Movement & Mobility: Understanding the Connection
The Difference
Mobility is your ability to move a joint through its full range of motion—like how far your ankle can bend or your hip can rotate.
Movement is putting all those mobile joints together to create functional patterns—like squatting down to pick up your pack, stepping over a log, or navigating uneven terrain.
The Three Pillars of Movement
When you're struggling with a movement pattern, the limitation usually comes from one (or more) of these three areas:
1. Mobility (Range of Motion)
Can your joints move through the ranges they need for the task? Tight calves, stiff hips, or restricted shoulders can all limit your movement options.
2. Neuromuscular Control (Motor Control)
Can your brain coordinate all the moving parts? This is your body's ability to sequence muscles properly and maintain good posture throughout the movement.
3. Strength
Do you have the muscle power to control the movement through its full range? You might be able to get into a position but lack the strength to get back out of it safely.
Testing Your Work
Here's the key: test, then retest.
Before you do any mobility work—whether it's foam rolling, stretching, or self-massage—perform the movement you're trying to improve. Note where you feel restricted. Then do your mobility work and immediately test the movement again. Did it help? This tells you if you're working on the right thing.
Example: If your squat feels limited, test it first. Then foam roll your calves (a common squat restriction) and squat again. Better? You found a piece of the puzzle.
Why Consistency Matters
Your mobility changes constantly—day to day, even hour to hour. How you slept, yesterday's hike, work stress, hydration—it all affects how your body moves. This is why mobility work isn't a "fix it once and forget it" solution. It's an ongoing practice that builds up over time.
The Trail Application
Think about stepping over a fallen tree on the trail. You need:
- Mobility in your hips and ankles to lift your leg high enough
- Control to coordinate the movement without losing balance
- Strength to power through the motion while carrying your pack
When you understand these three pieces, you can identify what's holding you back and address it specifically—getting you back to moving confidently on the trail.