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How to Fix Shoulder Pain & Impingement (FOREVER)



If you have shoulder pain when you lift weights or simply lift your arms up over your head, then you’ll want to watch this video. Here I’m going to show you how to fix shoulder pain and impingement forever by attacking the issue at the root cause and giving you the right rotator cuff exercises and progressions to do to get this to go away once and for all.

As always, it starts with a look into the anatomy of the shoulder. First, the source of many problems when it comes to shoulder pain is the supraspinatus tendon. The supraspinatus muscle is one of the muscles of the rotator cuff. It originates on the upper surface of the scapula and feeds through a small space in the shoulder joint to attach to the upper humerus.

Given the limited room inside the joint already because of ligaments, bursa and an already tight shoulder capsule from limited shoulder mobility, the supraspinatus tendon can become pinched when the arm is lifted overhead. This is sometimes the direct cause of the inflammation that one gets and the shoulder tendonitis that one experiences that keeps them from performing upper body exercises without pain.

There is a second important cause of this pain however, that left untreated, will continue to cause a recurrence of the pain without ever getting to the bottom of the real issue. This is the fact that the supraspinatus tendon in the shoulder (as well as the biceps tendon for that matter) have an orientation that leads to them bending around the bone they attach to when the arm is moved into certain positions.

This cause a compression stress on the underside of the tendon. When this occurs, the breakdown of the tendon and resulting inflammation is being caused directly by the inability of the tendon to accommodate to the normal stresses of the joint. Sure, the joint itself becomes even more crowded and unable to safely house the tendon as additional inflammation and swelling mount up. Just doing things to strengthen the rotator cuff in this case to try and open up more room in the joint by positioning the humerus in a more biomechanically safe position isn’t enough.

Your training and rotator cuff exercises have to introduce an element of accommodating the shoulder joint to the stresses that the tendon is ill equipped to handle at this point. The way to do that is pretty simple. You need to use the right exercises, and more importantly, the right progression of exercises to push just as much as the tendon is capable of handling at this point.

We use a banded external rotation exercise and something we call a sword raise to address this.

First thing you want to do with either movement is aim to perform isometric sets. Simply hold the arm in the midrange position and aim to do so for 10 seconds for 5-10 reps. 3-5 sets is enough to get the job done. Ideally, you would save 3-5 days a week to perform this quick but effective routine.

From there, you would increase to a concentric external rotation exercise as able. Same rules apply to the number of sets and days per week that you’d be doing this. Reps could be in the 12-15 range per set.

Continue to work your way up to the stress that you are able to handle without pain.

From there you would introduce a small eccentric stress by adding a step away action. Gradually increase this stress by taking a larger step away and then finally, get to a ballistic or plyometric stress on the tendon by incorporating a small jump out. Increasingly, the tendon will accommodate to the compression stress it incurs, and needs to be able to handle, but only as your body is capable of handling it. Instead of rushing into this and risking further aggravation of symptoms. Do it at this gradual pace and you will be able to fix your shoulder pain once and for all.

For a step by step workout that incorporates corrective exercises into the overall workouts for building ripped athletic muscle, head to athleanx.com at the link below and get the A-X program best suited to your current goals.

For more videos on how to fix shoulder pain and impingement while getting the best rotator cuff exercises to do, be sure to subscribe to our channel at the link below and remember to turn on your notifications so you never miss a new video when it’s published.

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28 Comments

  1. Jeff – I can't thank you enough for the thorough "on-point" instruction/explanation of why we have shoulder impingments!
    I've been following your recommendations to fix the issue and I feel like a new man! Thank you so much! Keep up the great work – and thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.

  2. What about passive hanging (see Dr. John Kirsch "Shoulder pain the solution and prevention") for creating more space and healing shoulder impingement along with strengthening exercises? Any thoughts about that method?

  3. So that's why a lot of people (including myself) see such great benefits from training the external rotators.. I was wonderings how training the infraspinatus and teres minor seems to be such a magical cure for shoulder impingement, since the impingement is in an entirely different place

  4. What if I get a pinching pain at the front of my shoulder when doing push ups with good form, but no pain from raising my arm overhead?

  5. Ive shoulder popping/clicking in my right shoulder but no pain and doesn’t hinder any movement. But last week I think I went a little too hard on overhead press and ive this burning sensation in my right shoulder from 4 days ive done all the necessary stretches and mobility exercises idk what else to do and im really worried. Anyone could help me out?

  6. For months my shoulder has been in pain as a goal keeper that sucks! This describes my pain, iv been at the gym for about 2 weeks now and this has helped, still a slight pain but I now have more movement 😁 thanks man!!

  7. Hi first i must say good video!! Good exercises like in physio therapy.

    But i have i question, i have a little form of the inpingement syndrom, i had an plastic surgery for 5 years and its got a little bit worse.

    So i would like to countinue to boxing can someone who is also a boxer or maybe you give me some more tips how you handle it or how u lost it completely?

    Sorry for bad english, i hope someone can help me✌🏼

    Thank you anyway for the good exercises god bless you

  8. ATHLEAN-X hoping you can help me here ,,,, I'm 50 years old and lifting since I was 24 years old, over the last 10 or so years my eldest son got sick , it was a very hard time for me and it made me take breaks from the gym , after a two year break I'm 9 weeks back lifting while doing flys or over head dumbbell I think pinched me shoulder, its a pain not so painful but stops me lifting , do you think your advice here would fix it ? Me shoulder like? I usually get up to around 75kg by the 6 week but I'm finding it hard to get past 50kg ,, but I'm making myself a good shape with lighter weights. Thanks for your information
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  9. I started training to gain muscle like a year ago and I reach a point in my training where I felt confident in my flat bench and incline bench press. Last week I started to feel this pain in my shoulder and I thought I would never be able to train as hard as I could before. Thank you so much for this tip! It’s help me a lot.

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