I found out I’m hypermobile - here’s everything I’ve learnt so far

Published 2024-04-17
Don't watch if you don't like feet. Please stick to OnlyFans if you really like feet.

After a running injury this January, I went to a podiatrist who confirmed my suspicions that I’m hypermobile. Cue me learning lots about it - don’t quote me on any of the science though.

Massive shoutout to Help! I’m Hypermobile’s Alex O for helping me understand way more about hypermobility: www.instagram.com/hypermobilityhq/?hl=en-gb /    / @hypermobilityhq  

Interested in 1-1 coaching? Get in touch! [email protected].

All Comments (4)
  • I'm not hypermobile, but it was interesting to listen to. Thanks for sharing it. As a neurodivergent I understand the daily struggle, but the upside is that we get very strong in some areas because of it. Thus becoming like warriors 💪
  • @jgthree
    I'm so happy to see a video on this topic -- Thank you for sharing your story! I made it to middle age without getting a diagnosis, but ever since I started viewing my lifelong unexplainable difficulties through the lens of highly masked autism, everything makes infinitely more sense. And I have also always shared this tendency towards joint injuries. In my early 20s, my doctor encouraged me to take up high-intensity muscle-building workouts because I've always had trouble putting on bulk, but I resisted that advice since I had consistently experienced pain with that kind of forced exertion. I followed my intuition and took up yoga instead. Much later, I became a trained yoga teacher to learn the mechanics of it more thoroughly. It has been the single most helpful physical tool for me. As you said, when you're hypermobile, it requires intense mindfulness the closer you get to the edges of your range of motion. Consistently applying that mindfulness in yoga practice helped me to build the neural pathways to actually feel and intentionally engage the necessary and proper muscular support throughout my body at a somatic level rather than relying on my connective tissue alone to mark the boundaries. It has been radically life-changing and there is just no other mind-body modality that has come anywhere close to making me feel stronger and more physically stable in this skinny, bendy meatsuit. I say all this to encourage you not to give up on yoga! It can be amazing if approached wisely.
  • @lakritzeslena
    So interesting. I stumbled across that connection between neurodivergence and hypermobility before. And, it seems also been somewhat interlinked with fatigue like simptoms. (Recently binge watched the webinar videos of the me/CFS conference, where one of the topics was cervical instability, that seems to also be caused by connective tissue instability and can lead to real scary simptoms. Side note). I'm not particularly hypermobile, I think, maybe a bit, and had the same preferences with sports, liked yoga a lot. My mother is hypermobile, has ADHD, and is underweight her whole life now, so, her muscles do not support her in a way that her hypermobile body would need. Last year she tried yoga and it was really painful for her and she had to stop. It's totally fascinating, I'm so curious what science will show us in the next years. (At least that's cool, hyperfixation on science topics).