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The Move Well Project

10/26/2020

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The Move Well Project

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Our guest today is Chris Peil. Chris is a sports rehabilitation expert who specializes in helping people get back to performing at their best after the medical community has tried and failed. His no-nonsense, logical straight-talking approach is a breath of fresh air compared to much of the hot air and self-promotion you see from people far less skilled.

 

 

Chris flies under the radar for someone who works with Olympians, professional athletes, and World’s Strongest Man champion, Eddie Hall. His lack of self-promotion is refreshing but robs the world of his wealth of wisdom. Listen to this episode to learn from a genuine hidden gem of the fitness industry.

 

If you enjoyed this podcast and took value from it, please rate and review to help us spread the word to motivate and inspire others to take their performance to the next level.

 

For more podcasts like this, visit the Breaking Muscle Six Pack of Knowledge page. Find all out podcasts on most streaming services available including: iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, YouTube, Stitcher, PlayerFM, and PodBean.

 

I am the host, Tom MacCormick and I am a personal trainer and online coach whose goal is to be the curator of the greatest hypertrophy experts on the planet. If you are interested in working with me or finding out more about me then follow me on Instagram @tommaccormick.

 





Fitness

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October 26, 2020 at 02:39PM
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The Move Well Project

10/26/2020

0 Comments

 
The Move Well Project

https://ift.tt/35ytrRy

 

 

Our guest today is Chris Peil. Chris is a sports rehabilitation expert who specializes in helping people get back to performing at their best after the medical community has tried and failed. His no-nonsense, logical straight-talking approach is a breath of fresh air compared to much of the hot air and self-promotion you see from people far less skilled.

 

Chris flies under the radar for someone who works with Olympians, professional athletes, and World’s Strongest Man champion, Eddie Hall. His lack of self-promotion is refreshing but robs the world of his wealth of wisdom. Listen to this episode to learn from a genuine hidden gem of the fitness industry.

 

If you enjoyed this podcast and took value from it, please rate and review to help us spread the word to motivate and inspire others to take their performance to the next level.

 

For more podcasts like this, visit the Breaking Muscle Six Pack of Knowledge page. Find all out podcasts on most streaming services available including: iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, YouTube, Stitcher, PlayerFM, and PodBean.

 

I am the host, Tom MacCormick and I am a personal trainer and online coach whose goal is to be the curator of the greatest hypertrophy experts on the planet. If you are interested in working with me or finding out more about me then follow me on Instagram @tommaccormick.

 





Fitness

via Breaking Muscle https://ift.tt/1hdUh1E

October 26, 2020 at 02:04PM
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Heavy Suitcase Deadlifts Build Anti-Rotational Control and Strength

10/22/2020

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Heavy Suitcase Deadlifts Build Anti-Rotational Control and Strength

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Deadlifts with dumbbells or kettlebells are kind of pointless unless you’re doing single-leg variations. Wrong.

 

Do you ever try single-arm variation instead of single-leg? Two legs on the ground but just one bell, in one hand, held on the side of your body. This is the suitcase deadlift, and in many ways, it trains the same qualities as a single-leg RDL.

 

 

The difference is, you can load this exercise up much heavier and have much more fun with it. I have put a lot of the details of your approach in this article, if you need to dig deeper or have specific issues than you should check out my movement principles online course.

 

The Benefits of the Suitcase Deadlift

Why do we do single-leg exercises? It’s easy to build single-leg strength. Except that’s not all. They also help improve our stability, and it’s not just because they build unilateral strength. It’s from developing the skill of triggering the trunk muscles that keep our hips from rotating or shifting in a coordinated effort.

 

Our bodies find stability and strength for one side from the other. Our left side obliques turn on to help keep us from side-bending when we’re holding something heavy on the right side of our bodies.

 

We create a force against the ground from our right foot to flex our left lat.

 

These cross patterns should be automatic, and we should have control and strength on each side to stabilize the other, but that’s not always the case. 

 

The suitcase deadlift makes it intuitive to sharpen this quality.

