It’s Not Your Lower Back’s Fault

It’s Not Your Lower Back’s Fault

“My low back hurts…How do I strengthen it?”

But what if strengthening it isn’t really the issue?

What if working it more won’t fix your problem and may actually make it WORSE!?

Low back aches and pains are one of the most common issues out there. About 80% of the population will at some time or another complain that their low back is “bugging” them.

I mean who hasn’t gotten low back soreness from sitting too long? Or we’ve known someone who’s “thrown their back out” picking up something as freaking light as a pencil. Heck, it’s may have even happened to us!

So what do we often do when this happens?

We go “rest up” on the couch or sit and don’t workout. We avoid moves we think may have caused it.

But rest and avoidance don’t really solve the problem.

Because we then go back to repeating the same poor movement patterns and compensations that caused it in the first place.

So maybe in an attempt to prevent yourself from getting injured again you think, “I’ll add in more moves to strengthen my low back.”

I mean it got injured cause it was weak, right?

WRONG!

Yes, sometimes weakness does lead to injury.

But guess what!?!

It may not be low back weakness that is the issue…

Actually working your low back more may only PERPETUATE the pain!

Often with low back injuries, we are ticking time bombs.

We spend way too much time seated with our hips in flexion hunched over a computer, driving in a car, watching TV…

This hip tightness and constant flexion can make our glutes, and even abs, under active and cause our low back to want to work during exercises and movements when other muscles should actually be doing the work.

It leads to compensations, imbalances and overuse injuries.

It causes our low back to become OVERWORKED!

Which is why simply working your low back more, thinking it is weak, isn’t the answer.

Too often when we get injured, we only focus on the point of pain. When the actual problem causing the imbalances and compensations that lead to our pain, aren’t exactly where we hurt.

That’s why you may want to give your low back a break and start addressing these other issues:

If you can get your glutes and abs working as they should, they will help prevent your low back from becoming overworked. They will PROTECT YOUR LOW BACK.

But often to get your glutes and abs working correctly, you also need to address hip flexor tightness and any imbalances you have between, not only your right and left sides, but even between different muscle groups.

Ever feel one side more than the other during exercises?

Or maybe you only feel your hamstrings or low back during glute bridges?

Or maybe you only ever feel your quads (the fronts of your legs) during leg exercises and never your butt?

These are all imbalances that need to be corrected! And often we ignore these things when we workout and continue to push through because these things seem like they have nothing to do with our low back pain.

I know I know…It’s not where it hurts.

BUT THEY ARE THE REAL PROBLEM!

And they all relate back to getting the RIGHT MUSCLES working. AKA your abs and glutes!

Using isolation exercises that require little to no resistance for higher repetitions, you can activate your abs and glutes and improve your hip mobility to prevent further low back aches and pains.

 The key is to use these moves to rebuild that mind-body connection and get the right muscles working BEFORE you do other compound moves.

That way when you run and lift, your abs and glutes will work as they should!

If you’re ready to stop suffering from low back aches and pains and wasting time overworking your low back, it’s time to start my 28-Day Booty Burner Challenge.

These quick workouts will help unlock your hips, correct imbalances and get your abs and glutes working correctly!

Join my 28-Day Booty Burner Challenge to activate those glutes —> https://goo.gl/FWYnzd

The Dangers Of Yo-Yo Dieting

The Dangers Of Yo-Yo Dieting

Ever heard the phrase “Yo-Yo Dieting?” Every wonder what it was or why Yo-Yo Dieting is so bad for you?

Yo-yo dieting is that horrible cycle all too many of us have gone through when it comes to weight  loss and dieting…

We want to lose weight so we go on a diet.

We find a diet that promises the fastest weight loss possible…makes losing weight sound easy. And we start losing weight, sometimes rather quickly in fact.

We start was is commonly called a CRASH DIET!

But in the process of losing weight, we start “habits” that are really unmaintainable. We maybe even feel low energy and crappy.

We cut out the foods we love. We start eating these bland, boring tupperware meals of chicken and broccoli. We slash our calories and maybe even start two-a-day workouts.

And guess what happens?

It may happen a week into the diet, or a month…But we fall off.

We end up binge unable to maintain the unrealistic habits we were trying to instill.

And then we can’t seem to get back on track.

So we gain the weight back…and then some.

We lost weight only to gain it right back – we “yo-yo-ed.”

And the thing is…we aren’t alone. When we use a “short-term diet” aka a crash diet to lose weight, up to 65% of us will regain the weight we lost within 3 years.

Not only that, but only 5% of people manage to lose weight on a crash diet and actually KEEP IT OFF.

5%!?!

All that deprivation only to regain the weight and then some? No wonder we get frustrated with trying to eat well!

And the worst part is that the scale doesn’t even tell us the full story. It isn’t just “a few pounds” we are gaining back each time we repeat this yo-yo dieting cycle…this cycle many of us have fallen victim too more times than we’d like to admit…

Each time we cycle we are actually making it harder on ourselves to reach our goals!

Each time we crash diet to lose weight quickly, we may see that number on the scale drop . And it may seem super satisfying to see it go down quickly.

The problem is…well…that AMAZING weight loss?…It isn’t necessarily only fat being loss.

Actually, crash diets can cause you to lose a surprising amount of muscle mass. And when you lose muscle during your diet, your metabolism can also slow to conserve energy.

That can make you hit a plateau in your crash diet weight loss.

And when that happens?

Well that is often when we binge. And then we feel guilty. Which often leads to another binge. Until we end up back where we started, again putting ourself through another restrictive diet. 

binge cycleThe other problem is, when we gain the weight back…well we don’t gain back muscle near as easily as fat. That means every time we yo-yo, we are not only gaining more weight, but actually increasing our body fat percentage.

AKA our body composition is getting worse and we could be adding more belly fat!

That is the yo-yo dieting cycle has to end.

If you want to not only lose weight but actually lose fat AND KEEP IT OFF, you’ve got to start a sustainable diet.

A diet that allows you to truly make lifestyle changes!

But what the heck would a diet like that even look like?

Well…

A sustainable diet:

  • Would have to let you enjoy the foods you love
  • Help you feel good and ENERGIZED
  • Let you make slow, steady change and build true HABITS
  • Not make any foods off limits
  • Let you enjoy time with friends and family
  • KEEP THINGS SIMPLE!

You need to find something that allows you consistent progress, but WHILE you are developing something you can maintain long term.

You need something that teaches you balance. Because there will be events. Vacations. Stressful times.

Times you are more motivated and less motivated.

And eating according to your goals can be balanced around them all.

Plus it should make you FEEL AND LOOK GOOD. Note…The FEEL GOOD part. Too often we just accept that we will feel crappy and low energy on a diet when that really shouldn’t be the case!

If you’re ready to get started with a sustainable diet and leave the yo-yoing behind, and you need some help knowing how to eat according to your goals, it’s time you checked out my Macro Cycling program!

Say GOODBYE to the restriction of crash diets and the rebound of the yo-yo dieting cycle!

How To Modify Your Workouts And Exercises To Fit Your Fitness Level

How To Modify Your Workouts And Exercises To Fit Your Fitness Level

We are each starting our fitness journey at a different point with different experiences and different abilities.

That is why it is important to understand how to modify exercises and workouts to fit our needs.

Heck even if you’ve been exercising for awhile, you may find at points you need to modify due to injury or even simply because you took some time off.

For that reason, I want to go over some basic tips to help you modify moves and workouts as well as a few modified variations of moves you may often see in workouts!

First, 3 Tips To Help You Get Into A Workout Routine (or BACK into one) and then 5 Basic Moves And How To Modify Them For Your Needs!

(Please note, this is a very long article. If you want regressions to 5 Basic Moves click the linked text above. If you want the tips, just scroll down)

3 Tips To Help You Get Into A Workout Routine (or BACK into one!)

  1. Tip #1: Less is more – Start slowly
  2. Tip #2: Regress to Progress
  3. Tip #3: Build the FOUNDATION

Tip #1: Less is more – Start slowly

Often when we begin a new workout program, we are extra super motivated. But we are also extra super deconditioned. Whether we’ve been out with an injury or…well…life has just gotten in the way, we often come back to a workout routine nowhere near where we’d like to be.

And sometimes we even have expectations of where we should be that cause us to push way too hard, way too fast and do way too much!

