Sacrum / SI Joints Protocol
Sacrum & SI Joint Release Protocol
Target the soft tissue surrounding the sacrum and sacroiliac joints — where weight transfers between the upper and lower body, and a common source of deep, aching lower back and hip pain.
The Anatomy
What Are the Sacrum & SI Joints?
The sacrum is the triangular bone at the base of the spine, connecting to the pelvis via the sacroiliac (SI) joints on each side. These joints support weight transfer between the upper and lower body during standing, walking, and lifting. The surrounding soft tissue — including the glutes, piriformis, lumbar fascia, and deep pelvic stabilizers — all attach to or cross the sacral region, making it a convergence point for tension from multiple directions.
Why It Matters
What Happens When the Area Is Restricted
When the surrounding tissues — glutes, piriformis, or lumbar fascia — tighten, they restrict motion at the SI joints and create deep, aching pain across the lower back or hips. SI joint dysfunction can produce pain that's difficult to localize — felt in the low back, buttock, or even the groin. Prolonged sitting, asymmetric loading, and repetitive activity compound the restriction. Targeted soft tissue mobilization around (not on) the sacrum helps restore pelvic mobility and relieve the tension driving SI joint pain.
Positioning & Technique
Supine Floor Release
Lie on your back with knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Lift your hips slightly and place the KNUKLBALL under one side of your lower back — between the tailbone and the outer hip, just below the beltline. Lower your weight slowly until the knuckles settle into the tissue. Focus on the soft tissue just next to the sacrum, not on the bone itself.
Standing Wall Release
Stand with your back to a wall. Place the KNUKLBALL on one side of the sacrum. Lean gently into the wall, keeping your knees soft to control pressure. Ideal for beginners or those sensitive to floor pressure. Allows easy repositioning to target different areas around the SI joint.
Seated or Side-Lying Direct Pressure
Sit or lie on your side. Grip the KNUKLBALL by the bottom sphere and reach behind to press the knuckles into the soft tissue alongside the sacrum. Lighter pressure than floor or wall — ideal for targeted trigger point work or when body-weight methods are too intense. Apply KNUKLBALM Rub for smoother gliding.
Protocol Steps
Before You Begin
Use moderate, controlled pressure throughout. Breathe deeply to help release the tissue with each exhale. Apply a thin layer of KNUKLBALM Rub if using cross-fiber or gliding motions. Best performed lying on the floor or against a wall.
Warm Up
Apply a warm towel or KNUKLBALM Rub to the lower back and sacral region. Perform gentle pelvic tilts, hip circles, or light walking to increase circulation to the area.
⏱ 3–5 minPosition & Locate Target Areas
Choose your setup: floor, wall, or hand-held. Place the KNUKLBALL under or against one side of the lower back, between the tailbone and the outer hip, just below the beltline. Allow the knuckles to settle into the soft tissue next to the sacrum.
Sustained Pressure — Trigger Point Release
Once positioned over a tender or tight spot, allow your body weight to sink gently into the KNUKLBALL. Hold steady pressure for 20–30 seconds, or until the tension begins to release. Focus on the soft tissue just next to the sacrum — not on the bone. Move slightly to locate 2–3 trigger points on each side.
⏱ up to 60 sec per spotCross-Fiber & Along-Fiber Mobilization
From the same position, make small, controlled shifts of your body to move the knuckles across the tissue. Cross-fiber: press and shift side-to-side, perpendicular to the sacrum. Along-fiber: press and shift vertically (up and down) along the gluteal and sacral border. Use smooth, moderate strokes for 30–60 seconds per region. Apply KNUKLBALM Rub for gentle glide along the fascia.
⏱ 30–60 sec per regionActive Mobilization — Pin & Stretch
Maintain pressure on a tender spot near the SI joint, then add movement to stretch the tissue under the knuckles. Knee draw: gently draw the same-side knee toward your chest, then extend it back out. Hip rotation: slowly rotate your hip inward and outward (butterfly motion) while the KNUKLBALL remains in contact. Perform 5–8 slow repetitions per side. This active movement stretches the tissue under tension, improving mobility through the hip and pelvic stabilizers.
⏱ 5–8 reps per sidePost-Release Integration
Remove the KNUKLBALL. Gently stretch the area — supine figure-four stretch or knees-to-chest. Hold for 20–30 seconds each side. Perform slow pelvic tilts and hip circles through full range. Apply KNUKLBALM Creme to cool the area. Hydrate.
⏱ 2–3 minWhy Knuklball Works for This Area
Sacral Border Precision
The SI joint soft tissue sits in a narrow corridor between the sacrum and the ilium. The KNUKLBALL's knuckles press into this space with focused contact — targeting the tissue next to the bone without compressing the bone itself.
Pin & Stretch
Pin the tissue with the knuckles, then draw the knee or rotate the hip to stretch the tissue under tension. This technique mobilizes the deep pelvic stabilizers and fascia that a static hold alone can't fully address.
Controlled Depth
Floor for deeper body-weight pressure with full stability. Wall for lighter, controlled contact — ideal for beginners or sensitive areas. The KNUKLBALL's versatility lets you adjust angle, pressure, and knuckle contact to personalize the treatment — essential in a region where too much force can aggravate rather than relieve.