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474 lines
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Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
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From: timbomb@cs.uq.oz.au (Tim Mansfield)
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Newsgroups: misc.fitness,misc.answers,news.answers
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Subject: Abdominal Training FAQ
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Supersedes: <abdominal-training_764247107@rtfm.mit.edu>
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Followup-To: misc.fitness
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Date: 22 Apr 1994 11:16:09 GMT
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Organization: none
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Lines: 452
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Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
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Expires: 5 Jun 1994 11:15:52 GMT
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Message-ID: <abdominal-training_767013352@rtfm.mit.edu>
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Reply-To: timbomb@cs.uq.oz.au (Tim Mansfield)
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NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
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Summary: Information about Training The Midsection (Monthly Posting)
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Keywords: abs, abdominals, situps, love handles
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X-Last-Updated: 1994/04/05
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Organisation: University Of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
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Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
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Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu misc.fitness:21228 misc.answers:554 news.answers:18473
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Archive-name: abdominal-training
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Last-modified: Apr 5 1994
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Version: 0.9
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THE ABDOMINAL TRAINING FAQ
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This FAQ is intended as an introduction to the basic principles of training
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the abdominal area, sometimes known as the belly or the abs. The creation of
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this FAQ was motivated by frequent questions on the topic in the newsgroup
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misc.fitness.
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The FAQ is posted every month to misc.fitness and misc.answers. It is also
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available via anonymous ftp from rtfm.mit.edu in
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/pub/usenet/misc.fitness/Abdominal_Training_FAQ. Those preferring to use
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the World Wide Web or Mosaic can use the URL --
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http://clix.aarnet.edu.au/misc.fitness/abdominal-training.html
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Table Of Contents
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I. INTRODUCTION AND CAVEATS
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II. QUESTIONS
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QUESTION 1: How do I get abs like giant ravioli?
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QUESTION 2: Should I do lots of situps to reduce fat around
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my middle?
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QUESTION 3: How do I reduce the fat covering my middle?
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QUESTION 4: How do I exercise the abs?
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QUESTION 5: What's wrong with situps?
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QUESTION 6: What are good ab exercises?
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QUESTION 7: Is there a specific order I should do exercises
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in?
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QUESTION 8: How do I structure a routine?
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QUESTION 9: How often should I train abs?
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QUESTION 10: Should I do side bends to reduce my love
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handles?
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QUESTION 11: Gee, but shouldn't I balance my abs with my
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spinal erectors?
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QUESTION 12: Are there any special abdominal exercises
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during pregnancy?
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III. REFERENCES
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IV. CONTRIBUTIONS OR COMMENTS
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V. CONTRIBUTORS
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I. INTRODUCTION AND CAVEATS
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The information in this FAQ is based on
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Health For Life's _Legendary Abs_ booklet
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endless threads about abdominal training
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in misc.fitness and
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on the weights mailing list
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and sundry other sources.
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See the references list at the end for how to get hold of these things for
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yourself.
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II. QUESTIONS
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QUESTION 1: How do I get abs like giant ravioli?
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Getting visible abdominal muscles or "abs" depends on reducing the amount
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of fat covering the abs, see Question 3. Getting hard, lumpy abs depends on
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developing the underlying muscles, for details, read on...
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QUESTION 2: Should I do lots of situps to reduce fat around my
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middle?
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No. Exercising the area from which you want to lose fat is called "spot
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reduction". Spot reduction is now believed to be a myth. Research shows that
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fat is lost all over your body, not just in the area that you work. Situps are
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also bad for your lower back (see Question 5).
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QUESTION 3: How do I reduce the fat covering my middle?
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The answer comes in two parts: diet and aerobic exercise.
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DIET
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This is controversial, but most people agree that eating very little fat and lots
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of complex carbs (like rice, pasta and potatoes) helps ensure that you don't
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add additional fat. Then you have to work at using the fat you already have
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stored which involves...
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EXERCISE
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Again a bit controversial, but it's widely agreed that regular, moderate,
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aerobic exercise 3-4 times per week works best to burn fat that's already
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stored.
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"Moderate" because intense exercise burns glycogen not fat, so keep the
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intensity at about the level where you are beginning to puff a little.
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"Aerobic" means (very vaguely) the kind of exercise that requires you to
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inhale more. Some suggest that building more muscle through weight
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training helps as well, since muscle burns fat just by being there and moving
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your body about; so some weight training couldn't hurt and will probably
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help.
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Many misc.fitness people agree that exercise periods of more than 20
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minutes work best. But note that the longer you exercise, the more prone you
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are to injury since your muscles also begin to weaken. Two things which
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help prevent injury are:
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a good warmup
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5-10 minutes of light exercise to warm your muscles, try to break a
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sweat
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stretching
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cautious 20-30 sec stretches for every muscle (for an excellent source
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of information on the topic, see the Stretching FAQ).
