4 Moves To Improve Your Thoracic Extension

We sit hunched over our computers, texting on our phones…heck even sitting in the car…

And this forward flexion can cause imbalances and compensations that lead to injury. It causes some muscles to become tight and overactive and others to become underactive, which can result in mobility restrictions.

It can cause our spinal extension to become limited, especially our thoracic extension. And this can cause neck, shoulder and even LOWER BACK aches and pains.

These 4 moves will help you loosen tight muscles, improve your thoracic extension and activate the muscles of your upper back to prevent injury!

4 Must-Do Exercises To Improve Your Thoracic Extension:

Exercise #1: Peanut Foam Rolling

A great way to reverse the constant hunch and relax tight or overactive muscles so you can get the correct muscles working is to start with foam rolling.

The peanut is the perfect tool to help you work on relaxing those muscles along your spine as you put your spine into extension. 

This move can also help you to stretch your chest and release any trigger points even in your rhomboids that may be causing neck or upper back aches and pains.

To do the Peanut Foam Rolling for your thoracic spine, you will place the Peanut in your mid-back while lying on your back on the ground with a ball of the peanut on each side of your spine.

Bend your knees and place your heels on the ground. Then cross your hands over your chest and relax back over the Peanut. Relaxing over the Peanut, extend your arms up overhead.

Swing your arms down and out to the side, as if making a snow angel, before bending them to cross them over your chest again.

Then crunch your upper body up, tensing the muscles of your back. Do not crunch up off the Peanut. You simply want to tighten the muscles before you relax back over the Peanut.

By “crunching up” and contracting the muscles, you can help the muscles release when you relax back over the Peanut.

As you work up your back, moving the peanut up toward your shoulders, perform a few crunches and extensions in each spot.

As you relax over each time, reach your hands overhead or even make “snow angels” with your arms, sweeping them along the ground and overhead before bringing them back down by your sides and finally back across your chest.

If you need to support your neck, you can simply place your hands behind your head as you extend over and think about opening your elbows at wide as you relax over.

To hit your rhomboids more, you may tuck your elbows together then open them out wide instead of crunching even while rolling out between your shoulder blades.

Exercise #2: Active Foam Roller Star Stretch

Improve your spinal mobility and relax your lower back as you also stretch your chest and glutes with this great active stretch to include prior to your workouts or as part of your cool down to prepare your body for work the next day.

It is the perfect move to include after sitting hunched over a computer all day so that you can make sure you don’t end up with neck, shoulder or lower back aches and pains!

To do the Active Foam Roller Star Stretch, grab a foam roller or block that you can place on the ground under your knee. Start by lying on your back with the roller running parallel to your body and about the middle at waist height. Bend your knee, on the side furthest from the roller, and bring it up toward your chest so that your hip is bent to about 90 degrees.

Take the hand on the same side as the roller and reach across to the outside of that knee and pull your knee across your body to place it on the roller. Hold your knee down on the roller and even relax your lower leg down on it. You will want to keep your knee on the roller even if you do roll forward or backward a bit on it. Just don’t let the knee come up off of it.

Place your other hand behind your head so your elbow is open and out. Rotate to bring that elbow down on the ground by your opposite shoulder. Don’t just flap your arm but actually rotate your body.

Then lift the elbow up and rotate your chest back open toward the ceiling as you try to touch your shoulder and that elbow back down on the ground. You are trying to rotate as open as you can, twisting through your spine without letting your knee come up off the roller. Open up, pause and then rotate back closed. Repeat all reps on one side before switching.

Exercise #3: Downward Dog to Upward Dog

This is not only a great stretch to open up your chest, lats, but will even stretch your hips while working on your spinal extension.

It’s a great way to reverse the constant sitting and perfect to include before your upper body or full body workouts.

The Downward Dog to Upward Dog will also help you improve your shoulder mobility and health!

To do Downward Dog to Upward Dog, start in the high plank position with your hands under your shoulders and feet about hip-width apart.

Then push back into downward dog. Drive your chest back toward your legs and lift your butt up toward the ceiling as you drive your heels down. Feel your hamstrings stretch as you extend your spine too. Drive through your palm and even your thumb and index finger instead of rocking out on your hand.