 

It feels wrong to tilt or rotate to one side when you’re picking a heavy weight off the floor in just one hand. You instinctively and actively fight against it. 

 

Should You Do It?

This may seem like a remedial exercise, or something beginners should practice before training heavy barbell deadlifts. Still, it’s just as necessary for elite powerlifters to be far from the competition during general training blocks. 

 

We’ll always develop a tendency to use one side of our bodies in the movement more than the other.

 

 

And while some of that is part of being human, too much is part of a problem that can get you hurt. 

 

You may play a sport where you almost exclusively use just one side of your body. Or you could be a busy professional who does some repetitive tasks over and over.

 

It doesn’t matter what it is; repeat the same movements over and over on one side, and you’re going to struggle with some nagging injuries, aches, and pains. 

 

Exercises like the suitcase deadlift can keep you healthy or help rehab the damage that's already been done. 

 

What Muscles Are Involved?

The movement itself trains the hamstrings, quads, glutes, and even the back muscles as they help you grip and hold the bell.

 

But the true advantage in adding these to your workouts is that they build anti-rotational trunk control and strength. 

 

The deep muscles of the trunk that stabilize the spine, pelvis, and hips like the transverse abdominis, psoas major, and even the pelvic floor muscles, to name a few, can really be stressed with this exercise and trained harder than they would be with any exercise where you’d have the same sized weights in both hands.  

 

How to Do a Suitcase Deadlift 

Place a dumbbell or kettlebell to the side of one of your ankles.

 

Heavy Suitcase Deadlifts Build Anti-Rotational Control and Strength - Fitness, elite athletes, Kettlebell, dumbbells, functional strength, suitcase deadlift, single leg, powerlifter, transverse abdominal, cross patterning, obliques, psoas, unilateral exercises, remedial exercises, core stability

 

Hinge over and squat down similarly to setting up for a barbell deadlift. You’ll have to squat down lower and be more upright than you would in a conventional deadlift with a loaded barbell because the bell isn’t as high off the floor, and it’s placed to the side. 

 

Heavy Suitcase Deadlifts Build Anti-Rotational Control and Strength - Fitness, elite athletes, Kettlebell, dumbbells, functional strength, suitcase deadlift, single leg, powerlifter, transverse abdominal, cross patterning, obliques, psoas, unilateral exercises, remedial exercises, core stability

 

Inhale deeply, filling your entire abdominal cavity and expanding and pressurizing not only your belly but the sides of your torso and lower back with the air. 

 

Brace and think of driving your feet and ankles through the floor as you stand, making sure your hips don’t shoot up before your chest and shoulders do.

 

 

  • As you stand, concentrate on letting your shoulders relax and hang but keep the side of your torso with the weight from dipping or slanting lower than the opposite side.
  • You want your hips to stay square and even the whole time.
  • Fight the urge to let your torso bend to the side of the weight as you stand.
  • Concentrate on engaging your trunk to keep your hips square and not allowing yourself to twist or bend to the side at all. 
  • Exhale hard at the top, rebrace and squat down the same way to touch the bell to the ground before standing back up 

 

Add Variation

One of the biggest ways to switch things up would be to use a barbell instead of a dumbbell or kettlebell. 

 

  • Many people think of using a barbell when they do suitcase deadlifts, but it needs to be thought of as a progression to using a bell. 
  • With a barbell, not only do you have to fire your trunk to stabilize and keep from turning and rotating, but you’ll also have to stabilize the bar to keep it from tipping forward or back in your hand. 
  • This demands a lot of focus on engaging your shoulders, back, and forearms to stabilize the barbell itself and if you can’t first fix your hips and pelvis in place, using a barbell defeats the purpose of the exercise.

 

Find stability in your body first with bells. Then you can use barbells, also. 

 

Too Far Too Soon

To train trunk stability and get the legs working, you need to challenge yourself with a heavyweight.

 

But you have to ease into it.

 

Too heavy of a dumbbell on day one, and you’re stabilizing muscles are likely to tire out too quickly, making you twist or turn.

 

And once that happens, nothing is protecting your back from injury. 

