yes your butt can pop depending on where you try to pop it
Yes my girl pops it all the time. But biologically unless you have some excess air or some unnatural process going on it is impossible to physically pop your butt. Your skin will stretch gradually to account for excess fat.
Do you mean like you pop your knuckles or how you do in dance? No to the first, yes to the second
You can pop a muscle.
If you did not have muscles you would not be able to move, talk, smell, listen, see And if you didn't have muscles your eyes would pop out of place because muscles keep your eyes in place
The muscles will pop out even though your not tensing then
pop ten pill mix or match get tired
A pop in your neck can be due to the over use and over stretching of neck muscles and tendons. Rest a ice will help to relieve the inflammation.
Helps keep the eye in place so it doesn't pop out of its socket.
The sternocleidomastoids are the large straplike muscles running down the front of the neck that pop out when the jaw is flexed. They are used to turn and support the head.
Because the muscles is being oversaguated with the major function of its infants who consistantly will accure damaged and rebuild.
Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..Pop..
Because your muscles are not used to you running and they expand too much and pop. To recover, all you have to do is continue running and eat lots of protein (mainly meat) to build back you muscles and make them stronger and able to handle the pain and burn. Always remember to stretch your muscles before you run and after as a cool down, you won't experience as much pain.
These muscles are called "skeletal muscles".
Skeletal muscles.
That feeling comes from unequal air pressure between the external ear canal and the middle ear. It is normally relieved, or equalized, by action of muscles that open the eustachian tube, a channel that runs from the back of the throat to the middle ear. Some people have the knack of "popping" their ears; others don't, and it's a difficult knack to teach. Fortunately, there's a trick that works for most people. The muscles that open the eustachian tube are attached to the soft palate (on the roof of the mouth). Those muscles go into action when we chew. For that reason, chewing a piece of gum will eventually result in the contraction of those critical muscles, and the ears will "pop." (Why chew gum? Because the chewing can be continuous without our having to replenish what is being chewed.) If you are in a pressurized cabin or the elevator of a tall office building, the difference in air pressure will be small, and as long as there is no pain, no harm will result if you wait until you return to lower levels, when the pressures will again be equal, and the need to "pop" your ears will disappear. If your ears do "pop" at high altitudes, then you may have to re-pop them when you return to lower levels.