Tag: Core Exercises

Weighted Crunches

Weighted Crunches

How to do weighted crunches properly, with perfect form and technique! The best ab exercise to build a strong core and abdominals!

Purpose:

  • Increase Abdominal Strength
  • Increase Abdominal Hypertrophy

Prime Movers:

  1. Rectus Abdominis (Abs)

How To Do Weighted Crunches

  • Lay on a flat surface with your feet placed so that your knees are higher than your hips.
  • Hold a weight at arm’s length above your shoulders. This can be a barbell, dumbbells or even a weight plate.
  • While keeping your head in line with your upper spine and hips down, curl your chest towards your hips to raise the weight higher above you.
  • Keep your arms straight up as you move and control the descent by slowly returning to the start.

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Standing Prone Cobra Core Exercise

How To Do The Standing Prone Cobra Core Exercise

Learn how to do the modified standing prone cobra core exercise to build strength teach proper abdominal bracing techniques. This is for those that cannot do the standard Prone Cobra Exercise.

  1. Stand erect with your hands touching together in front of you. During the entire motion keep your fingers spread wide, glutes activated and feet clenched into the ground with an external rotation torque.
  2. Brace your core by tightening your stomach along with all the muscles surrounding your abdomen. 
  3. With a neutral head position, begin by externally rotating your palms outward as you open your chest and lean back. Think of pulling your shoulder blades back and down towards your glutes and thumbs together behind you. 
  4. Only lean back as far as you can maintain balance.
  5. Hold that position for two seconds and then slowly return to the start.

Tip: Keep tension on your legs and glutes for stability. Brace your core by pressing your navel out against the floor.

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Benefits

  • The standing prone cobra builds the strength and mobility to hold the proper posture.

Purpose

  • Teach thoracic extension and shoulder external rotation while building postural strength.

Prime Movers – Most Active Muscles
  • Erector Spinae muscles (Back),
  • Rear Deltoids (Shoulders),
  • Trapezius (Back),
  • Rotary Cuff Complex (Shoulders)

Learn more about The Daily 30 Bodyweight Workout!


daily 30 2nd edition book The Daily 30: Bodyweight Fitness Workout

Learn how to move properly to build strength, decrease pain, prevent injury, and get fit, at home or in the gym!

Great for men, women, and children of all strength levels!

Learn More!


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Prone Cobra Exercise

How to do the prone cobra exercise properly, with perfect form and technique! The best bodyweight exercise for a strong lower-back and core!

prone cobra yoga exercise for posture

How To Do The Prone Cobra Exercise

  1. Lie face down on the ground with your arms out to your sides making a T-shape with your body. During the entire motion keep your fingers spread wide, glutes activated and balls of your feet kicked into the ground; raising your knees.
  2. With a neutral head position, begin by raising your torso as high as possible while externally rotating your palms upward (thumbs pointing up). Think of pulling your shoulder blades back down towards your glutes and thumbs together behind you.
  3. Hold the top position for two seconds and then slowly return to the start position.
  4. Do not fully relax to the floor and repeat.

Tip: Keep tension on your legs and glutes for stability. Brace your core by pressing your navel out against the floor.

Get our Book to perfect all your Bodyweight Movements!

Watch the Video!

Play

Benefits

  • The prone cobra exercise builds the strength and mobility to hold proper posture.

Purpose

  • Teach thoracic extension and shoulder external rotation while building postural strength.

Prime Movers – Most Active Muscles
  • Erector Spinae muscles (Back),
  • Rear Deltoids (Shoulders),
  • Trapezius (Back),
  • Rotary Cuff Complex (Shoulders)

Learn more about The Daily 30 Bodyweight Workout!


daily 30 2nd edition book The Daily 30: Bodyweight Fitness Workout

Learn how to move properly to build strength, decrease pain, prevent injury, and get fit, at home or in the gym!

Great for men, women, and children of all strength levels!

Learn More!


More Bodyweight Exercises >>

View All Exercise Descriptions >>

Abs and Core Abdominal Training Exercises

Learn how to do the best abs and core training exercises for strength!

best six pack ab exercises

Abdominal (6-Pack) Training Principles

Abdominal training consists of any exercise focused on building up the rectus-abdominis, or “6-Pack”.

The rectus-abdominis is the muscular connection between your anterior pelvis (hips) and rib cage. Its main functions include protecting your internal organs and flexing the spinal column. Other functions include stabilization along with assisting most movements of the spinal column or hips.

To emphasize the use of the rectus-abdominis, there must be a movement that brings the chest and hips closer together anteriorly. If these two points do not come closer upon movement then the focus of the exercise is placed elsewhere and the rectus abdominis becomes an assistive muscle.

To increase the hypertrophy (size or look) and strength of the rectus abdominis there must be increasing intensity over time the same as any other muscle. This can be done with added resistance or increasing volume.

When training for strength, use a resistance that allows for 5-10 repetitions. When adding volume do not do sets of more than 25 repetitions. 10-15 repetitions is a good intensity to volume range.

While building up your abdominals use basic techniques such as the ones listed below to build a base before utilizing unique exercises.

Core Training Principles

Core training consists of exercises focused on building up the muscles which stabilize the torso and resists change during movement. This includes increasing the utilization of all the core muscles in unison.

The core consists of many muscles attached between the rib cage and pelvis (hips). These muscles create a cylinder-like structure that surrounds your internal organs. The base of the cylinder is the pelvis, with all of its musculature, and the top is the diaphragm. All the muscles surrounding the internal organs between these two points help with core stabilization.

Knowing this, it is not enough just to train the abdominals and the lower back. The muscle must be strengthened in all directions around the core.

To train all the surrounding musculature, there must be movements practiced that attempts to bring the torso out of rigidity and into flexion or rotation.

Main Lifts and most exercises use the core to stabilize the movements created by the limbs and increase the use of the entire body as one unit.

A weak or misused core stabilization can greatly diminish the maximal strength of any lift.

The exercises listed below are basic exercises that lay a strong foundation for the core musculature. To increase the strength of the core, there must be an increase in resistance over time such as added weight.

While training the core, ensure that all the core muscles are working in unison by bracing your entire torso throughout the exercise.


Ab Exercise How To’s

Ab Training Exercises

Oblique and Core Training Exercises