 

For the Advanced 

Despite what you use for weight - dumbbell, kettlebell, barbell - you can make this exercise much more difficult by doing floating reps.

 

Start the exercise the same as usual, but when you squat back down after the first rep, instead of placing the weight on the floor or even tapping it to the ground, you lower it until it's just half an inch off the floor. Pause for just a moment and stand back up. 

 

Heavy Suitcase Deadlifts Build Anti-Rotational Control and Strength - Fitness, elite athletes, Kettlebell, dumbbells, functional strength, suitcase deadlift, single leg, powerlifter, transverse abdominal, cross patterning, obliques, psoas, unilateral exercises, remedial exercises, core stability

 

 

Heavy Suitcase Deadlifts Build Anti-Rotational Control and Strength - Fitness, elite athletes, Kettlebell, dumbbells, functional strength, suitcase deadlift, single leg, powerlifter, transverse abdominal, cross patterning, obliques, psoas, unilateral exercises, remedial exercises, core stability

 

Do your entire set floating the weight just above the ground but never touching, and you’ll feel fatigued, and soreness in a way you haven’t felt since your way over-zealous grade school gym teacher made you do a hundred rep sit-up challenge. 

 





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October 22, 2020 at 11:26AM
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The Muscle Lab is Open

10/20/2020

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The Muscle Lab is Open

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Cody Haun is the epitome of a 21st century strength scientists. As he ventures out on his own, leaving academia for private practice, he is set up to track, analyze, and assess every aspect of your training and nutrition.

 

 

  • In this episode, we geek out about:
  • Inter-individual heterogeneity and response to training and nutrition
  • Starting a research and training practice
  • Case studies, database processes, and accountability to trainees
  • Ultrasound units, portable metabolic analyzers, and the tools of the trade

 

If you enjoyed this podcast and took value from it, please rate and review to help us spread the word to motivate and inspire others to take their performance to the next level.

 

For more podcasts like this, visit the Breaking Muscle Six Pack of Knowledge page. Find all out podcasts on most streaming services available including: iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, YouTube, Stitcher, PlayerFM, and PodBean.

 

I am the host, Tom MacCormick and I am a personal trainer and online coach whose goal is to be the curator of the greatest hypertrophy experts on the planet. If you are interested in working with me or finding out more about me then follow me on Instagram @tommaccormick.

 





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October 20, 2020 at 08:47PM
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5 Ways to Workout With Your Partner

10/19/2020

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5 Ways to Workout With Your Partner

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There’s strength in numbers. Never is this more true than when it comes to committing to working out.

 

It’s the reason people hire personal trainers or sign up for a bootcamp with a friend: Accountability. And what more convenient accountability partner than your intimate partner? If you live with the person, even better.

 

 

What if we’re at different fitness levels? How does that work?

 

Rest assured, it can still work, even if one person is much fitter, stronger, or faster than the other.

 

Here are 5 ways to workout with your partner, even in the comfort of your own own, if you so desire:

 

1. Choose Your Own Adventure Burpees

Burpee intervals, where you each work for a specific amount of time, tend to work well for people who move at different speeds, as you’ll both end up doing an appropriate amount of work for your level, as opposed to one person whooping the other person’s butt.

 

Try this:

 

  1. One person works for 30 seconds doing as many burpees as they can, while the other person rests. Then reverse roles.
  2. Repeat for a total of 8 to 10 rounds each. Can you hold the same number of burpees in your last interval as you did in your first?

 

Make sure your chest touches the ground at the bottom of the burpee and that you fully extend your hips and jump at the end with your hands overhead.

 

2. High Five Partner Planks

You have probably done a plank before, and maybe a shoulder tap, where you raise one arm and touch your hand to your opposite shoulder, all the while stabilizing through the core and keeping your hips from shifting.

 

This is the same concept, only instead of tapping your shoulder, you raise your hand and high five your partner’s hand.

 

 

To perform:

 

  1. Face each other and assume the plank position.
  2. At the same time, raise your right hands and gently high five. Then the left. Back and forth.
  3. Focus on keeping your hips from shifting and your glutes and abs as tight as can be through the duration of this exercise.

