The Shoulder Domino Effect

February 24, 20262 min read

Position, Mobility & Long-Term Joint Health

The Domino Effect of Shoulder Pain

Ah yes—the shoulder.

If yours feel great, you probably don’t think about them.

If they ache when you:

• Lift your arms
• Wash your hair
• Toss a tennis ball
• Reach overhead

…then you know how frustrating shoulder pain can be.

(I’ve been there too. A few years ago, even drying my hair wasn’t fun.)

Here’s the truth:

You can’t prevent every injury.
But you can reduce your risk—dramatically.

And it starts with three principles.

1️⃣ Positioning

Before movement comes alignment.

If your shoulder blades aren’t set properly, everything that follows becomes compensation.

Think:

• Shoulder blades gently down and back
• Ribs stacked over the pelvis
• Neck tall and relaxed

Position is your foundation.

Without it, strength doesn’t matter.

2️⃣ Mobility

Can your joints actually move through a full range of motion?

If your thoracic spine (upper back) is stiff, your shoulder will try to make up for it.

That’s when pain starts creeping in.

Mobility allows motion without forcing it.

The shoulder is highly mobile by design—but it depends on the upper back and rib cage to support that motion.

3️⃣ Activation

Even if positioning and mobility are solid, the right muscles have to fire in the right order.

If bigger muscles dominate and smaller stabilizers lag behind, movement becomes inefficient.

And inefficient movement leads to overload.

Think of it like dominoes:

If the first piece is out of place, the entire chain falls apart.

Apply It to Overhead Movement

Want to lift your arms overhead safely?

✅ Set the shoulder blades first
✅ Make sure your upper back can extend and rotate
✅ Activate the rotator cuff and mid-back stabilizers

Miss one step—and the shoulder pays for it.

It’s Bigger Than the Shoulder

This framework applies everywhere:

Knees.
Hips.
Lower back.

Position → Mobility → Activation.

That’s how you stay ahead of pain instead of constantly reacting to it.

Final Thought

Don’t wait until your shoulder is yelling at you.

Build alignment.
Improve mobility.
Activate intentionally.

Take care of your joints now—
so they’ll take care of you later.

Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team

Back to Blog