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Single-leg training has many benefits you’ve probably heard about. Here are 5 you haven’t. …read more
By Matthew Ibrahim
“My lower back hurts.”
How often have you heard someone say that? I’d guess a lot of the time.
I would estimate that 95% of this could be fixed if people learned how to move their hips the right way.
The Hip Hinge is Everywhere
A simple task such as bending down to get your groceries involves the necessity to hinge at your hips. Although this is the desired pattern of movement we want, it isn’t quite always what we get.
If we were to take a poll and ask 10 people what should move first when they were to sit down in a chair, I can guarantee you that we would get 9 people saying that the knees should bend first. That’s wrong.
I think this is very important to note, not because of the misguided and miseducated notion on what should bend first, but more along the lines of people simply not having enough awareness of their body. That’s a monumental gap missing in today’s society. People just simply don’t know how their body should move.
We need to fix that.
I think a great start would be learning the hip hinge pattern first, since it’s one of the most visited movements in life, regardless of age, activity level and lifestyle.
When you’re about to sit down in a chair, think of your hips as the drivers and your knees as the passengers: your hips initiate the movement and act as the primary movers here, while your knees act as the secondary movers in the movement and come along for the ride.
Although sitting down in a chair is a start, we can also see the hip hinge in many other aspects in life. The hinge occurs in plenty of daily life activities (i.e., bending down to garden the flowers, bending down to pick …read more
These five vacuum exercises will narrow and tighten your waist by training the transverse abdominis. …read more
Most people train the big lifts once or twice per week. But the strongest people in the world use a much higher frequency. Why aren’t you? …read more
Smart lifters never stop training, even when injured. Here’s how to recover as quickly as possible and come back even stronger. …read more
Reach your physique goals faster. Smash personal records. Make other teams fear you. How? Tap into the flow state. Here’s how to do it. …read more
Sets of 50-100 reps, performed with a minimum number of pauses, can be used to break plateaus, build muscle, or burn fat. Here’s how. …read more
So you want to compete in bodybuilding, huh? Read this first so you don’t embarrass yourself. …read more
Never stop making gains. Never hit a plateau. Never stop getting stronger. Here’s how. …read more
If you want a big back, the Kroc row and the Pendlay row are the biggest, baddest rows on the planet. But which one will build more strength and grow more muscle? …read more
NYA KOMMENTARER
very nice!
posted in Nice & Clean. The best for your blog!from nice
also another nice feedback here, uh uh
posted in Nice & Clean. The best for your blog!from corrado