Yoga Therapy With Kat

Yoga Therapy With Kat Group, Private and semi private Yoga and meditation in the Desert YOGA IS FOR EVERYONE!

This would be me🤣😻👯‍♀️😸
05/31/2026

This would be me🤣😻👯‍♀️😸

05/31/2026

SACRO-ILIAC joint: where you can feel it when it flares up, what are the muscles to train to unblock it.

The sacroiliac joint is responsible for a percentage of back pain that surprises almost everyone when they hear it: About 30% of all lower back pain originates from this joint, making it one of the most common causes of low back pain.

Yet, despite being so common, the sacroiliac is also one of the most subtle structures of the body, because its pain almost never presents itself clearly and unanimously.

WHERE DO YOU FEEL HER (AND WHY SHE CONFUSES)

Sometimes it hurts exactly where it is: in the “dimples” area of your low back, lower than where you’d expect classic low back pain, often more from one side than the other. That deep end, that annoyance you just want to just press your thumb to make it disappear.

But sacro-iliac has a peculiarity of projecting pain into areas you don’t expect, and that’s why it’s constantly mistaken for other problems.

It can project into the center of the gluteum: and at that point you think it's the piriform, or a deep muscle contraction.

It can project into the back of the thigh: and at that point you think it's a sciatica, a disk pressing on a nerve.

It can even project to the groin: and at that point you think it's a hip problem, or something visceral.

In practice, the sacroiliac can "mimic" at least three or four different problems, and it's not uncommon for people to go on for months thinking they have a hip problem or sciatica, when actually the source is this joint that is lying down there, between the spine and the back. basin, doing its quiet job.

WHY DOES IT GET FLAMED SO EASILY

The sacro-iliac is the point where the column connects to the pelvis, meaning it is the first structure to manage the transfer of load between your upper body and your legs. All the body weight passes from there, with every step, and if there is any imbalance (in the upper posture, in the lower limb, in the muscles around it) the sacroiliac is the first to feel it.

But the main reason why it burns so easily is that the muscles around it are among the most "problematic" in the body, each for its own reasons.

THE FOUR MUSCLES THAT DETERMINE YOUR BALANCE

The psoas goes over the sacroiliac like a bridge and attaches to the lumbar vertebrae just above it. When it’s stiff (and sedentary, emotional stress, and an irritated bowel make it stiff with unparalleled ease), it pulls on the vertebrae and changes the way the load reaches the sacroiliac, overloading it asymmetrically.

The piriform is inserted directly onto the sacred bone, that is, on one of the two "pieces" that make up the joint. When he contractes (and we sit on it all day, crushing it between the basin and the chair), he pulls directly on the sacroiliac from below, irritating it. And because it is in faccial continuity with the pelvic floor, it also collects emotional tensions that we are often unaware of.

The square of the lumbar is the great lateral stabilizer of the area, which manages the load transition to the right and left at every step. When it's overloaded (and it almost always is because it's the muscle that compensates for everyone else), it creates a constant lateral tension that the sacroiliac has to absorb.

Gluteum is the largest muscle in the body and the main stabilizer of the pelvis. When it’s strong and active, it “embraces” the sacroiliac from the outside and protects it from any imbalance. When it's turned off (and the brain shuts it off first when it's not needed), the sacroiliac loses its primary protection and is exposed to all the forces coming from the other three muscles.

Basically: the sacro-iliac is tight between a psoas pulling from the top, a piriform pulling from the bottom, a square of the lumbar pulling to the side, and a gluteo that should protect everything but often doesn’t. When even one of these balances balances goes off, the joint overloads and the pain leaves.

HOW TO 'UNLOCK' (AND WHY ONE MANIPULATION IS NOT ENOUGH)

“Unblocking” the sacroiliac with a manipulation can give immediate and even quite spectacular relief, but the problem is that the forces that overloaded it are still all there: the psoas is still stiff, the piriform is still contracted, the gluteum is still off. Within a few days or weeks, the joint is in the same situation and the pain returns.

