Amazing journal so far and your progress is inspiring. My surgery with Becker is on 5/10/23, very excited.
You mentioned you noticed you were more mobile / flexible than the other patients. What exercises / stretches stood out to you? Ideally, I'd like to see if I am as flexible as you!
I met with Victor (C4L) and he mentioned I am very loose and limber, and should do fine. Another data point be great.
Looking forward to your timeline update brother!
I was extremely flexible before the surgery, I did 6 months of stretching to prepare for the surgery, but I think I had decent flexibility even before that since youth because of the stretching I did to do martial arts (taekwondo, later kickboxing). I could almost do front splits and side splits still, and most of the kicks from taekwondo fairly well so I am guessing this helped a lot. I think there is a also a genetic/luck components to it because there was one other patient who was 19 and had done a lot of stretching to prepare and he seemed to struggle a lot.
I don't know if there are any particular exercises that standout, you want to stretch 6 muscle groups basically (quads, hamstrings, hip flexor, hip adductor, buttocks, calves) and the TFL muscle + IT band (which is a ligament not a muscle). Judge the exercise by how good a stretch you can get out of it a lot of the exercises they gave us at the rehab centre didn't stretch the muscle very well for me so I modified them a little to get a slightly better stretch.
The muscle that were the tightest throughout lengthening were the quads, hip flexors, TFL and IT band. That's not to say you can neglect the other muscles, and ironically my left shin which seems otherwise unrelated is the area that gives me the most pain (muscle and nerve pain) now.
Once you actually have the surgery, it's good to have benchmarks for flexibility so you can observe reductions in your flexibility. I would basically check my flexibility benchmarks and if it had dropped a lot since clicking I would make sure to keep stretching until I could hit the "benchmark" (e.g. how close to touching your toes you are) and I basically made sure I didn't go to bed if possible until I had "maintained' the previous days mobility levels. It's a lot easier to lose mobility then regain it, so I have been pretty obsessive about this the last few months.
Beyond sheer flexibility, the ability to actually "relax" the muscle and not tense up is a huge aspect of pain management in clicking and yoga style exercises, meditation etc. help with this.
Once I got back I took TRT as well given opiates crush your natural testosterone levels (and consequently your estrogen which is key for bone consolidation). I have also recently started taking very low dose HGH (be very careful with this as it can cause early consolidation) which I think has helped with my recovery a lot.