 

After finishing the choose your own adventure burpees, finish with 3 rounds of 20 high five partner planks with one minute rest between sets.

 

 

3. Ab War

One two three four—I declare an ab war.

 

On a day you’re feeling competitive, go for a max effort hollow hold against each other. Who can hold a hollow hold longer?

 

Make sure your shoulder blades are off the ground, your lower back is glued to the ground, your hands are straight overhead and your heels are hovering four to six inches off the ground.

 

Hollow Rock

 

Then finish with 100 hollow rocks as a team. Break them up as needed and complete 100 together.

 

 

4. Interval Isometric Fun

 

Similar to the burpee workout, trade off movements of:

 

Wall Hold

 

  1. 30-second wall sit hold
  2. 30-second dead bug hold

 

Dead Bug Hold

 

Or better yet, make it a bully dead bug, where your partner pushes your arms and legs around a bit to force you to resist their pushes and tighten up your core with everything you’ve got. This is also a great core activation drill.

 

 

 

5. Race a 10 to 1

I really like 10-1 workouts, because each round gets easier. You can do this with all sorts of movements, but basically select two movements and do 10 reps of each, then 9 reps of each, then 8, 7, 6 all the way to 1.

 

If you’re at a similar fitness level, then select one movement each that you’re good at and then race each other. Or, if one person is way more fit, then have them do 10-1 while the other person does 9-1, kind of like a handicap in golf.

 

Try it with air squats and sit ups, or burpees and lunges, or push-ups and hollow rocks. The sky is the limit.

 

Why?

 

Because as the saying goes, ‘Those who train together stay together.'

 





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October 19, 2020 at 03:56PM
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Maximize Muscularity and Strength; Minimize Risk of Injury

10/13/2020

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Maximize Muscularity and Strength; Minimize Risk of Injury

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Jordan Shallow is a chiropractor, strength and conditioning coach, powerlifter and educator. He's the cofounder of Pre-Script, which operates on the three pillars of mobility, stability and strength.

 

In this episode:

 

  • Jordan identifies the missing piece of the puzzle when it comes to enhancing performance, gaining strength, building muscle mass, managing injury risk, and developing more robust athletes
  • He explains how developing a foundation of ability and stability can facilitate an increase in strength

 

This is an interview I've wanted to do for several months and I'm delighted to finally get it done. Listening to Jordan will shine a spotlight on what your limiting factor is when it comes to getting results, it will identify why you get those nagging injuries or why you keep hitting plateaus in the gym. I'm willing to bet you'll learn you've had a blind spot when it comes to your programming. What's crazier is that blind spot has been hiding in plain sight the whole time. 

 

If you enjoyed this podcast and took value from it, please rate and review to help us spread the word to motivate and inspire others to take their performance to the next level.

 

For more podcasts like this, visit the Breaking Muscle Six Pack of Knowledge page. Find all out podcasts on most streaming services available including: iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, YouTube, Stitcher, PlayerFM, and PodBean.

 

I am the host, Tom MacCormick and I am a personal trainer and online coach whose goal is to be the curator of the greatest hypertrophy experts on the planet. If you are interested in working with me or finding out more about me then follow him on Instagram @tommaccormick.

 





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via Breaking Muscle https://ift.tt/1hdUh1E

October 13, 2020 at 08:12PM
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The 10 Commandments of Health

10/12/2020

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The 10 Commandments of Health

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Now God didn’t etch these in stone and send them down through the clouds, nor did I perform any miracles like parting the Red Sea. So, in that respect, they’re up for debate. 

 

But after being in the fitness industry for a while, reading, studying, doing continuing education credit hours on top of training clients, and teaching group exercise classes, I’ve gotten a pretty decent handle on how to get fit.

 

 

However, there are many options for you to shed weight, build muscle, and be your best self. A quick Google search for health and fitness generates over 2,670,000,000 hits, so you’ve got plenty of choices. 

