benefit is stretching order.

I found this:

Quite often, when we perform a particular stretch, it actually stretches more than one group of muscles: the muscles that the stretch is primarily intended for, and other supporting muscles that are also stretched but which do not receive the "brunt" of the stretch. These supporting muscles usually function as synergists for the muscles being stretched (see section Cooperating Muscle Groups). This is the basis behind a principle that SynerStretch calls the interdependency of muscle groups. Before performing a stretch intended for a particular muscle, but which actually stretches several muscles, you should first stretch each of that muscle's synergists. The benefit of this is that you are able to better stretch the primary muscles by not allowing the supporting muscles the opportunity to be a limiting factor in how "good" a stretch you can attain for a particular exercise.




This is the website it came from:
Exercise Order | Stretching
I can see this actually,I have extremely tight hamstrings and relatively serious shoulder damage. So stretching those parts out BEFORE I go over to my basic stretches would be advantageous