The real solution is to bring back balance to the four surrounding muscles. Relax the psoas, lengthen the piriform, discharge the square of the lumbar, and above all reactivate the gluteum that needs to be protected again.

When these muscles are working, the sacroiliac doesn't need to be "unblocked" because it doesn't get stuck anymore: the forces around it are balanced, and the joint does its job without overloading 💪

🤣♥️
05/25/2026

🤣♥️

05/24/2026
05/12/2026

Pelvic floor: if you train your ABS wrongly (or if you DON'T train them) you damage yourself! This is why and what to do.

Almost no one connects pelvic floor problems to abdominal problems. Yet the connection is direct, anatomical, and once you understand it completely changes the way you look at training the trunk.

The pelvic floor is not a stand-alone structure. It is the bottom of a pressure system that involves the whole trunk, and the health of that system depends on how the structures that make up it work: the diaphragm above, the pelvic floor below, and the abdominal wall around it.

Imagine a basketball. Its walls hold the internal pressure evenly because they are stretched on all sides equally. If a part of the wall gives way or weakens, the internal pressure does not disappear: it focuses on that area, or worse, it descends towards the point of least resistance.

In the human trunk the point of least resistance is almost always downwards. On the pelvic floor.

Every time intra-abdominal pressure rises, during an effort, cough, sneeze, run, jump, lift weights, the system has to manage it. If the abdominal wall is toned and functions well, that pressure is contained on all sides and the pelvic floor receives only its physiological share, the one it is measured for. If the abdominal wall is weak or doesn’t activate properly, all that pressure goes straight downwards, and the pelvic floor is just running what should be distributed throughout the system.

The central muscle in this mechanism is the transverse of the abdomen, the deepest of the abdominal wall, the one that wraps the trunk like a belt from the inside, and whose main function is exactly this: to hold the pressure laterally, to distribute it, to prevent it from discharging all the way down.

It's not the abdominal re**um that forms the six-pack. These are not external obliques. It’s a deep muscle layer that in most traditional training programs is completely ignored while working on the surface.

And this is where the damage is created.

Surface abdominal exercises, crunches, sit-ups, leg raises performed with extended knees increase intra-abdominal pressure and direct it downwards without activating the inverse. If the pelvic floor is in good condition it can handle it. But if there is already a hypertension, a weakness, a postpartum scar that has altered the mechanics, each repetition becomes a downward spike on a structure that cannot handle it.

Not exercising at all is not the solution: a transverse that is never stimulated becomes progressively less reactive, less able to activate automatically during daily movements, and the pelvic floor becomes without its main protection.

The good news is that transverse and pelvic floor work synergistically: when the transverse activates, the pelvic floor responds automatically. I'm part of the same neuromuscular reflex. This means that a program that includes upside down work also improves the pelvic floor response, not only as a side effect but as a direct consequence of the synergy between the two structures.

Training your abdominal well, paying attention to muscle depth, pressure management, coordinated breathing with movement, is probably the most beneficial thing you can do for long-term pelvic floor health. Much more useful, in many cases, than isolated pelvic floor work itself 💪

If you want to start working on these mechanisms with a comprehensive approach, you can access for FREE the first lessons of "Beyond the Kegel", the course that my collaborator Angela Torretta and I dedicated to the pelvic floor and pelvis.

Having yummy brunch with The Canadian ♥️♥️
04/26/2026

Having yummy brunch with The Canadian ♥️♥️

Address

76778 Katree Road
Palm Desert, CA
92211

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 7pm
Tuesday 7am - 7pm
Wednesday 7am - 7pm
Thursday 7am - 7pm
Friday 7am - 7pm
Saturday 7am - 7pm
Sunday 7am - 7pm

Telephone

+19496331301

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Yoga Therapy With Kat posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Yoga Therapy With Kat:

Share