 

However, this is a classic case of information overload. Hence, the need to take the view from 10,000 feet and to not major in the minors. It's easy to do when you're supporting or improving your health and fitness.  

 

Think of these commandments as a guide to best navigate the world of health and fitness on the interwebs and mainstream media. 

 

Hopefully, you and the man upstairs approve. 

 

1. You Shall Engage In Resistance Training

The 10 Commandments of Health - Fitness, fitness, meditation, cardio, immune system, hydration, resistance training, proteins, heart disease, weight loss, hypertrophy, energy, posture, metabolism, sleep deprivation, fiber, healthy eating, obesity crisis

 

It doesn’t matter what type of resistance training you engage in because the body can’t tell the difference between a dumbbell, a stone, or your own bodyweight. 

 

Having a decent amount of muscle mass and strength will act as armor for whatever the world throws at you, and you’ll look better naked.

 

It also helps to keep bones strong, increase your energy levels, support good posture, and increase your metabolism to help you lose weight.

 

2. You Shall Eat Fruit And Vegetables

The 10 Commandments of Health - Fitness, fitness, meditation, cardio, immune system, hydration, resistance training, proteins, heart disease, weight loss, hypertrophy, energy, posture, metabolism, sleep deprivation, fiber, healthy eating, obesity crisis

 

 

Personally, I've never seen someone become overweight by eating too many fruits and vegetables. It’s hard to eat too much because of the amount of chewing they require and their water content. 

 

Both fruits and vegetables provide the body with the energy to perform in and out of the gym.

 

Fruits and veggies are rich in vitamins and minerals because they draw the nutrients to grow from mother earth. 

 

If that wasn’t enough to convince you, both offer fiber to help you feel fuller longer and more regular in the bathroom. But I’ll stop there. 

 

3. You Shall Eat Enough Protein

To build and support muscles, you must eat protein. Protein contains amino acids that repair and rebuild muscles, and protein helps you stay fuller longer, which helps you lose fat.

 

Protein is also an important building block for your bones, cartilage, skin, and blood.

 

There are all kinds of protein, and some are better than others, but that’s not the most important thing. Whether you’re a vegan, meat-eater, or vegetarian, you should strive to eat enough protein to repair and rebuild muscle.  

 

4. You Shall Engage In Cardiovascular Activity

Heart disease is one of the human race’s biggest killers. This has probably touched you or someone you know. I have friends and clients who have suffered heart attacks, and coming back from them is no joke. 

 

Having good aerobic fitness doesn’t totally cut the chances of having heart disease, but it surely helps. Having good aerobic fitness helps cut the risk factors associated with this terrible disease, such as:

 

 

All you have to do is find a movement you enjoy, do it consistently, and raise a sweat every once in a while.

 

It’s that easy.  

 

5. You Shall Drink Water

Our bodies are 60% water. And if you lose more than 2% of this through sweat, bad things start to happen like:

 

 

Your body needs water to function, and drinking (or eating fruit and vegetables that contain water) enough for your body weight and activity levels is a no-brainer. 

 

6. You Shall Take Time For Yourself

Between work, life, family, and friends, a lot is going on. Maybe you’re rushing around, trying to get stuff done, and you’re getting pulled in a million different directions.

 

However, making time for yourself should be a priority because your sanity depends on it. 

 

Whether it’s lying in bed for a few minutes thinking about all the blessings in your life, doing meditation, or engaging in a moving-meditation-like exercise, you need to focus on you and drown out the noise of the world before you run yourself ragged. 

 

Because you're not useful to anyone else if you’ve lost your mind. 

 

7. You Shall Be Consistent

This is the most important commandment because none of this works if you don’t do this.

 

It’s about finding what works best for you, your schedule, and your lifestyle.

 

Does it mean doing it every day? No.

 

It means most days. And if you fall off the horse for a few days, dust yourself off and jump back in the saddle.

 

The only way you can fail at this health and fitness thing is to quit.

 

And you’re no quitter. 

