Recovery decides how much you can train the next day. Acupressure doesn't replace sleep, nutrition or active mobility, but it's a cheap, passive and consistent complementary tool. Here's how to use it.
What the mat does post-training
After a hard workout, two problems delay recovery: accumulated muscle tension (active trigger points) and residual sympathetic activation (elevated heart rate, high cortisol). The mat attacks both:
- Local vasodilation: improves blood flow to loaded muscles without active massage. Helps metabolite transport.
- Parasympathetic activation: lowers heart rate and favours transition to recovery state.
- Endorphin release: reduces DOMS perception (delayed onset muscle soreness) the next day.
The evidence is subjective but consistent: athletes who use it report less stiffness on waking and better night sleep quality after hard workouts.
When to use it (timing matters)
- 1–4 hours post-workout — optimal window. Enough time for heart rate to drop, still in active recovery phase.
- Before sleep — second window. Parasympathetic transition facilitates deep sleep, where you actually recover.
- NOT immediately post-workout — wait at least 30 min. Lying down with heart at 140 bpm feels uncomfortable with no benefit.
- NOT before training — prior vasodilation interferes with competitive activation.
Protocol by sport
Running / Hyrox / endurance
- 10–15 min on the mat, focus on hip, glute and lumbar area.
- 5–10 min with neck pillow under the lumbar (supporting the lumbar curve, not the neck) — relief after repeated impact.
- 2–5 min standing on the mat — plantar reflexology. Especially useful after long runs.
Strength / CrossFit / Hyrox strength
- 15–20 min on the mat, pressure in full back area.
- 10 min with neck pillow under the neck — pull-ups, press and deadlift load trapezius.
- After: 5 min light stretching. The acupressure + stretch combo stimulates better than either alone.
Yoga / pilates / mobility
- 20 min on the mat at the end of the session, as a charged savasana. Pressure deepens relaxation.
- Nasal breathing 4-4-6 (inhale 4, hold 4, exhale 6) throughout the session.
Cycling
- 10–15 min on the mat — lumbar area and glute (the zones most loaded in hunched position).
- 5 min with neck pillow under cervical area — counteracts the cervical hyperextension of hours on the handlebar.
Mistakes that invalidate the effect
- Short sessions (under 8 min): not enough time for parasympathetic response. Result: discomfort without benefit.
- Lying down with the phone: cognitive stimulus cancels parasympathetic activation. Forget the phone for 20 min.
- Skipping the first 5 sessions: they're uncomfortable but the nervous system adapts. Quit on day 1, you never reach the benefit.
- Expecting objective results in a week: the effect is real but subjective. Don't expect your HRV to improve visibly in 3 days. Evaluate at 4 weeks.
How to combine with other tools
- + Foam roller: active foam roller first (5–10 min), then passive acupressure. Foam roller releases fascia, acupressure consolidates relaxation.
- + Cold shower: cold shower first (2–3 min), 30 min wait, then acupressure. Cold activates vasoconstriction; the mat relaxes after.
- + Stretching: opposite to foam roller — acupressure first (15 min), then stretch. Nervous system is already in rest mode and accepts more range.
The minimum viable protocol
If you only do one thing post-workout, this:
15 minutes on the mat, 2 hours post-workout, with slow nasal breathing. 5 days a week. Evaluate at 4 weeks. If you don't notice difference in subjective recovery nor sleep quality, return the product unused within 30 days.
CREATH Mat — Set €40 includes mat + neck pillow, ships from Spain, 30-day return if unused.