Why Compression Products Fail
Compression works through external force. It squeezes and restricts. Your body naturally fights back. You can't breathe fully because your ribs can't expand properly.
Your core muscles can't engage the way they should because everything is held rigid. You feel tighter, but it's the wrong kind of tight. Constrained, not supported.
But beyond the physiological problems, there are practical failures.
These products roll up during movement, requiring constant adjustment. They're bulky under clothing, defeating the purpose if discretion matters.
Many have chemical odors from synthetic materials. Some require assistance to put on, making daily use impractical.
But the real issue runs deeper.
Compression addresses only the structural level of your body. Physical force holding tissues in position. That's the limit of what it can do.
Your body needs support at multiple levels.
Circulatory support for blood flow and nutrient delivery, cellular-level support for healing and recovery.
Compression can't touch these dimensions. It just adds external pressure to a system that needs internal optimization.
This gap in the market led researchers toward a fundamentally different approach. Not compression-based. Frequency-based.