 

8. You Shall Make Sleep A Priority

Sleep plays a huge role in your health and well-being. Getting enough sleep can help protect your mental health, physical health, quality of life, and safety. 

 

The way you feel when you're awake depends on (in part) the quality of your sleep. And if you don’t sleep great, there is always coffee, but caffeine only lasts for so long.

 

During sleep, the body is hard at work to support healthy brain function and repair and recuperate your body. And if sleep quality is an issue, it will catch up with you eventually. 

 

Because you’ll be too tired to run.  

 

9. You Shall Eat Like An Adult 

It’s great when you’re a kid. You can eat McDonald’s Happy Meals, all you can eat candy, a variety of fried yellow food, and barely put on a pound because you have a metabolism that runs like a Ferrari. 

 

However, when you're an adult (some in age only) with a slower metabolism and more stress and responsibilities, eating like a kid will have you staring down at your waistline in disbelief.

 

You shall follow commandments 2, 3, and 5 and eat like an adult and leave your childhood behind you. 

 

10. You Shall Not Shame Others  

There’s a reason The Biggest Loser isn’t popular anymore. The yelling, the screaming, and the boot camp mentality that tore these overweight people down to build them back up again are now out of step with today’s society.  

 

Obesity is a crisis that won’t be solved by shaming them into eating less and moving more. 

 

People like this need encouragement and not stares, ridicule, judgment, and finger-pointing. That’s the easy way out. 

 

Are these good enough to be etched in stone? Maybe not, but if you follow these ten commandments, they will lead you to a better quality of life and a longer life.

 

And that’s what we all want. 





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October 12, 2020 at 11:12AM
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Getting Schooled on Building Muscle

10/9/2020

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Getting Schooled on Building Muscle

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Chris Barakat, MS, ATC, CISSN, is the founder of School of Gainz and Competitive Breed. He is also a competitive natural bodybuilder, researcher, and educator who truly walks the talk.
 

In this episode, we discuss all things muscle building including:

  • Whether DOMs are a useful indicator of effective training
  • What makes a good muscle building exercise
  • How much variety do you need in your training
  • Is periodization a useful muscle building tool

 

As well as discussing Chris' exciting research and insights into the latest science in hypertrophy.

 

 

If you enjoyed this podcast and took value from it, please rate and review to help us spread the word to motivate and inspire others to take their performance to the next level. For more podcasts like this, visit the Breaking Muscle Six Pack of Knowledge page. Find all out podcasts on most streaming services available including: iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, YouTube, Stitcher, PlayerFM, and PodBean.

 

I am the host, Tom MacCormick and I am a personal trainer and online coach whose goal is to be the curator of the greatest hypertrophy experts on the planet. If you are interested in working with me or finding out more about me then follow him on Instagram @tommaccormick.





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via Breaking Muscle https://ift.tt/1hdUh1E

October 9, 2020 at 09:51AM
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The Cossack Squat: Reclaiming Your Baseline Balance

10/8/2020

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The Cossack Squat: Reclaiming Your Baseline Balance

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This uncomplicated exercise not only builds single-leg strength and coordination but also takes care of the instability of the hips that unavoidably creeps in after years of training heavy two-sided movements like squats and deadlifts.

 

We're not perfectly balanced machines. One side of our body has more prominent organs in different places than the other side. We have a dominant side that will always be a little stronger and more coordinated than the other. 

 

 

So, when we start training heavy two-legged or bilateral movements like squats and deadlifts, it would make sense that we'd begin to develop a bias to push harder, shift toward, or favor our dominant side.

 

It's part of the deal in being a human being, and no measure of one-side focused remedial exercises or drills will make us perfectly balanced.

 

There's no point in obsessing over this because we're, by nature, imbalanced. 

 

We should always concentrate on the foundations that are beyond every movement and exercise. If you're interested in learning what these foundation principles are, check out this new course I'm offering.

 

When the Imbalance Is Too Much

Sometimes though, the gap between the sides and segments can grow a little too large. When that happens, we need smart exercises that train all variables to help move the meter back toward your baseline, a reasonable asymmetry.