Then come back forward into the plank position and drop your hips toward the ground as you shift onto the tops of your feet. As you drop your hips, arch your spine, opening your chest up toward the ceiling. Do not shrug your shoulders.

Pause then come back into plank and shift back into downward dog. Like the divebomber but without focusing on the strengthe element of sneaking under to come forward.

Exercise #4: Lying W Pulldowns

Activate the muscles of your upper back and shoulder to help improve your posture and maintain the thoracic extension you’re working hard to improve with the foam rolling and stretching.

If you don’t also get the correct muscles working, you’ll keep compensating and things will continue to just tighten right back up no matter how much you stretch.

Activation is that often overlooked, but oh so essential piece if we want to make sure the correct muscles are working during our lifts!

This move is a great way to improve your scapular mobility while activating your lats and the muscles of your upper back. Plus it doesn’t allow your spine to be in flexion as you work to activate your back!

To do W Lying Pull Downs, lie face down on the ground and engage your upper back just enough so that your face isn’t flat on the ground. Pull your elbows down and in and lift your arms off the ground with your hands in by your shoulders like you’ve pulled your chest up to the bar in a pull up.

You want to make a W with your arms and your hands should be palms down at shoulder height. Feel the backs of your shoulders and your upper back lift your arms off the ground and pull your elbows down.

Then, keeping your hands off the ground, extend your arms straight out toward the wall in front of you. Reach out overhead the bring your hands back down and in. Move slowly, keeping your hands off the ground. Feel your back keep your arms off the ground as you extend and even feel your lats pull your elbows back down and in.

Prevent Injury AND Build A Strong, Sexy Upper Body…

Foam rolling, stretching, and activation are ESSENTIAL if you want to reverse the postural distortions we create with our modern lifestyle.

But they are often the pieces we skip in favor of the lifting and cardio that we feel are more “worthwhile.”

However, with a proper routine that includes those three pieces as well as the STRENGTHENING element, you can not only avoid injury, but also build strong, sexy arms and shoulders!

Learn more about my Arm Burner System!

FHP 022: 5 Facebook Ad Mistakes Beginners Make

FHP 022: 5 Facebook Ad Mistakes Beginners Make

The Fitness Hacks Podcast

by Redefining Strength | FHP 022: 5 Facebook Ad Mistakes Beginners Make

REDEFINING STRENGTH
Cori and Ryan 
redefiningstrength.com
The 5 Facebook Ad Mistakes Beginners Make:
1. You don’t set a goal for your ads and marketing efforts.

2. You don’t know your avatar and focus on targeting.

3. You don’t pay enough attention to your landing pages and have continuity between them and your ads.

4. You aren’t create enough ads and split testing.

5. You aren’t tracking enough!

Connect
SOCIAL MEDIA
RedefiningStrength.com
Email – [email protected]
Facebook
Instagram

FHP 007: Dan Ritchie Of The Functional Aging Institute

FHP 007: Dan Ritchie Of The Functional Aging Institute

The Fitness Hacks Podcast

by Redefining Strength | FHP 007: Dan Ritchie of the Functional Aging Institute talks about how age is just a number and gives some insight into his success training baby boomers

Functional
Aging
Institute
Dan Ritchie
functionalaginginstitute.com
ABOUT:
Dan Ritchie PhD, has a broad background in the fitness industry including training and management in commercial and university/hospital-based fitness, for-profit, not for-profit and educational facilities. His primary areas of expertise are in personal training for special populations: athletes, pregnancy, blind, stroke recovery, Parkinsons, multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, Fibromyalgia, Alzheimers, etc.

He has worked with Division I athletes some of whom have been professionally drafted. He has also worked on state funded research on exercise for severe dementia alzheimers type. He regularly presents at national and regional conferences and has been active on committees for the American College of Sports Medicine.

3 KEY POINTS:
1. Prioritize ability over age when training your clients.

2. We live in an ageist society. To be old is NOT to be sick. It’s a privilege to age and aging is an amazing opportunity.