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QUESTION 4: How do I exercise the abs?
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The abs are designed to perform one main task, to shorten the distance
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between your sternum, or breastbone, and your pelvis. The only way to do
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this is to bend your spine in the lower back region.
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In short, any exercise which makes you move your sternum toward your
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pelvis or your pelvis toward your sternum is good. To do this safely, the
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lower back must be rounded, not arched.
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QUESTION 5: What's wrong with situps?
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Traditional situps emphasize sitting up rather than merely pulling your
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sternum down to meet your pelvis. The action of the psoas muscles, which
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run from the lower back around to the front of the thighs, is to pull the
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thighs closer to the torso. This action is the major component in sitting up.
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Because of this, situps primarily engage the psoas meaning that they're
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inefficient and grind vertebrae in your lower back.
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They're inefficient because the psoas work best when the legs are close to
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straight (as they are when doing situps), so for most of the situp the psoas are
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doing most of the work and the abs are just stabilising.
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Putting the thighs at a right angle to the torso to begin with means that the
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psoas can't pull it any further, so all of the stress is placed on the abs.
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Situps also grind vertebrae in your lower back. This is because to work the
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abs effectively you are trying to make the lower back round, but tension in
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the psaos encourages the lower back to arch. The result is the infamous "disc
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pepper grinder" effect that helps give you chronic lower back pain in later
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life.
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There may be a way to do situps safely and thus exercise your psoas muscles.
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If anyone knows what it is, please let the FAQ maintainer know.
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QUESTION 6: What are good ab exercises?
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For the lower abs, in order of difficulty:
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15cm lying leg raises
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vertical lying leg thrusts
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hanging knee raises
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hanging leg raises
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For the upper abs:
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ab crunches
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1/4 crunches
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cross-knee crunches
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pulldown crunches
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15cm Lying Leg Raises
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Lie on your back with you hands, palms down under your buttocks. Raise
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your legs about 30cm off the floor and hold them there. Now trying to use
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just your lower abs, raise your legs by another 15cm. Do this by tilting the
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pelvis instead of lifting the legs with the psoas. Make sure your knees are
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slightly bent.
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If you're big or have long legs or both, you should probably avoid this
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exercise. For people with legs that are too heavy for their lower abs strength,
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this exercise pulls the lower back into an arch which is bad (and painful). For
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reasons why it's bad, see Question 5. If you have this problem you can either
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try bending your knees slightly and making sure you keep your lower back
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flat, or just try another exercise.
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Vertical Lying Leg Thrusts
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Lie on your back and put your legs in the air vertically over your pelvis and
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your fists at your sides on the floor. Now, just using the abs raise your pelvis
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off the ground. If you have difficulty straightening your legs, that's OK, but
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make sure you're doing the work with your abs, not using the momentum of
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thrusting with your legs. Try pointing your toes at the top of the movement.
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Lie on your back with your fists, palms down, under your buttocks to keep
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your lower back flat against the ground. Try to raise head and shoulders off
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the ground.
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With your knees slightly bent, raise your legs 35 to 45cm off the floor. Your
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lower back should be flat against the floor; if not, bend your knees more or
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raise your legs higher.
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The exercise itself has four phases:
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1. Contract your abs to raise your pelvis and legs so that your feet are
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pointing at the sky.
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2. Thrust upward with your pelvis, pushing your feet skywards.
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3. Lower out of the thrust, leaving your pointing up.
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4. Lower your pelvis and legs back to the starting position.
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Legendary Abs II recommends these as safer than Lying 15cm Leg Raises.
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Hanging Knee Raises
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You need a chin-up bar or something you can hang from for this. Grab the
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bar with both hands with a grip a bit wider than your shoulders, cross your
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ankles and bring your knees up to your chest (or as close as you can get).
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Your pelvis should rock slightly forward. Pause at the top of the movement
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for a second and then slowly lower your knees by relaxing your abs. Don't
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lower your legs all the way. Repeat the movement using just your abs to
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raise your knees.
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Make sure that you don't start swinging. You want your abs to do the work,
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not momentum. It's important that you don't move your legs too far or your
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psoas muscle will be doing a lot of work and possibly causing back problems
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as in a situp. Make sure your pelvis moves, your lower back stays roudned,
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not arched, and that your abs are doing the work, not your hips.
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Hanging Leg Raises
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Just like knee raises except you keep your legs straight. This requires good
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hamstring and lower back flexibility, see the Stretching FAQ for details.