When you go from zero to 60 right away (aka you get super excited and go all out even trying to be right back where you feel like you should be), you not only risk injury, but chances are, you’ll also make yourself so sore you can’t workout consistently, which may make it hard for you to get in a routine.

Because part of getting started is not only taking it slow to avoid injury but also about getting in a routine. It’s hard to get in a routine if the first days you just destroy yourself.

Start slowly.

I even like to tell my clients coming back…Start as if you sort of aim not to be sore for the first week. Trust me…Most of the time, you’ll still get super sore, BUT it will be more tolerable if you pushed as hard as humanly possible.

Less is more. It allows you to keep going. To rebuild SMARTLY AND to set yourself up with goals that keep you on track.

Getting so sore you can’t move, can make it hard to go back into the gym the next day if you set your goal to go to the gym 5 times a week for an hour each time.

Also, trying to go from never working out, or working out in a very limited way, to doing as much as you’d ideally want to do, isn’t an easy transition.

Sometimes you have to find a happy middle ground. Say ideally you’d want 5 times a week for 1 hour a day. What about starting with 3 times a week, 30 minutes a day?

Seems way easier mentally, right?

It’s a much smaller commitment to start, making it an EASIER commitment to start.

And when something is more easily attainable, we stick with it and even EXCEED our own expectations. And not only hitting our goal, but sometimes exceeding it, can create the momentum we need to not only continue, but fully commit.

Reaching a goal is motivational. On the flip side, giving ourselves too much and expecting too much to start (even if we “should” be able to do it, especially eventually) can actually prevent us from developing a routine.

You want to almost underwhelm vs. overwhelm yourself and your body to start so you can develop a routine.

LESS IS MORE.

Start slow so you can rebuild your body stronger. Start slow so you can get in a routine. Start slow so you can get consistent and see results.

Less is more means starting with a schedule you know without doubt you can commit to and workouts that are shorter and lower in intensity.

Less is more in a way summarizes even Tip #2 and #3 below!

Tip #2: Regress to Progress

As I mentioned already, often we come in with expectations of where we should be and what moves we should be able to do. But jumping right back into those variations can lead to injury. And often if we are just beginning, we can’t properly perform moves, which can lead to us becoming discouraged or even injured.

So we need to remember to REGRESS TO PROGRESS to start.

Just because you can lift a weight or do a move DOESN’T mean you are A. doing it well or B. using the right muscles.

That is why it is key to sometimes make a move even easier to start to make sure you are doing it correctly, ESPECIALLY as you fatigue. And rebuilding slowly with regressed moves and weights allows not only our muscles to adapt, but also our connective tissues, which can easily get overloaded if not prepped correctly AND take way longer to heal!

Plus, whether you’ve never worked out before OR have been out with injury, especially injury, your mind-body connection probably isn’t as good as you would hope it was.

What does that mean?

It means that because of poor movement patterns, either due to sitting too much and a lack of activity OR even injury, we don’t necessarily recruit the right muscles to perform the exercises.

Our bodies take the path of least resistance, meaning we recruit the muscles we have the best mind-body connection with instead of necessarily the big muscles that SHOULD be handling the load.

So when you jump into working out, even if you can perform an advanced variation, you are probably more focused on “getting the move done” than on the right muscles working. Because of this, you could end up with an injury (or maybe even another injury seemingly unrelated to your previous one).

So you need to regress so you can focus on the right muscles working and slowly progress to keep the right things working. If you just go through the motions of a harder move, you WON’T get more out of your workouts. You’ll only really perpetuate imbalances and compensations, which can lead to injury.

DON’T JUST GO THROUGH THE MOTIONS! Work out SMARTER.

Regress to progress so you can establish a mind-body connection that allows you to use the right muscles for the movements. You’ll end up stronger!

Tip #3: Build the FOUNDATION

This really overlaps with regressing to progress in that you need to restore a proper mind-body connection and regress moves as necessary to get the right muscles working.

However, it isn’t just about regressing moves, but also about using activation, foam rolling and stretching exercises to make sure that you are mobile and strong through that full range of motion.

Compound moves are KEY to building full-body, functional strength. We don’t really live every day life doing isolation exercises. That is why it is key to regress compound moves so we can do them correctly.

HOWEVER, the more muscles working and the more joints involved in a movement, the harder it can be to focus on the muscles working instead of just doing the movement.

That is why isolation moves used as ACTIVATION are key to make sure the right muscles are working and rebuild that mind-body connection and reverse the imbalances and compensations we’ve created.

Movements that isolate and activate the glutes, abs and back are super key as we spend way too much time in forward flexion. AND activating these three muscle groups means we’ll open up tight hips, prevent our low backs from overworking and mobilize our shoulder blades, which will go a long way in PREVENTING most injuries from occurring.

Rebuilding your foundation happens by including Foam Rolling, Stretching and Activation BEFORE your workout to get your body working correctly. Loosen tight muscles, mobilize your joints then get the right muscles working through the full range of motion.

Then add weight and intensity to get your blood pumping and build strength!

But if your foundation is weak, if you can’t engage the right muscles and if your mind-body connection isn’t there, you’re not going to reach your goals near as quickly OR you may even end up injured and worse off than where you started.

For more activation exercises, foam rolling moves and stretches to help you rebuild your foundation:

Want guidance and coaching to help you dial in your workouts AND your diet to match your needs and goals? Schedule a call with Redefining Strength to chat about program options!

–> Schedule A Call

 

5 Basic Moves And How To Modify Them For Your Needs

Almost every move out there can be modified to fit your fitness level. Yes…Sometimes a move isn’t “right” for you, but often simple swaps can make you able to still get benefit from a movement!

Below I want to review 5 moves you see in many programs and how you can modify, and even progress them, to fit your needs.

  1. Burpees
  2. Squats
  3. Push Up
  4. Pull Up
  5. Deadlift

Burpee:

The Burpee – It’s a horribly wonderful move that truly is a full-body workout in one movement. It is also a ridiculous hard movement. It requires not only strength, but a good aerobic base AND even more mobility than we realize to get down and up.

Often to modify the burpee, we simply take out the push up.

Maybe we go one step further even and step back instead of jumping back into the high plank position.

But guess what?

Sometimes that isn’t enough.

What if you CAN’T get all the way down to the ground?

How about putting a box or bench in front of you and instead of putting your hands on the ground to move into plank, you put your hands on the bench?

Sounds more doable, right?

There is always a way to regress a movement to fit your needs. And as you get stronger and more mobile, you can slowly lower the incline until you can get your hands all the way down to the ground.

Then you can start by stepping back as you move to the ground. And then start jumping back instead of stepping back into plank on the ground.

Then maybe you add in a push up from your knees.

And then finally? Well finally maybe you’re doing the full burpee and even some fun variations!

basic-burpee

Another “modification” I use for the burpee at points is the Spiderman Mountain Climber OR even Half Burpee. I like both of these moves because they take out the down-up part of the burpee while still being more cardio. And both can work on the mobility that is really required to get down and up from the plank position in the burpee.

For the Spiderman Mountain Climber, you can advance and regress as necessary too. The variation I usually use to modify the burpee is the Modified Spiderman Mountain Climber.

To do the Spiderman Mountain Climber, start in the high plank position from your hands and feet.

Keeping your core engaged, step one foot up and outside your hand into a nice low spiderman or runner’s lunge. Try not to let your butt go way up in the air as you step your foot outside. You also want to work to get your foot up as close outside your hands as possible. This will help improve your mobility. If you can’t step all the way up, you can readjust to get it as close as possible.

Beginners will then quickly step back into plank and then step the other foot forward into a lunge on the other side. They will move as quickly as possible, stepping their foot all the way outside their hand or as close as possible, working to get a little further each time.

More advanced exercisers will jump from lunge to lunge. The faster you jump between lunges and the less you pause on each side, the harder the move will be. Still try to keep your butt down and make sure to land in a lunge with your foot outside your hand each time.

Another great way to modify the burpee and improve mobility while getting your blood pumping is the Half Burpee. With this move, you can keep in the push up to add in the upper body work of a burpee or take it out to modify. This is a great way to remove the down-up from the burpee too without losing the benefit of the move!

To do the Half Burpee, set up in the high plank position with your hands under your shoulders and your feet about shoulder-width apart. Then jump both feet up and outside your hands so your in a squat position or frog position. Try to really jump all the way outside your hands.

Quickly jump back into plank. Try not to let your butt go way up in the air as you jump from the squat back to plank and from the plank into a squat. Back in the plank position perform a push up. Beginners may go down to their knees to maintain proper form during the push up OR simply take the push up out altogether.

