uknown slayerrr
black pill
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2025
- Posts
- 297
- Reputation
- 154
For osteocytes to stop producing sclerostin and start signaling growth, you need to apply an impact equal to:
Minimum effective: 2.0g – 3.0g (2 to 3 times your body weight).
Example: If you weigh 70 kg, the impact on the ground or the pressure on the bone must be perceived as a load of at least 140–210 kg for a fraction of a second.
How does this force translate in practice? You don’t need to lift 200 kg to achieve this pressure. Impact force depends on speed:
Brisk walking: Generates about 1.2 g → Ineffective for growth (only for maintenance).
Slow running (jogging): Generates about 2.0 g → Minimum threshold (starts stimulating the molecules).
Jumping in place (even small jumps): Generates 3.0–5.0 g → Optimal for bone growth.
Every time you land from a jump rope session, the impact with the ground generates a force equal to 3–5 times your body weight.
If you weigh 70 kg, your bones experience an instantaneous load between 210 kg and 350 kg.
This force is perfect for surpassing the “Minimum Effective Threshold” we discussed, activating Piezo1 channels and forcing osteocytes to stop producing sclerostin.
Bone responds not only to how much you weigh, but also to how quickly the load is applied.
Jumping rope is an explosive, fast movement.
This speed pushes the interstitial fluid inside the bone forcefully, creating shear stress, which is the most powerful signal for activating local IGF-1 production.
Jumping rope for 2–5 minutes is far more effective for your bones than walking for 2 hours.
After about 40–50 jumps, your molecules have already received the maximum signal. Continuing to jump for an hour benefits the heart and muscles, but does not add anything to bone density.
You can do it 2 times a day after 8 hours.
Aside from that u should make sure you consume vitamin D at optimal levels (to absorb calcium).
Sufficient protein (to produce the collagen on which minerals will be deposited).
Minimum effective: 2.0g – 3.0g (2 to 3 times your body weight).
Example: If you weigh 70 kg, the impact on the ground or the pressure on the bone must be perceived as a load of at least 140–210 kg for a fraction of a second.
How does this force translate in practice? You don’t need to lift 200 kg to achieve this pressure. Impact force depends on speed:
Brisk walking: Generates about 1.2 g → Ineffective for growth (only for maintenance).
Slow running (jogging): Generates about 2.0 g → Minimum threshold (starts stimulating the molecules).
Jumping in place (even small jumps): Generates 3.0–5.0 g → Optimal for bone growth.
Every time you land from a jump rope session, the impact with the ground generates a force equal to 3–5 times your body weight.
If you weigh 70 kg, your bones experience an instantaneous load between 210 kg and 350 kg.
This force is perfect for surpassing the “Minimum Effective Threshold” we discussed, activating Piezo1 channels and forcing osteocytes to stop producing sclerostin.
Bone responds not only to how much you weigh, but also to how quickly the load is applied.
Jumping rope is an explosive, fast movement.
This speed pushes the interstitial fluid inside the bone forcefully, creating shear stress, which is the most powerful signal for activating local IGF-1 production.
Jumping rope for 2–5 minutes is far more effective for your bones than walking for 2 hours.
After about 40–50 jumps, your molecules have already received the maximum signal. Continuing to jump for an hour benefits the heart and muscles, but does not add anything to bone density.
You can do it 2 times a day after 8 hours.
Aside from that u should make sure you consume vitamin D at optimal levels (to absorb calcium).
Sufficient protein (to produce the collagen on which minerals will be deposited).