 

The cossack squat demands you move in positions that can be difficult at first to do, but the movement itself is simple and straightforward.

 

It can be done anywhere with bodyweight or loaded in different ways with whatever kind of weights are available to you.

 

Why The Cossack Squat?

Any single-leg exercise can improve stability and physical awareness. What makes the cossack squat valuable is that you have the light support of your trail leg. This support enables you to focus on controlled moving through the entire range of motion available to you while building more mobility and strength at the end of your range.

 

The Cossack Squat: Reclaiming Your Baseline Balance - Fitness, fitness, mobility, strength training, range of motion, posture, stability, deadlifts, hip abduction, planes of motion, movement patterns, coordination, asymmetry, cossack squat, imbalances, adductors, core stability                    

As you drop down, you're moving at the limit of your hip and ankle range of motion. Just look at the picture above. I'm doing as deep of a squat as I possibly can on one side of my body. 

 

 

We all tend to emphasize linear movements where we move straight up and down. If you want a big squat and deadlift, there's nothing wrong with that. But you need to make sure that you're moving in different directions and patterns of movement at least some of the time.

 

The cossack squat is an exercise you can add to the end of your workouts that gets you moving in a different plane.

 

It would be best if you moved through these different patterns to prevent pattern overload (injuries to your soft tissues from moving in only one pattern or limiting the free range of motion for too long).

 

It would help if you moved in these different positions to keep all of the connective tissue in the body healthy. 

 

The longer we've been training, the more we may need this.

 

The older we get, the more we need to move in every possible way.

 

And the more we sit for work, the more we should move in every movement pattern possible.

 

Use Every Pattern of Movement

 

 

  • Place your feet one to two-foot lengths outside of shoulder-width apart. You may have to adjust your feet wider. Play around with your stance to figure out what's comfortable and strong.

  • Ground the foot on the side you're going to squat toward first. Push your big toe firmly into the ground and create pressure against the ground outside of your foot, directly below the outer edge of the ankle.

  • You can turn your toes out at first but eventually work toward keeping them pointed straight as it will challenge your mobility and stability at new levels.

  • Use your other foot on the opposite side to help you and push you into the squat. 

  • Lower yourself into the squat without letting your heels or any part of your feet lose contact with the floor. Some variations allow your toes on your trail leg to lift and rotate up but keeping them down is better to challenge your adductors mobility.

  • Push off the foot you've squatted toward to push your hips up and back toward the middle.

  • Without pausing, lower yourself to the other side, keeping the same points of contact and ideas in mind.

 

Weighted Cossack Squat

Usually, to add weight to this exercise, you'd hold the weight out in front of you to use as a counterbalance to keep you upright, or you'd hold it close to your body.

 

The Cossack Squat: Reclaiming Your Baseline Balance - Fitness, fitness, mobility, strength training, range of motion, posture, stability, deadlifts, hip abduction, planes of motion, movement patterns, coordination, asymmetry, cossack squat, imbalances, adductors, core stability                                 

If you want to change it up, try holding a weight behind your head. 

                                   

The Cossack Squat: Reclaiming Your Baseline Balance - Fitness, fitness, mobility, strength training, range of motion, posture, stability, deadlifts, hip abduction, planes of motion, movement patterns, coordination, asymmetry, cossack squat, imbalances, adductors, core stability

 

Holding a weight behind your head tests your dexterity to stay upright.

 

You'll train the upper back's strength and mobility, and your trunk will work even harder to keep posture and stabilize you. Win, win, and win. 

 

Watch Your Limit 

The point of this exercise isn't to bend and fold yourself into a position that you can't yet reach. It's to find the edge of your mobility and stability in this motion and challenge it slowly, without losing posture and rigidity or compensating in some way.

 

If you consistently practice it, you'll reach this bottom position, but your adductors, knees, and ankles won't like you very much if you try to force it too soon. 

 

Ready For More Difficulty? 

There are a few different ways to load this exercise to make it more challenging. Holding a weight behind your head, which I already described, is one. Keeping weight overhead with arms extended is another.