Then after returning to plank, move quickly, jumping into the squat position and back out into plank before doing another push up. Do not let your hips sag or your butt go up in the air in the plank/push up position.

Beginners can also even step one foot at a time up to move into the squat position instead of jumping.

Squat:

The Squat is a great compound lower body exercise to work your quads, hamstrings and glutes. However, often people avoid the squat because they are worried about injuring their knees.

And yes…with certain injuries, squats aren’t a move you should be doing. The problem is, far too many people avoid squats thinking they’ll cause injury when they won’t.

A huge reason most people think they’ll hurt their knees with squats is because they don’t know how to squat properly. It may be due to the fact they’ve never learned proper form or it may be because they have mobility issues and their glutes are underactive.

That is why it is important to know how to regress squats so you can do them properly and build up without injury.

One of the best ways to learn how to do the basic bodyweight squat is using a bench. The Bench Squat is a great way to teach you how to load things properly while giving you the security to perform the movement because you have something you are sitting down to. And let’s face it…This is why a squat is important. You should be able to sit down to a chair or a toilet no matter your age!

Even if you lack a bit of core stability or mobility, the Bench Squat gives you a way to squat without risking injury as you work to improve your mobility and activate the right muscles.

To do the Bench Squat, you will want to pick a box or bench that let’s you squat to at least parallel to the ground. Beginners can start with a higher box and work down to even below parallel. Sometimes even when coming back from knee injury, a limited range of motion squat is a great option.

Stand in front of the box or bench and face away. It can also be helpful if you are nervous to start seated on the box to set up and then stand up. Set up with your feet about hip-width to shoulder-width apart. Then squat down to the box as if sitting back. You want to make sure you are sitting your butt back and down to the box. Do not lean forward too much and hinge at the hips.

Also, do not come forward onto the balls of your feet. Sit back with our chest up. Sit all the way down on the bench or box then drive back up to standing tall. Try not to rock forward or lean forward as you come up, but think about driving through your entire foot on the ground. Make sure your heels stay down at all times.

Come back up to standing and then repeat. Do not plop onto the bench. Control your decent and then quickly stand back up.

The lower the box or bench, the harder the move and the bigger the range of motion you are strengthening through!

After you feel comfortable squatting to a box about parallel to the ground, you can begin to not actually relax and fully sit on the box, but instead just hover right above it. And from there you can move into a full bodyweight squat.

If you’re still struggling to feel comfortable with the full bodyweight squat and lack the core stability and even mobility to squat without the bench, you can also try a Counterbalanced Squat.

You can do a Counterbalanced Squat in a number of ways. You can hold onto a pole or suspension trainer to help you remain stabile and work through a full range of motion. However, you do want to make sure you don’t turn it into an upper body exercise.

Holding the trainer or pole can help if you lack a bit of core stability. And the assistance can often help you get a bit lower in that squat as you work on your strength and mobility.

Or you can even press a weight out at shoulder height. Holding a weight out with your arms extended can help you brace your core and perform a fuller range of motion.

To do the weight Counterbalanced Squat, hold a dumbbell or sandbag in both hands at chest height. Stand with your feet about hip-width to shoulder-width apart. Then, as you sit your butt back and squat down, press the weight out at chest height. You want a weight that is light enough you can press out without shrugging your shoulders, but enough to help you sit down and back while keeping your chest up.

Sink as low as you can with good form, making sure to sit into your heels instead of rocking forward onto the balls of your feet. Then drive back up to standing and, as you do, you can bring the weight back into your chest. You can also hold the weight out the entire time, but often the press out and then pull back in can help you to sink down and stand back up with proper form.

Another way to modify the squat, and even tell if a lack of ankle mobility may be contributing to your inability to get lower or even load your glutes correctly, is to try a Heels Up Squat.

To do the Heels Up Squat, you can use plate weights or a small block, but you want something an inch or two high to place your heels up on as the balls of your feet and toes rest on the ground. With your heels up on the weights and your feet about hip-width to shoulder-width apart, squat down. Sit back into your heels on the plates, but do not let your toes come up. Keep your chest up as you sit down.

Then drive back up through your heels to come to standing. Do not rock forward as you stand back up. Squeeze your glutes at the top and repeat the squat. If you find you can get lower with ease, you may want to start working on your ankle mobility a bit more.

Band Mini Squats can be another great way to help activate the glutes as you squat. The band right below or above your knees can help get your glute medius and minimus especially engaged and working as you squat. If you’ve suffered from knee valgus or your knees caving in as you squat, this is a great way to train a proper position.

To do a Mini Band Squat, place a band just above or below your knees and stand with your feet between hip-width and shoulder-width apart. Your feet should be parallel. Putting the band below your knees makes the move harder while putting the band above your kenes can make it easier to activate your glutes.

Then sit down until your thighs are parallel to the ground. You can go lower if you are able to maintain proper form. Do not let your knees collapse in as you squat down and keep your chest up. You want to make sure you are pressing out against the band.

Then drive back up to standing, pushing through your heels. Do not rock forward onto the balls of your feet. Your knees shouldn’t cave in as you stand back up. This move is a great way to make sure your glutes are engaged while doing a squat. Beginners may want to perform the squat with band down to a chair or bench to help remind them to sit back as they squat.

To progress the basic squat, you can add weight or even change up the tempo. Changing up the tempo can mean slowing down the movement or even making it into a quick squat jump. Or you can even make it a unilateral move and do a Single Leg Squat variation!

If you can’t do a jump squat, remember you can always just do a quicker bodyweight squat without leaving the ground or you can even do a squat to calf raise. The Squat to Calf Raise is a great way to mimic coming off the ground and work to improve your triple extension (aka extension of your hips, knees and ankles) without actually leaving the ground. It will also get your blood pumping.

For even more squat variations, check out the post and video below!

Push Up:

Push ups are a great upper body and core exercise. But a full push up is by no means an easy move to do…and do PROPERLY.

It not only requires, chest, shoulder and tricep strength but also a great deal of core strength. It’s basically a moving plank!

Too often when people try to advance the push up, they end up doing the worm, or their head is forward as if they’re smelling the ground or their elbows flare way up by their head. All of these things can results in not only injury, but you not really getting the full benefit out of the movement that you should.

And who wants to waste time doing a move that doesn’t really benefit them!?

The problem is, when we go to modify the push up, we all too often just turn to Knee Push Ups. And while those can be a great way to modify the full push up, they don’t force you to engage your core the same way you would during a full push up AND they can often still be too advanced and cause you to compensate.

That is why the Incline Push Up is such a great way to modify. It allows you to choose an incline that allows you to perform the movement with perfect form AND forces you to engage your core in the same way you’ll have to with a full push up. As you get stronger, you will simply lower the incline until you reach the ground.

beginner-push-up

To do an Incline Push Up, find an incline that allows you to perform push ups with perfect form. It may have to be higher to start, but you can use anything really – a wall, bench, shelf or bar at an appropriate height that allows you to drop your chest all the way down while maintaining perfect form. A smith machine even at a gym can be a great adjustable incline.

With your hands on the incline, place your feet together and your hands right outside your chest. You may want to set up at the bottom of the push up so that you know your chest will hit the incline right at nipple height between your hands. By setting up at the bottom of the push up, you can ensure that your upper body will be in perfect alignment with your arms forming an arrow shape (->) with your body. You do not need to keep your arms right in by your sides; however, you don’t want your elbows to flare up above your shoulders or you will put more strain on your shoulders.

Drive back through your heels to engage your quads as you brace your core and keep your body in a nice straight line. If you press forward onto your toes, you are going to make your push ups weaker because your legs won’t be engaged to help keep your body in a nice straight line. Then press up from the bar, extending your arms out all the way and locking out at the top. Do not round your back at the top.

As you press up, make sure your body moves as one unit. Your head should be in line with your spine and your hips shouldn’t sag toward the ground or your butt shouldn’t go up in the air. Make sure your shoulders don’t shrug as you push up. You also don’t want your back to round at the top of the push up. Do not tuck your chin in toward your chest or let your head jut forward. Feel your back working and even the muscles around the sides of your ribs supporting your shoulders.

Then with your body moving as one unit, lower your chest back down to the bar. As you perform the movement, if your feet are together, you may even feel your inner thighs working to help keep everything tight and in a nice straight line. Even at the bottom of the push up, do not relax. Keep everything engaged so you can press right back up.

