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Posts Tagged ‘sit ups’

Top 4 Posts of 2009

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009 by Karena

Picture 22It’s exciting to look back at 2009 and know that we made it through. We kicked and screamed through the economics of it all and celebrated and rejoiced in remembering what is really important. I think that the most popular posts of 2009 reflect what 2009 taught us. Health and great friends are way more important than world craziness…. Here are your top choices for 2009:

1. Are Your Sit-ups Making you Fatter?

When you do sit-ups incorrectly you may find yourself buying the next size up.

2. Osteoporosis: Bone Quality vs. Bone Quantity

A Mayo Clinic study shows that you do not have to increase your bone density to reduce your fracture risk up to 300%

3. Inspiring Cancer Patient: Photos

Linda Smith, a cancer patient and Pilates friend, fought back during chemo. Did you ever dream of doing a glamorous photo shoot when you are undergoing cancer treatment?

4. Better than Sit-ups.

Sit-ups are great but this exercise is even more effective than sit-ups for activating those core muscles.

Back Pain: No Sit-Ups Required

Thursday, August 13th, 2009 by Karena

Are you doing sit-ups and crunches to help support your aching back? Stop. In the name of all that you have already put your spine through, please, stop. I teach therapeutic exercise in a physical therapy clinic and I hear myself repeating the same thing over and over again. Stop doing sit-ups, stop doing crunches, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop….. (In my own head, what I am hearing is the voice of Charlie Brown’s teacher: WAHN, WAHN, WHAN, WHAN, WAHN, WAHN… )

It’s a mistake to think that what we need is increased strength in our abdomen. Did you know that people with a history of disabling back pain, whether they are currently in pain or not, have a better ability to hold a sit-up type position than their pain-free counterparts? (It’s true. I’m not making this up.) The tests were done by Stuart McGill. He’s a doctor of kinesiology at the University of Waterloo in Canada. He has done too many tests to count on how our muscles are firing, or not firing as the case may be, and has produced a wonderful body of work in ‘Low Back Disorders’ that explains why some exercises work and others don’t. The book is a little dense: it’s not meant for the lay person but if you are determined you can get through it.

Picture 4In any case, one of the more remarkable studies he did was to test muscular endurance on thoseTherapeutic Exericse with and without a history of back pain. When holding a sit-up type position, those with a history of back pain were stronger. The exact position is this: Seated with the knees up and the soles of the feet down, the person being tested is asked to lean back against a wedge.

The angle is about 35 degrees off of perpendicular. Next the wedge is removed and the timer starts. On average, the person with a history of disabling back pain was able to hold this flexed position for almost 20 seconds longer than someone with no history of back pain.

Now the position does rely on the stabilization of not only the abdominal musles but also relies heavily on the hip flexors. But so does a crunch and a sit-up. The best exercise for the abdomen (whether you have back pain or not) is to not engage the hip flexors. An example of that type of exercise is below in Part 6 of 8 on back pain.

After several more tests were completed this position is the only one where those with a history of disabling back pain tested stronger. They were weaker in spine extension and right and left side-bending (the obliques). So THAT is where the time should be spent if you are trying to prevent back pain: your spine extension muscles and your obliques. You can strengthen the obliques with the exercise that will be in the next installment of the back pain series and the spine muscles with the final installment.

In the meantime, you can get yourself going with the exercises below. All of these exercises and more are compiled in my DVD: Pilates for Healthy Bodies. You can purchase the DVD on this website. Good luck! –Karena

Are your situps making you fatter?

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009 by Karena

Okay, so sit-ups cannot make you fatter but they can make you look fatter. omigosh…. who knew? (smiling smugly, giggling behind my hand, raising my hand, ooh, ooh, pick me: ‘I Did! I Knew!”‘)

So, I thought I’d share my non-rocket science info with you so you can do your sit-ups and NOT have to buy a larger pant size as you get stronger. It’s the little things in life that make us happy, right?

Next week, I’ll share the secret of life but for this week: plain old flat-tummy creating sit-ups. Here’s the deal. Your muscles will form in the shape you put them. If you pooch your tummy while doing a sit-up then you are forming a permanent poochy tummy. If you flatten your tummy while doing a sit-up you create a flat tummy. See? Not rocket science. Just a well-kept secret. It makes me, as a Pilates Instructor, feel important and needed. :-)

Here’s how you do it. Engage your transversus abdominus muscle. (Yup, that muscle you were just talking about with your girlfriends at lunch today.) The transversus works like your mother’s girdle. It sucks everything in and streamlines and makes everything flat and sexy.

How do you engage it? That’s a little trickier.

First you have to find it. Cough. Laugh. Feel your stomach engage? That’s your transversus.

To engage it without hacking or guffawing then you can imagine that a 2-year-old is getting ready to punch you in the gut. So you tighten. Like a girdle. Remember this is a 2-year-old we are talking about so just a little tightening. You aren’t practicing to be the new circus act where they shoot cannon balls at your gut so don’t overdo it.

Now add this to your ‘girdle tightening’: Pull your abs away from your panty line at your hip-line. We are talking about the new ‘lower’ panty line here; not the panty line when you were pregnant or six-years-old. This isn’t something you do just when you do sit-ups. You can do this all the time and then never do a sit-up and still have flatter abs. cool, huh? But it is very important to do this when you are doing sit-ups or you are going to create poochy, bunchy ab muscles. I don’t want to hear it when you have to wear sweats everywhere because you have GINORMOUS ab muscles. Do ‘em right. Flatten your tummy. Look great. Teaser: secret to life in the next post…