 

But there's something else you can do to test your mobility and stability that doesn't necessarily require any weight.  

 

The Cossack Squat: Reclaiming Your Baseline Balance - Fitness, fitness, mobility, strength training, range of motion, posture, stability, deadlifts, hip abduction, planes of motion, movement patterns, coordination, asymmetry, cossack squat, imbalances, adductors, core stability

 

Choose the side you're squatting toward and place a small plate or similar flat object under that foot. Do your chosen number of reps and then switch sides.

 

Just by elevating your foot a few inches, you'll be fighting to maintain position while you lower into a deeper position.





Fitness

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October 8, 2020 at 08:44PM
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Can I Train With A Herniated Disc?

10/5/2020

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Can I Train With A Herniated Disc?

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Short answer? Yes.

 

Before you go rushing to the weight room, we need to take a step back.

 

 

Even though you can still exercise, play sports, and move in general with a herniated or bulging disc, there are a few precautions and steps you need to take to stop the owie from kicking your butt big time.

 

First, you need to understand your injury. Know thy enemy and all that.

 

What Is a Herniated Disc?

Your spine consists of small sections of bone called vertebrae. In-between each of these bones is an intervertebral disc.

 

low back pain, lower back injury, low back injury, lumbar pain, lumbar injury

 

These guys are there for three reasons.

 

  1. Shock absorption
  2. Protection
  3. Allow movement

 

Oh, and to piss you off when you try to lift something clearly too heavy for you.

 

A disc bulge or a disc herniation is when one of these fluid-filled discs is injured.

 

It can either protrude out or rupture, usually causing a restriction on nerves and generating intense pain.

 

 

On the other hand, most adults have disc bulges and suffer no effects at all. In general, it's completely natural.

 

Many people get MRIs and decide they are done for when it shows herniated or bulging discs.

 

But if you've ever herniated a disc, you know the kind of pain it can trigger.

 

When I herniated three discs, I could not move at all without intense pain. I mean, really could not move, and if you are in that kind of pain this minute, I sympathize with you. I do understand because it sucks big time.

 

There Is Light at the End of the Tunnel

It might not seem like it, but there is.

 

You can come back from herniated discs just as strong if you take the right steps.

 

It's all about building back the proper support around your spine and convincing your brain that it is safe and doesn't need to generate that pain action signal.

 

There are four essential steps to getting you back in action.

 

1. Isometric Exercises

  • Listen, if you've had a backsplosion (going to TM that btw), you need to take a step back and scrape it all down to your training foundations.
  • That means learning to tense your muscles again by re-learning to brace your trunk ane support your spine. You are re-educating your brain, confirming that you know what you're doing, you're addressing the issue, and most importantly, it's re-establishing your relationship with gravity.
  • Also, by building isometric strength, you are giving your spine the support it needs to move safely and eventually accept a load.
  • Proper support means less pressure on your discs.

 

 

2. Find Movements and Exercises You Can Do

  • It sounds simple.
  • But that's not all. It would be best if you found exercises you can do that replicate the ones you can't.
  • For example, the second exercise in the video is the split stance lunge. This exercise replicates the back squat's muscular activation, and it won't leave you in tears the next day trying to get out of bed.

 

3. Start to Reintroduce Hinge Movements

It would be best if you started re-introducing your trunk and spine back into hinge movements.

 

Slowly!

 

Just hinging at the hip could be too much for your spine to take straight off, so you need to find a way to hinge but with consideration for initial weight and movement range.

 

Next, you need to increase weight gradually.

 

 

4. Build control

It would be best if you build control of the spine and the muscles that support it.

 

If you can't control and support your spine, you'll never fully recover from a herniated disc.

 

Try the all-fours-spinal-wave in the video to start building the control you need to keep moving well.

 

After all, if you can't control the car you're driving, you can't expect it to stay on the road, can you?

 

It makes complete sense when it's laid out, but sometimes it's hard to see the wood for the trees.





Fitness

via Breaking Muscle https://ift.tt/1hdUh1E

October 5, 2020 at 03:35PM
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