As the incline becomes easier, make it lower and lower. If your form starts to falter, do fewer reps from the lower incline or regress the incline and bring it back up.

As you work to lower the incline for your push ups, you can also add in some Eccentric Only Push Ups to help you learn to take on your own bodyweight while keeping your core engaged correctly through the push up movement.

These can be a great way to use a lower incline or even no incline at all even if you can’t still complete a full push up.

eccentric-focused-push-up

To do Eccentric Only Push Ups, set up in a high plank position with your hands outside your chest and your feet together. Your body should be in a nice straight line from your head to your heels. Brace your core, flex your quads and drive back through your heels. Feel your back even engage to support your shoulders. Then, keeping your body in a nice straight line, slowly begin to lower your body down to the ground. Lower as slowly as possible until you hit the ground. Make sure your chest hits first and that you don’t sag your hips or let your head go forward.

At the bottom release then sit back and simply reset in the high plank position. With the Eccentric Only, you are simply lowering down as slowly as possible and using that slow lower to learn how to maintain proper form and keep everything engaged even while you’re not yet able to do a full push up.

Another way to regress the push up, is by doing a Band Push Up. Like with the Incline Push Up, your body still has to engage and work as one unit, but you are reducing the amount of weight you have to move.

To do the Band Push Up, hook a band around two anchor points close to the ground. The lighter the band and the closer to the ground you put it, the less assistance you’ll get and the more it will only help at the bottom. The band should have tension on it when anchored and be parallel to the ground. Set up in a push up from the ground with the band about at the bottom of your ribs and your hands under your shoulders and body in a nice straight line to your feet. Your feet should be together.

Then lower down, dropping your chest to the ground or just an inch off and press back up. As you lower, the band will help you control the decent and maintain a nice straight line from your head to your heels since your arms won’t need to handle your full bodyweight yet.

Then once you lower down, press back up. Make sure to focus on engaging your core and performing the push up with proper form.

The cool part about the band is it can also be used later to add resistance to the push up. To do an Advanced Band Push Up, you’ll simply place the band under your hands but instead of in front of you, you’ll want to put it across your back. That way it will resist your push back up!

For even more tips to help you improve those push ups and strengthen your weak links, check out these 5 Tips To Improve Your Push Ups.

And if you’re ready to advance your push ups, try some of these fun 31 Push Up Variations! And beginners, some of these you can even use off an incline to keep things fun and interesting as you target different muscles!

 

Want guidance and coaching to help you dial in your workouts AND your diet to match your needs and goals? Schedule a call with Redefining Strength to chat about program options!

–> Schedule A Call

Pull Up:

Have you had Pull Ups as one of your goals for awhile? Feel like you’ll just never get there no matter how much you work on them? Feel like all you ever do is get better at the assisted variations?

Well maybe it’s because you’re not doing the right assisted variations or using them in the right way!

If you just keep trying to do MORE REPS with assistance, instead of fewer reps with constantly harder and harder variations, you’ll simply become better at the assisted variation.

Plus, depending on the type of assistance you use, it may be causing you to not learn how to properly engage at different points in the pull ups.

While Band Pull Ups are a popular way to modify the pull up, they are not my favorite.

Why?

Because bands give the most assistance at the bottom and often start us at a point where we never have to learn how to engage our back properly at the bottom.

Ever feel like if you just started a little above a dead hang you could easily do a full pull up?

That’s because you haven’t been working to learn that initial engagement from a dead hang. You aren’t able to engage your back and go from just hanging to retracting and depressing your shoulder blades. And if you’ve been using bands, it’s because the band puts you in a position where you’re above that initial engagement point.

So because the band hinders you from learning that initial engagement, they aren’t my favorite way to modify. (Of course now knowing that, you can use them if that isn’t your problem OR even keep using them but also include Mini Pull Ups. Just always know why you are using certain moves and their upsides and downsides!)

Instead of doing Band Pull Ups, I like to use Foot-Assisted variations or even Jumping Pull Ups…and with both you can even use a controlled Eccentric to build even more strength!

The Foot-Assisted Pull Ups are a great way to control exactly how much assistance you give yourself and even adjust as you fatigue. Plus, you can provide consistent tension throughout the entire move.

foot-assisted-pull-up

To do Foot-Assisted Pull Ups, hang from the bar or trainer and place your feet flat on the ground in front of you or your toes right behind you. Either foot position works, just make sure you set up so you can pull straight up without arching your back or letting your hips come up and forward. You don’t want a huge arch in your body or to turn this into a row. You want a vertical pull.

As you hang at the bottom, you’ll want to move from a dead hang with your shoulder up by your ears to retracting your shoulder blades down and back as you press your chest up toward the bar. Leading with your chest, pull yourself up.

Use your feet only as much as needed to pull up. Your goal is to use your back and arms as much as possible. Pull your chin all the way above your hands and try to get your chest to your hands.

Then lower back down, fully extending your arms at the bottom, returning to the full dead hang. Feel your back working as you lead with your chest to pull up and lower down. You don’t want your upper traps or arms to be the only thing you feel.

To make the move harder, use your feet less or even just one one foot. You can also change up the tempo of this movement and do a very controlled slow lower down. By slowing down the eccentric portion aka the lower down, you will spend more time under tension, which can help you build more strength more quickly.

If you’re ready or maybe don’t have a bar at a height you can use your toes, you can also modify the pull up by doing a Jumping Pull Up with slow eccentric.

jumping-pull-ups

To do the Jumping Pull Up, set up under a bar that is high enough off the ground that you can hang from it, but low enough that you can use your legs to help get your chin up over the bar.

Hang from the bar with your feet flat on the ground. You can do this with either a chin up or pull up grip. Then jump, and at the same time, pull yourself up with your arms to get your chin up over the bar. Only use your legs as much as is needed to get your chin over the bar. Think about leading with your chest as you jump up.

At the top pause if possible and then slowly lower yourself back down, fully extending your arms at the bottom before you jump up again.

Try not to pause at the bottom or let go of the bar but quickly repeat the move, slowing down the lower down to take on your own bodyweight as long as possible. By slowing down the lower down, you’ll spend more time under tension AND take on your own bodyweight even though you’re not yet able to do a full pull up.

With both of these modified variations, it is best to do fewer reps with a more advanced variation. If you’re looking for that first full pull up, you don’t need to be doing 10 reps, but instead 1-3 reps with the hardest variation you can do!

Ok so say these are all well and good but you want to modify the pull up because you don’t have a bar to do them from and they are included in your program?

Two great exercises I will sometimes sub to modify the Pull Up are the Band Lat Pull Down and the Inverted Row.

Both of these can help you build back strength and work on your scapular mobility to improve your pull ups as well as your posture.

lat-pull-downs

To do the Band Lat Pull Down, anchor the band up high and, holding a handle in each hand. Walk back away from the anchor point and set up in a lunge stance.

Lunge back while facing the anchor point and lean your chest over your front knee. Your back leg can be straight, but you want to make sure to lean forward so that you work your lats and are performing a movement that mimics a vertical pull.

Reach your hands up overhead. There should be tension in the band with your arms extended. If there isn’t, move back. Then pull the band down toward your shoulders, driving your elbows down and back. The movement should mimic you pulling yourself up to a bar for a pull up.

As you pull down, pinch your shoulder blades down and together. Focus on working your back muscles. You want to feel the sides of your back pulling the band down. Don’t just go through the motions. You want to consciously activate the big muscles of your back.

The slowly extend your arms back out and repeat. Each time you pull down, drive your elbows down and back.

Keep your core engaged the entire time and your back flat. Do not start to straighten up and turn this into a row instead of a pulldown.

You may also feel this move in your legs because you are holding a low lunge. You can do pulldowns with a few different grips. You can have your palms facing the ground (pull up grip), palms facing you (chin up grip) or palms facing each other (neutral grip).

Change the tempo or move back further from the anchor point to make the move more challenging. Just like with the pull ups, you can slow down the eccentric portion.

And while the Inverted Row is a horizontal pull, unlike the Band Lat Pull Down that mimics the vertical pull, it is a great move to supplement your pull up work and even modify the pull up to start.

inverted-row

To do the Basic Inverted Row, you can either use a Suspension Trainer or a Bar. Using a Suspension Trainer, hold a handle in each hand with your palms facing in. Walk your feet forward so that your body is at an incline. The closer to parallel to the ground you get, the harder the move will be.

