That first hook is a struggle.
The compression feels intense.
And at some point, you’re wondering…
Is this normal —
or is this too much?
Here’s how to tell the difference between medical tight and dangerously tight,
and how to survive the break-in phase like a pro.
👉🏼 New to recovery? Start here:
https://bdyfajas.com/pages/the-stage-by-stage-recovery-roadmap
A medical-grade faja is not like regular shapewear.
It is an engineered compression tool designed to apply calculated resistance during recovery.
Because BDY fajas use high-quality compression fabric, they are meant to feel firm from day one.
✅ The First Hook Struggle
It should take effort to close the first hook
sometimes a deep breath and patience
✅ The Firm Hug
You should feel consistent, 360° pressure around your midsection
✅ Posture Support
Your faja should naturally hold your spine upright
slouching should feel difficult
✅ The Two-Finger Test
You should be able to slide two fingers under:
• the top of the ribs
• the leg openings
This confirms circulation is not restricted
👉🏼 Learn what your first 72 hours should feel like:
https://bdyfajas.com/pages/the-break-in-period-guide-your-first-72-hours-in-a-faja
When your faja is doing its job properly, you will notice:
☑️ Uniform Compression
No gaps, bubbles, or loose areas
☑️ Managed Swelling
After removing your faja, the area looks:
• flatter
• smoother
☑️ The Lace Flat Rule
The leg lace should:
• sit flat
• not roll
• not dig aggressively
👉🏼 Having fit issues?
https://bdyfajas.com/pages/the-faja-fit-fix-guide-how-to-adjust-a-faja-that-doesn-t-feel-right
If you experience any of the following, your faja is likely too aggressive for your stage:
🚫 Shortness of Breath
You cannot take a full, deep breath
🚫 Numbness or Tingling
Pins and needles in:
• legs
• groin
• feet
🚫 Skin Discoloration
Skin appears:
• purple
• blue
• unusually pale
🚫 Sharp or Deep Pain
Compression should feel like pressure — not stabbing or burning
🚫 Deep Indentations
Marks that:
• last too long
• feel irritated
👉🏼 Learn how swelling affects compression tolerance:
https://bdyfajas.com/pages/the-swelling-timeline-guide-what-s-normal-and-what-s-not
Most people think they need a bigger size.
In reality, they just need flexibility during peak swelling.
Use BDY Gold Hook Extender
https://bdyfajas.com/products/bdy-gold-hook-extender
✔️ You are within the first 14 days (peak swelling)
✔️ The faja fits but feels too aggressive at certain hooks
✔️ You need room for foams or boards
• start with the extender early
• let swelling decrease
• transition back to hooks gradually
This allows you to:
• stay consistent
• avoid forcing compression
• protect healing
👉🏼 Not sure when to tighten or transition?
https://bdyfajas.com/blogs/news/the-ultimate-faja-timeline-when-to-switch-from-stage-1-to-stage-2
Your faja will adapt.
Your body will adapt.
The first few days are the hardest —
but that does not mean something is wrong.
The goal is always:
• firm compression
• controlled pressure
• safe circulation
👉🏼 Learn how to survive your first 72 hours:
https://bdyfajas.com/pages/the-break-in-period-guide-your-first-72-hours-in-a-faja
A faja is supposed to feel tight.
That is how it works.
The key is knowing the difference between:
• supportive pressure
• harmful restriction
When in doubt:
Adjust — don’t force
👉🏼 Shop Stage 1 Fajas
https://bdyfajas.com/collections/stage-1-fajas
👉🏼 Shop Stage 2 Fajas
https://bdyfajas.com/collections/stage-2-fajas
👉🏼 Need help with fit or sizing?
https://thefajadoctor.com/