
What if your 10,000 steps a day were the reason your back hurts?
Biomechanics engineer Gabriel Saravia, joins Nick Urban to break down why most chronic back pain comes from millimeter-scale vertebra shifts rather than weak muscles. After eliminating chronic pain in hundreds of clients ranging from world champions to people who couldn't move without bracing, his approach centers on spine-driven mechanics: the rotation, lateral flexion, and decompression patterns humans evolved for.
Meet our guestGabriel Saravia is an engineer turned biomechanics specialist and the creator of the Paraball, Paramace, and Parabell training systems. After years of chronic back pain from competitive squash and bodybuilding, he rebuilt his understanding of the human body from first principles and now coaches everyone from world champions to clients with severe movement limitations. His method centers on spine-driven mechanics: the rotation, lateral flexion, and decompression patterns humans evolved for.
Thank you to our partnersEpisode highlights
00:00 Intro
02:01 Origin story: bodybuilding back pain
05:18 Spine anatomy: 3 planes of motion
06:07 The 1 millimeter vertebra shift that decides pain
13:33 Why static stretching fails biomechanically
17:08 Why yoga teachers have the worst back pain
21:35 Bottom-up kinetic sequencing (the cross punch)
32:22 The universal weakness on every gait analysis
35:48 The ribcage elevation protocol for back pain
42:25 Why 10,000 asymmetric steps destroy the spine
56:36 Tensegrity and active spinal decompression
01:02:25 Rapid fire: daily exercise, biggest gym waste
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