Hang from the straps with your body in a nice straight line and your chest pressed out. Engage your core and glutes and keep your legs straight. You want a nice straight line from your head to your heels. Do not let your low back arch or your hips sag toward the ground.

Then drive your elbows down and back to row your chest up to the handles. Keep your body in a nice straight line as you row up and do not bounce off the bottom. Keep your wrists straight as you row up. Also, do not shrug your shoulders.

Then lower back down. Do not lose tension at the bottom. Make sure to keep the chest pressed out and your body in a nice straight line. Do not swing to row back up.

Make sure to feel your back and arms working to row and not just your arms. Focus on feeling your back pull.

As you build up your pull ups, you can even have some fun playing around with these 28 Pull Up Variations.

And for 3 keys to help you improve your pull ups, check out this Pull Up post as well!

Deadlift:

The Deadlift is a must-do compound exercise that trains the hip hinge movement and works your entire posterior chain aka your backside. But it is far from an easy move to do, especially with a barbell which is the most common variation we see done and taught.

The hip hinge is a fundamental movement but one that isn’t easy for many of us to do because we want to either turn it into a squat OR simply lean forward. It’s hard because all too many of us sit for way too many hours during the day and our hips become tight so our glutes don’t want to fire correctly and we instead want to squat or load our low backs instead of hinging properly at the hips.

That is why it is important to learn the hip hinge movement before moving on to the barbell deadlifts. No back injuries please!

A great way to modify and learn the hip hinge movement is with the Band Hinge or even the Kettlebell Deadlift.

The Band Hip Hinge teaches you to load your glutes and hinge at the hips properly without simply leaning over. It is also a great move to activate those glutes (and one even advanced exercisers should include).

It is such a key modification because it activates the glutes and trains you to “push the ground away” to power the hip extension. Too often when people go to deadlift, they think about simply picking the weight up, which can cause them to lose tension and end up lifting with their backs. Training to “push the ground away” helps you focus on using your legs to lift the weight up.

To do the Band Hip Hinge, anchor a band behind you and step into the band so it is below your hips. Walk away from the anchor point so that there is tension in the band and stand with your feet about hip-width to shoulder-width apart. The more the band tries to pull you back (aka the further out you walk), the harder the move will be.

Then hinge over, allowing the band to pull your butt back toward the anchor point. Make sure your knees are soft so that you can sit your butt back and load your glutes. You will need to have a slight bend to your knees to keep you from flying back with the band.

Then explosively drive your hips forward to come back up to standing tall. Think about driving through the ground to extend your hips as you squeeze your glutes at the top. You may lean slightly forward against the band, but you want to stand up tall and drive your hips forward against the band without arching your low back.

Stand up tall and squeeze your glutes then quickly hinge back over before repeating. This should be a quicker move and you should really focus on loading your glutes as you hinge over and then on quickly driving your hips into extension as you stand back up, squeezing your glutes hard at the top.

Also, make sure you don’t lock out your legs OR squat to much as you hinge over. Make sure there is tension in the band even as you hinge over. Think about this move almost as if you are going to leap forward.

Another great way to learn the deadlift is using a kettlebell. During the barbell deadlift, it is key you keep the bar right up against your body. If the bar drifts away, people will often load their low backs to lift.

BUT it can be awkward to basically “scrap the bar up your shins” as you deadlift. Which causes people to try to keep the bar away from their body, which puts them at risk for injury.

So to avoid the bar drifting away and to teach you to sit back and keep the weight by your body, a kettlebell can be a great way to modify!

To do the Kettlebell Deadlift, place a kettlebell in between your feet as you stand with your feet about hip-width to shoulder-width apart. Your feet should be parallel and the kettlebell should be back by your heels.

Sit your butt back and hinge at the hips so you can reach and grab the kettlebell handle with your spine and arms straight. Your knees will be soft so you can load your glutes. As you hold the ketllebell, create tension through your arms and engage your lats to keep your back flat.

Then drive the ground away as you lift the weight up. Stand up nice and tall and squeeze your glutes at the top. Then sit your butt back as you hinge at the hips to drop the weight back toward your heels.

Make sure you don’t lean forward to lower the weight out in front of you as you put it back down. Really make sure to lower the kettlebell back down toward your heels, forcing yourself to sit back and hinge at the hips with your knees soft. You don’t want to just lean over or let your back round. Load your glutes and sit your butt back, bending your knees to allow yourself to load your glutes. Do not lock out your legs.

Another must do variation of the deadlift is the Single Leg Deadlift. But what if your balance sucks and you still want the benefits of the unilateral move? Because the unilateral move, or one sided movement is key to help build core strength as you correct imbalances between both sides. During a unilateral move, your strong side can’t take over!

To modify the Single Leg Deadlift, you can use a slider or even do a Staggered 80/20 Deadlift. Both of these variations will give you the benefits of a unilateral move and allow you to start working toward that full single leg move while helping reduce how much balance is needed. These moves may be “modifications” but they are great moves for even the advanced lifter especially if they add weight!

The best variation to start with is the Staggered 80/20 Deadlift.

To do the Staggered 80/20 Deadlift, you can hold a ketllebell in both hands down in front or a sandbag up at your chest (any weight can actually work in either loading position). Stand with your feet about hip-width apart then step one foot back toward the instep of the other foot or even back toward the heel. Do not put that foot any further back then your heel. Lift up onto the toe of that back foot so it is just lightly on the ground for balance and that back knee is bent.

Then push your butt back and hinge over softening your front knee as you sit back and load your glutes. Keep your back flat as you hinge over and feel your hamstrings stretch and glutes load. Then drive back up to standing and squeeze your glutes at the top. 80-90% of your weight will be on that front leg with the back leg really there for balance. You will feel that standing glute and hamstring load. Do not rotate or shift your weight back toward the staggered leg as you hinge and drive back up.

The Slider Single Leg Deadlift, is another variation that focuses on each leg individually without the balance requirements of the full single leg variation. This one can be tougher for people as often it becomes a lunge instead of a deadlift. You want to remember your weight is all on the standing leg and you are just allowing the foot on the slider to slide back for balance.

To do the Slider Single Leg Deadlift, you can hold a weight at your chest or down by your sides OR even unilaterally loaded aka in one hand. The unilateral load can challenge your core even more BUT don’t add this if you can’t perform the basic move correctly…This is a way to advance this move. Place the ball of one foot on a slider and stand nice and tall.

Then, hinging at the hips, push your butt back with your knees soft. As you hinge, your foot will slide back on the slider. Do not think about sliding back though. Your focus is not on how far you can slide back. You want to keep your weight centered on that front leg and only lightly on the slider.

You want to feel a stretch down the hamstring of your standing leg as you sit back and load your glute. Keep your back flat as you hinge over.

Then driving through the standing foot, come back up to standing, sliding your back foot back in as you stand up. Squeeze your glute at the top. Remember you are focused on that standing leg and using the foot on the slider only to stay balanced.

For even more tips on improving your deadlift, click here –> Proper Deadlift Form and Variations.

Want guidance and coaching to help you dial in your workouts AND your diet to match your needs and goals? Schedule a call with Redefining Strength to chat about program options!

–> Schedule A Call

Improve Your Posture And Pull Ups With 5 Moves

Improve Your Posture And Pull Ups With 5 Moves

I want to ask you a couple of questions…And tell me if these sound familiar….

  • Have you ever had neck, shoulder or upper back pain?
  • Do you feel like your upper back and neck are constantly tight?
  • Do you have poor posture and tend to round forward?
  • Have you been struggling to improve your pull ups no matter how much you work at them?
  • Heck have you ever tried to work on pull ups only to end up with neck or shoulder pain?!

Maybe all of the above even!?!

Do you feel like no amount of stretching helps permanently and that you just have to keep doing more and more for momentary relief?

Unfortunately that is because stretching alone isn’t the answer.

Stretching alone doesn’t solve the problem for a two main reasons…

  1. We aren’t stretching the RIGHT muscles.
  2. We don’t get the right muscles activated so we keep overusing the wrong muscles.

Often our back “feels” tight so we stretch it.

But that tight feeling often isn’t from muscles being shortened.

When muscles are shortened, stretching can really help. But in this case, stretching a muscle that is overly lengthened may feel good for a moment but doesn’t SOLVE the problem. Our back may “feel” tight and even gets trigger points because our chest is overly tight and causing our back muscles to be over-stretched.