3. The longevity economy is going to explode over the next 5-10 years.

MORE ABOUT THIS EPISODE:
In this episode we talk with Dan Ritchie of the Functional Aging Institute about the fact that age is just a number and that we’ve got to learn how to train people based on their ability and not their age. We discuss the importance of learning how to train people as they grow older so that they can continue to move well and feel great and remain independent and able to live life to the fullest.

Dan Ritchie points out that we live in a very ageist society where we think of getting older as a bad thing when, in reality, it is a privilege and an amazing new opportunity. And that as trainers it is our responsibility to learn how to properly train people of all ages and help people live their healthiest, happiest lives no matter their age!

ASHLEY’S FAST FIVE FITNESS FACTS
Q: What’s your favorite exercise?

Sled Push

Q: What exercise do you hate…but love at the same time?

Dumbbell Burpees

Q: What is the best book you’ve ever read?

The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership by John C. Maxwell

Quiet Strength – Tony Dungy

Q: What is your favorite Pump Up Song?

Anything from the Rocky IV Soundtrack 

Q: If you could train with one person (alive or dead) who would it be? 

Nelson Mandela

Improve Your Pull Ups And Core Strength With This Killer Workout

Improve Your Pull Ups And Core Strength With This Killer Workout

I designed this workout when experimenting with my 30-Day Pull Up Challenge workouts and scheduling.

And while I intended it to simply help people achieve that first, or 15th!, Pull Up, I never expected it to be such a core killer…like…KILLER!

More clients tell me their entire core hurts, and is more sore after this one workout from my 30-Day Pull Up Challenge than from almost any other workout we do.

That is also why this workout is so effective at improving your Pull Ups – it builds your core strength while also activating and strengthening your back.

That’s right…core strength is ESSENTIAL to improving your Pull Ups.

And this workout…well…it hammers your core as it works to improve your scapular retraction and get your back activated and working correctly!

It also combines two other keys to improve your Pull Ups besides building core strength – it also uses Eccentric Pull Ups and Pull Up Holds.

Including both Eccentric Pull Ups and Pull Up Holds in your workout program is also essential if you want results fast. Combining these 3 elements – Core Strength, Eccentric Pull Ups and Pull Up Holds is what makes this workout one of the foundational workouts of my 30-day program (Ready to improve your Pull Ups and want the full program? Click HERE) .

Ready for a killer core workout that will improve your Pull Ups? Then try the one below!

The 30-Day Pull Up Workout

Warm up then complete 4-6 rounds of the first exercise, resting about 1 minute between rounds. Then rest 1-2 minutes before moving on to the supplemental circuits. Rest no more than 30 seconds between rounds of the supplemental circuits and 1-2 minutes between circuits. Complete 6-8 rounds of each of the supplemental circuits. Then cool down by rolling and stretching.

EXERCISE:
5-8 reps Eccentric Pull Ups

CIRCUIT #1:
20 seconds Pull Ups
20 seconds Handstand Hold
15-30 seconds Rest

CIRCUIT #2:
20 seconds Push Ups
20 seconds Pull Up Holds
15-30 seconds Rest

NOTES: Pick variations of each move that allow you to work the entire 20 seconds. While that seems short, it adds up. And if you don’t work the entire time, you won’t get in the volume that will help create changes. Regress as you go if needed. For the Eccentric Pull Ups, lower down as slowly as possible.

For Pull Ups, do the hardest version you can. Full pull ups, foot assisted pull ups, jumping pull ups….Something that will challenge your back for the time but allow you to keep moving even if you regress as you go!

For the Push Ups and Pull Up Holds, select moves that work on weak points. For instance, close grip will work your triceps more on push ups. Wide grip will work your chest more. On Pull Up Holds, hold at the top to work on lock out. Hold at the bottom to work on Scapular Retraction (aka getting your lats actually engaged so you can begin the Pull Up). Hold at the mid-point to work on getting over your stick point.

Want to improve your Pull Ups? These 3 Keys To Improving Your Pull Ups will help!

Learn my 3 Keys To Improving Your Pull Ups –> https://goo.gl/GbJSK7