Therefore stretching our back alone doesn’t really SOLVE the problem.

If we’ve suffered upper body pain or injury and sit hunched over a computer or walk texting on our phones, often the big muscles of our back aren’t working correctly and carrying the load they should be carrying. It can also cause our chest and lats to become tight and our shoulder blades to become less mobile.

This leads small muscles, like our rotator cuff muscles, to become overworked, which can injured to injury. It can cause neck pain and shoulder pain.

But only stretching won’t get the right muscles working.

Stretching the right muscles, aka the muscles that are SHORTENED and TIGHT, can help open everything up, but then we NEED to activate the right muscles.

If you don’t then ACTIVATE, you’ll keep overusing muscles that weren’t meant to be the prime movers!

So if you’re ready to get the right muscles working to improve your posture AND even your pull ups, you’ll want to start including these 5 moves daily even!

Using these 5 moves, you can relax tight muscles and activate the big muscles of your back! They combine foam rolling, stretching and activation to help you restore mobility and build that mind-body connection.

Chest Foam Rolling: 

Neck, shoulder, upper back pain? Always feel like you have “knots” in your back, but the relief from massage or stretching is only temporary?

Well guess what? Part of the problem is that your chest muscles are tight and actually perpetuating you rounding forward and even the rounding forward of your shoulders.

So to help relieve those aches and pains and help yourself get the muscles of your back working correctly, you need to start rolling out your chest.

To roll out your chest, you can either use a bigger foam ball against the ground or you can use a smaller, harder ball in a doorway.

chest-ball-roll-out

To roll out your chest using a foam ball against the ground, place the ball on the ground and lie face down on top of it with the ball starting right at the side and top of your chest beside your shoulder joint and below your collarbone.

Holding the ball there, begin to sweep your arm overhead and then back down toward your legs. You can sweep your arm almost as if making snow angels. Or you can move your arm overhead and then tuck it under to reach down toward your feet and rotate your shoulder a bit. You can make full and partial sweeps to dig into a spot.

Then move the ball a little more toward your sternum and repeat. You can work all along underneath your collarbone, holding on any tight spots and moving your arm. You want to make sure to work all around the front of your shoulder joint and toward your sternum.

To roll out your chest in a doorway, it is best to use a smaller, harder ball instead of the foam ball.

chest-foam-rolling

Stand facing the wall besides the doorway and place the ball between your chest and the wall. You want to be right on the edge of the wall so that you can extend your arm forward through the doorway. Place the ball in your chest right by your shoulder joint. Hold on any tight spots as you work down toward your armpit then up under your collarbone. You will want to lift your arm out in front as you roll as well as out to the side like you did on the ground.

Lat Foam Rolling:

Because we sit way too much hunched forward over our computers, phones or even our bikes, our lats can become tight. It is important that you get everything loosened up if you want to improve your posture and your pull ups.

lat-trigger-point-release

To roll out your lats, you can use a ball or a roller. Start by lying on your side with a roller under one armpit along the side of your back. Extend the arm on the side with the roller up above the roller. Then rock forward and backward on the roller, rotating your chest toward the ground and then up toward the ceiling as you roll on the roller so it hits toward your ribs and then toward your back.

Hold on any tight spots you find then move it lower down the side of your back. Hold on any tight spots as you go and make sure to rock forward and backward as you make your way down your side.

As you work down your side, you may want to rotate slightly more toward your back. Work all the way from your armpit to about the end of your rib cage.

Be careful as you work your way down your lat. Do not start to hyperextend your low back or tense to arch over the roller.

Kneeling Thoracic Extension and Lat Stretch:

When we sit all day in forward flexion, hunched over, our spine is in flexion. This stretch works on the exact opposite – extension. It will help you reverse the hunch (improve your spinal extension) as you stretch out your lats and even your triceps.

kneeling-lat-and-thoracic-stretch

To do the Kneeling Thoracic Extension and Lat Stretch, place a box, bench or table on the ground in front of you. Kneel on the ground facing the bench and place your elbows up on it about shoulder-width apart. Make sure that you are kneeling far enough away from the bench that you can lean forward and drop your head between your elbows as you press your chest toward the ground.

From this kneeling position, relax your chest and head over, sitting your butt back. Press your chest toward the ground and feel your spine extend. You should feel a nice stretch down your triceps and lats as well as through your thoracic spine. Try to extend your back as much as possible as you press your chest toward the ground, but don’t simply arch your lower back. Keep your abs braced so that you force your mid and upper back to extend.

Breathe to stretch deeper and then relax back out and repeat, trying to get further with each rep.

If you really feel your elbows constantly sliding out on the bench, you can hold a dowel or even a towel between your hands to help keep everything in line. You can also increase the stretch by bringing your hands back toward your head as you maintain extension.

Pull Downs:

Once you’ve foam rolled and stretched to loosen tight muscles, you have to get the right muscles activated and working. Otherwise you’ll just end up constantly stretching everything only to tighten back up because you keep overusing muscles that aren’t meant to carry the load.

The Pull Downs are a great activation exercise to work your lats and lower traps and help mobilize your shoulder blades.

To do Pull Downs, hold a band, or even a towel, in both hands with your hands about hip-width apart. Slightly pull out on the band so that there is tension on the band or towel. Press your chest out and reach the band overhead, keeping the band/towel tight between your hands. You may need to adjust your hands in closer if the band is light. On a towel as long as you pull out with your hands a little wider than shoulder-width you should be fine since it won’t stretch like the band. You want to pull out on it so your hands are just slightly wider than shoulder-width apart.

Then pull the band down toward your chest, as if pulling your chest up to the bar during a Pull Up. Lead with your chest as you draw your shoulder blades down and back and feel your back working to pull the band down. As you pull the band down, keep it tight between your hands.

Hold at this bottom position. Really press your chest out and engage your upper back as you hold. You want to think that you were leading with your chest up toward the bar. Do not arch your low back even though you want to press your chest out. Make sure you also don’t simply feel the outsides of your shoulders working, but instead feel your back. If you only feel your shoulders, you may be using too heavy a band or you may be too focused on pulling out on the band instead of down.

Scapular Push Ups:

The Scapular Push Up is a must-do move.

If you have a desk job, want to improve your posture, improve your pull ups…heck improve your deadlift or press or just about anything, this is a must-do move!

It works on mobilizing your shoulder blades to create shoulder stability. It will activate your back and the muscles around your rib cage. It can even work your core.

You can do this move from the quadruped position or modified push up position to start. Beginners may even need to do it off the wall if they aren’t able to isolate and move their shoulder blades.

As you can actively recruit the proper muscles, you can do the scapular push up from the high plank or forearm plank position.

No matter your level, you can also do Single Arm Scapular Push Ups off the wall, which is my current favorite because it also allows you to address imbalances between your right and left sides.

To do Single Arm Scapular Push Ups, set up facing a wall. Place one hand up on the wall at about shoulder height. Your arm should be straight, but make sure you aren’t shrugging. You can be at a slight incline to make the move harder by walking your feet back, but start standing more vertical to the wall so you can really focus on proper movement of your shoulder blade.

Then, keeping your elbow straight, press your chest toward the wall as you feel your shoulder blade retract back. You should feel your shoulder blade move toward your spine. Do not shrug your shoulder as you focus on moving the shoulder blade. Pause then relax back out.

Make sure you don’t shrug or bend your elbows or rotate to try to make the movement bigger. Keep your core tight and isolate that one side working. You will feel the muscles along the side of your back and your ribs working. You can even put the opposite hand below your armpit on the working side to feel those muscles working.

Posture Or Pull Ups?

While these exercise will help with both, if you’d like to learn more about one or the other, click below! I’ve got programs to help with both ?

Learn more about improving your Posture –>

Learn more about improving your Pull Ups –>

How To Deadlift With Proper Form And The Right Variation For You!

How To Deadlift With Proper Form And The Right Variation For You!

I LOVE the deadlift. It is an amazing compound movement to target your posterior chain aka your entire backside.

But it is also a more complicated move than we give it credit for. And there are a ton of variations to choose from.

First let’s discuss WHY you should use the deadlift. Then we’ll review form and breakdown the conventional deadlift before explaining what variations to use and how to use them!

So Why Use The Deadlift In Your Workouts?

Deadlifts are ESSENTIAL to include because they:

  • Are a compound move that works numerous muscle groups at once.
  • Are a hip hinge exercise to train a functional movement pattern
  • Work your backside to reverse the constant flexion we sit in or walk in as we text all day.
  • Work on hip extension to strengthen our glutes to help us run faster and lift more.

Because deadlifts are a compound exercise, you work more muscles at once.

This not only helps you build functional strength because muscles have to work together to perform a movement, but it also helps you burn more calories in less time because more muscles are working at once. And compound moves that use the large muscles of our body, also allow us to lift MORE weight!

And on top of being a compound movement, the deadlift is a hip hinge exercise that works our posterior chain AKA our BACKSIDE!

What is a hip hinge?

It is a movement that loads your posterior chain when you hinge, aka flex your hips, to push your butt back then extend your hips to stand tall using your glutes. It is a functional move we need to do every day to reach down to the ground to pick things up…like a DEADLIFT!

The problem with this functional hip hinge exercise?

All too many people do incorrectly.

They simply lean forward without loading their posterior chain. Or they turn it into a squat.

Or they recruit their low back and hamstrings to do work their GLUTES should be doing.

So how do you deadlift properly to get the benefits of the deadlift and really work your backside?

How To Deadlift With Proper Form:

The most important thing you can ask someone is, “Where do you feel working?”

And with the deadlift, they can answer “upper back.” Or “glutes.” Or even “hamstring.” Actually all of the above. Especially their glutes.

However, the one place they shouldn’t feel acting as the prime mover is their low back. Which honestly too often is!

So how do you do the deadlift properly?

There are three things I think are key:

  1. Think about pushing the ground away with your feet INSTEAD of lifting the bar off the ground.
  2. Push your butt back to hinge over don’t just lean forward.
  3. Squeeze your butt hard at the top!

Thinking about these 3 things, here’s how to break down the Conventional Barbell Deadlift or the traditional or main deadlift variation.

To do a Conventional Barbell Deadlift, set a barbell up in front of you. Walk up to the center of the bar with your feet parallel and about hip-width apart. Set up so your shins are right up against the bar. You do not want the bar to drift away from your legs or you risk loading your low back.

Hinge at the hips, pushing your butt back as you reach to grab the bar just outside your shins. Your knees should be soft as you push your butt back to grab the bar, keeping your back flat.

Think about engaging your lats and upper back to keep your spine flat. Traditional form will tell you to keep your head in line with your spine and look out on the ground in front of you. Powerlifting form will often tell you to look up to help you pull up. Choose the one that feels most comfortable without straining anything weird.

With your arms straight and core engaged, put tension on the bar. Then drive through your feet, pushing the ground away to lift the bar up off the ground. Exhale as you lift, “dragging” the bar up your shins to stand up.

At the top, stand tall and squeeze your glutes to fully extend your hips. Don’t lean back at the top or arch your back. Squeeze your butt, then lower back down. Keep the bar close to your body as you lower. Control the decent so you don’t drop the bar, but don’t eccentrically lower.

Once you touch the ground, you can either perform a quick rep without pausing or you can completely release at the bottom and repeat.

The key is really to keep that bar close to your shin, drive the ground away and even use your breathing to engage your core. Do NOT try to squat or simply lean or round over. Keep tension through your upper back and engage your lats. And sit your butt back, hinging at the hips.

Your knees should be soft, but your exact knee bend will be dependent on your mobility. Do NOT actively bend your knees and turn this into a squat though!

So what if you aren’t comfortable with the barbell? What if you’re a beginner? Or what if you want to target different muscles and challenge your body with a new variation?

Check out these deadlift variations below!

Deadlift Variations And When To Use Them:

There are so many great variations of the deadlift you can use to regress and progress the movement and even change up exactly what you’re working or use different tools that you may have available.

Yes, it will always be posterior chain, but you can isolate each glute, add in more adductor or even engage your hamstrings or core more.

Because the deadlift is a more technical move, there are a few ways I like to teach the deadlift and hip hinge movement WITHOUT the barbell.

Three versions of the deadlift I like to use with beginners are:

  • The Bodyweight Wall Hinge
  • The Band Hinge
  • The Kettlebell Conventional Deadlift

I’ve found these three deadlift variations to be an easier way to teach and train the hip hinge movement so that people learn to load their glutes and posterior chain instead of just leaning forward or engaging their low backs.

Here’s how to perform each and why each can be a great training tool.

The Bodyweight Wall Hinge – When you are first learning a movement, it is key to start with your own bodyweight. If you can’t do the move without a load, you haven’t earned adding a weight. Remember you need to EARN the weight and more advanced variations. No point in doing something if it won’t be quality. Hard for hard sake won’t get you results!

So the Bodyweight Wall Hinge is great for beginners because it helps them learn the hip hinge and deadlift movement without any weight. This allows them to focus on feeling the right muscles working. And by using the wall as a guide, you can learn to load your glutes and push your butt back.

To do the Bodyweight Wall Hinge, stand in front of a wall facing away. You want to stand between 3-6 inches away from the wall so as you hinge over, you can use the wall as a guide to help you push your butt back. AKA you want to hinge over and touch your butt to the wall. This will prevent you from simply leaning forward.

Stand nice and tall facing away from the wall. Then hinge at the hips, pushing your butt back to touch the wall. Keep your knees soft as you hinge over and your back flat. Then drive through your feel to come back up to standing tall. Squeeze your glutes at the top to extend your hips. Don’t lean or arch back though.

Then hinge back over again, pushing your butt back to touch the wall. The wall is a great training tool to teach yourself to push your butt back and load your posterior chain. I even sometimes use it as a reminder with clients as they add a load, especially with Good Mornings.

The Band Hinge – A resistance band is another great training tool to help you remember to load your glutes. And it also adds some resistance to really get those glutes burning. This variation, while a great way to regress for the beginner, is also still an important move for advanced lifters because it really activates those glutes.

It’s great for glute activation, teaching the hip hinge for deadlift and reminding people that, while the Conventional Deadlift means some knee bend, it is NOT a squat! It also teaches you to “push the ground away” to power the hip extension against the band.

To do the Band Hinge, anchor a band or loop behind you and step into the band, bringing it right up below your hips. Walk away from the anchor point so that there is tension in the band and stand with your feet about hip-width to shoulder-width apart. The more the band tries to pull you back (aka the further out you walk), the harder the move will be.

Then hinge over, allowing the band to pull your butt back toward the anchor point. Bend your knees slightly as you push your butt back to help load your glutes and keep you from flying back with the band.

Then explosively drive your hips forward to come back up to standing. You may lean slightly forward against the band, but you want to explosively stand up and drive your hips forward against the band, contracting your glutes as you do.

Stand up tall and squeeze your glutes then quickly hinge back over before repeating. This should be a quicker move and you should really focus on loading your glutes as you hinge over and then on quickly driving your hips into extension as you stand back up, squeezing your glutes hard at the top.

Do not lean back or arch your back as you stand up. Also, make sure you don’t lock out your legs OR squat to much as you hinge over. Make sure there is tension in the band even as you hinge over.

The Kettlebell Conventional Deadlift – The third deadlift variation I like to use to help teach the deadlift is the single kettlebell Conventional Deadlift. This is a great way to load down the hip hinge, but teach people to really sit their butt back instead of just squatting down.

With the barbell Conventional Deadlift, we can often struggle with keeping the bar back against our shins and legs. And this can cause us to load our low back. Because we can have a tendency to let the bar drift away, it can be a struggle to sit back and load our glutes and even drive the ground away when we are first learning.

This is why I like to often use the kettlebell instead of the barbell when someone is first starting out. The fact that you can place the kettlebell back between your legs and toward your heels can really help ingrain the proper hip hinge movement and proper loading of the glutes.(BONUS: I even find that often the height of the kettlebell can help prevent people from wanting to squat as much.)

To do the Kettlebell Conventional Deadlift, place a kettlebell in between your feet as you stand with your feet about hip-width to shoulder-width apart. Your feet should be parallel and the kettlebell should be back by your heels.

Then sit your butt back and hinge at the hips so you can reach and grab the kettlebell handle. Your knees will be soft so you can load your glutes. Engage your lats as you grab the weight and keep your back flat.

Then drive the ground away as you lift the weight up. Stand up nice and tall and squeeze your glutes at the top. Then sit your butt back as you hinge at the hips to drop the weight back toward your heels.

Make sure you don’t reach out or lower the weight out in front of you. Really make sure to lower the kettlebell back down toward your heels. You don’t want to just lean over or let your back round. Load your glutes and sit your butt back, bending your knees to allow yourself to load your glutes. Do not lock out your legs.

Along with these three basic variations to really learn the hip hinge movement and even return to basics to make sure your foundation is strong (yes I LOVE using the Band Hinge even with my most advanced lifters), there are a variety of deadlift variations you can use to target your posterior chain in different ways and even work your core and balance.

Single Leg Deadlift – The Single Leg Deadlift is a must-do move for beginners and advanced lifters alike. It is an essential move to include because it will not only work your posterior chain and train the hip hinge, but it will also improve your core stability and balance.

It is also key because it is a unilateral exercise, which means it will work each side individually and help correct any imbalances. Aka if you have a stronger and weaker side, this allows you to make sure both sides are working and strong!

Beginners can start by doing more of a staggered stance deadlift or even a deadlift with one foot down on a slider. Once your balance improves, you’ll want to do the full Single Leg Deadlift.

To do the Single Leg Deadlift, you can use kettlebells, dumbbells or a barbell. You can even unilaterally load the move down to make it even more challenging for your core and your balance.

To do the basic move with bodyweight, start standing on both legs. Lightly touch one toe on the ground as you shift your weight onto the other leg. Begin to then hinge over, lifting your raised leg toward the wall behind you. Push your butt back and even slightly bend the knee of the standing leg to load your glutes.

You do not want to squat, but you want to soften your knee to push your butt back and load your glutes. As you hinge at the hips, don’t let your raised leg swing way open and don’t simply lean forward. Really focus on loading that standing glute as you feel your hamstring as well.

Keep your back flat and hips as square to the ground as possible. Do not worry about straightening the raised leg if it makes your hips rotate open.

Then driving through your standing foot, come back up to standing tall. You may tap your toe at the top, but do not use your other leg to help you come back up to standing. Stand tall and straighten your standing leg as you contract and squeeze your glute at the top. Really feel your hamstring and glute work to help you come back up to standing.

Then hinge back over and repeat. Make sure you don’t round toward the ground. When you add weights, you’ll want to think about dropping the weights down and back toward your standing heel to help you sit back. You’ll also need to engage your lats and upper back to support the weights.

Do not let your low back take over and make sure to brace your core. Complete all reps on one side before switching. Remember if you are starting out and balance is an issue, use a staggered stance, slider or even no weight to start.

Good Mornings and Straight Leg Deadlifts – The Deadlift is a posterior chain exercise and your glutes are definitely the prime mover, HOWEVER, you can make the deadlift focus and work different muscles to different extents. One great Deadlift Variation to really work your hamstrings, is the Straight Leg Deadlift. And when you make it a front-loaded move like the Good Morning, you force your abs and core to work even harder!

To do the Straight Leg Deadlift, you can use barbells, kettlebells, sandbags, dumbbells or even resistance bands. I even like front-loading it down for the Good Morning variation. If you front-load the movement, hold a sandbag up at your chest cradled in your arms. You’ll wrap your arms around the bag and then pull it into your chest engaging your upper back to support it. Stand tall with your feet about hip-width apart.

Then, bracing your abs, hinge over at the hips, pushing your butt back as you keep your back flat. Feel your hamstrings and glutes loading as you hinge over. You will want to very slightly bend or soften your knees to help you push your butt back, but do not turn this into a squat.

After hinging over, drive back up to standing, pushing through your feet as you squeeze your glutes at the top. Do not rock forward, but instead drive straight up. Keep your abs engaged and do not round over.

Stand up nice and tall and squeeze your glutes, then hinge back over and repeat. Do not simply lean forward. You will want to keep your legs straighter but NOT lock out your knees.

Sumo – The Sumo Deadlift is another great variation if you want to target your legs a bit more and even get your adductors working. For some, this deadlift variation even allows them to lift heavier weights than the other variations. However, because of the wide stance, you will want to make sure to take care of your hips as the external rotation and wide stance can occasionally be hard on them.

To the Sumo Deadlift, beginners can start with a kettlebell just like they did for the Conventional Deadlift. You can also use a sandbag, dumbbells or even a barbell.

For the Barbell Sumo Deadlift, set your feet wider than shoulder-width with your toes turned out slightly and your shins against the barbell. Reach down and grab the bar between your legs about hip-width apart. Hinge at the hips as you bend your knees to sit your butt back and grab the bar. Keep your back flat and engage your lats and upper back to support the tension on the bar. Make sure your knees are in line with your ankles and hips. You do not want your knees caving in with the wide stance.

Then driving up through your heels, come back up to standing. Think more about pushing the ground away than on picking the bar up. You won’t want to lose tension in your upper body as you initiate the pull so it can help to think about pushing the ground away. This can also help you focus on using your legs and glutes.

Drive all the way up to standing tall and squeeze your glutes at the top. You do not want to lean back, but you do fully want to extend your hips. Then begin to lower the bar back down, siting your butt back as you hinge over to return it to the ground. Stay in control of the bar, but do not turn this into a slow eccentric lower down.

Make sure to keep the bar close to your body the entire time to make sure you are using your posterior chain to lift!

Unilateral Loads – With all of these great deadlift variations, you can also change how you load the move. From making the Conventional Deadlift a bit easier for beginners by using kettlebells to even making moves harder and more core intense by front loading OR even adding a unilateral load.

Unilateral loading is a great way to work on anti-rotational core strength and stability. It allows you to add weight, but make your core work even harder to stay balanced. Because you are adding weight on only one side though, make sure your core is ready for the challenge of fighting your body’s urge to compensate and rotate or you risk injury.

To unilaterally load down any variation, you can simply hold a kettlebell, sandbag or dumbbell in one hand. For the Single Leg Deadlift, you can hold it in the same or the opposite hand from your standing leg and for the conventional, you can hold it like a suitcase outside one side. Just make sure to do reps holding the weight on each side.

All of these moves can be used in your programming to work your posterior chain and strengthen those glutes. Make sure to pick variations that target your specific goals and don’t hesitate to mix things over progressions to not only challenge your body, but even focus on your weaker areas!

For even more coaching cues, tips and variations, check out my Mastery Series – Deadlift Edition!

Can You Really Eat Intuitively?

Can You Really Eat Intuitively?

For most of us “intuitive eating” doesn’t exist…

At least not initially.

It has to be learned.

With the distorted portion sizes at restaurants, misleading food labels, junk food masquerading as healthy, it’s hard to know what you should be eating.

Plus, stress, lack of sleep and boredom can all lead to mindless snacking and our body even sending us triggers we THINK mean we are hungry…when, in fact, we’re not!

It’s hard to really know when and IF we need food or if one of these other things is at play. Especially when we’ve created bad habits and those habits have been ingrained for years!

And to make intuitive eating even more impossible on top of all of that…

We live in a culture very centered around food.

Social gatherings are often centered around FOOD…I mean we even have a whole holiday centered around sitting down to eat an unreasonably large meal together where we know there is a chance the pants are going to need to be unbuttoned…

I mean…I can’t be alone in doing that at Thanksgiving!

That is why intuitive eating is something that has to be LEARNED.

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It is why counting calories and tracking your food to start is key to success.

Starting out, most of us have no idea WHAT or HOW MUCH or even WHEN our bodies really need food. We’ve just become so out of tune that we need to relearn how to listen to our body’s cues.

We need to train ourselves to again respond to what our body needs.

It’s kind of like when you train for your first race or you want to improve your race time.

You don’t just say “Hey I’m going to intuitively run as far and as fast as I can whenever I want.”

NOPE!

You wouldn’t do that because then the first time you start to get tired or bored, you’d stop! You’d give yourself excuses to turn back and maybe not even run again that week.

So you write out a program. 

You set out how far you’re going to run, when you’re going to run and you track your pace.

You track and measure and set goals so you know EXACTLY how you’re doing and what you’re doing to get you to that first race or improve your time.

So why would eating be any different?

The simple fact is…It isn’t.

We need to track and log especially to start because tracking allows us to know what we are actually eating. 

It helps us understand how certain foods affect our body. It helps show us that quality calories matter and what portion sizes we should actually be eating.

It helps us learn when we are ACTUALLY HUNGRY or when we are actually bored or stressed or tired.

It gives us direction to reach our goal, just like that running program would.

You wouldn’t leave your race or that goal time up to “intuition” so why would you set yourself up for failure by doing the same to your weight loss goals?

If you want to LEARN to eat intuitively and respond to your bodies needs, you need to start by tracking and logging!