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Although Legendary Abs recommends these, The American Council on
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Exercise's Aerobics Instructor book warns that they have the same back
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problems as conventional situps. This makes sense since, like situps, the legs
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are kept straight and the hips move. For safety you should probably stick to
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leg thrusts and knee raises.
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If you do them, make sure your lower back stays rounded.
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There is an isometric variant done by gymnasts called the "L-Support",
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which basically consists of taking the leg raise position with the legs held
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straight at a level just above the hips. The position is held for 10 seconds.
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When you can complete this easily, try a higher position. The same cautions
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about back position still hold.
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Ab Crunches
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Lying on your back, put your knees up in the air so that your thighs are at a
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right angle to your torso, with your knees bent. If you like you can rest your
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feet on something, like a chair. Put you hands either behind your head or
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gently touching the sides of your head.
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Now, slowly raise your shoulders off the ground and try to touch your
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breastbone to your pelvis, breathing out as you go. If you succeed in touching
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your breastbone to your pelvis, see a doctor immediately.
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Do these fairly slowly to avoid using momentum to help.
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1/4 Crunches
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Same as an ab crunch except that you raise your shoulder up, instead of
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pulling them toward your pelvis. You can do these quickly, in fact it's hard
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to do them any other way.
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Cross-Knee Crunches
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Like ab crunches, take the lying, bent-knee position, but this time crunch
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diagonally so that you try to touch each shoulder to the opposite hip
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alternately. At the top position, one shoulder and one hip should be off the
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ground.
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Pulldown Crunches
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Drape a towel or rope around the bar of a pulldown machine so that you pull
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the weight using it instead of the bar. Kneel facing the machine and grab
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hold of the towel and put your hands against your forehead. Kneel far
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enough away from the machine so that the cable comes down at a slight
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angle.
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The exercise is the same movement as an ab crunch, but using the weight
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instead of gravity. The emphasis is still on crunching the abs, pulling the
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sternum (breastbone) towards the pelvis making sure you exhale all your air
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at each contraction.
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QUESTION 7: Is there a specific order I should do exercises in?
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According to the Health For Life people, you should exercise the lower abs
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before the upper abs and do any twisting upper ab movements before straight
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upper ab ones. Twisting exercises work the obliques as well as the upper abs.
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QUESTION 8: How do I structure a routine?
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Try to do sets in the 15-30 rep range.
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Follow the two golden rules in Question 7.
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Pick easy exercises to start with and when you can happily do about 2
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sets in a row of an exercise, try picking harder ones.
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Only rest when you absolutely must, so take a short (10-15sec) rest
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between two sets of the same exercise, but none between lower and
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upper abs.
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Try to take about 1 second for each rep, except for ab crunches which
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you should always do slow (2 secs/rep) and 1/4 crunches which you
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should do fast (2 reps/sec).
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QUESTION 9: How often should I train abs?
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Some writers recommend doing abs at every workout. Others recommend
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doing them however often you do anything else in other words treating them
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as you would any other body part. Health For Life's Legendary Abs
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recommends three or four times a week.
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QUESTION 10: Should I do side bends to reduce my love handles?
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Nope. Love handles (the pads of fat above the hip bone at the side of the
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waist) are fat and only shrink with a low fat diet and general aerobic exercise
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(see Question 3). You can't just remove the fat from that area on its own.
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Legendary Abs claims that side bends develop the oblique muscles under the
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fat and therefore make the fat more prominent, but some people feel that the
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obliques simply can't get big enough to be noticeable. If anyone feels they
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can offer an authoritative answer on this question, please contribute.
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QUESTION 11: Gee, but shouldn't I balance my abs with my spinal
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erectors?
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Thanks for asking. If your develop your ab strength without similarly
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developing your spinal erectors (the muscles that straighten your lower
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back), you will end up with strange and possibly damaging posture.
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A fairly good lower back exercise is hyperextensions, which are best done on
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a hyper extension bench, but can be done on a bed or ordinary bench with
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something (or someone) holding down your ankles.
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Lie face down, with your hands touching the sides of your head, your body
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draped over the edge of the bench and with your hips supported so your
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pelvis can't move. Slowly raise your torso to the horizontal position, but no
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higher.
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Keep your head, shoulders and upper back arched through the whole
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movement.
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Try to do a couple of sets af around 12 reps after each ab routine or after
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each back routine. Don't exercise them more than about three times a week.
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If you already do deadlifts that's probably exercise enough.
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The Back Lever
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Gymnasts do an exercise called a ``back lever'' which among other things
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strengthens your spinal erectors.
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This exercise is dangerous for many people, use caution!
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The exercise can be done on still rings, the high bar or a chin bar set a fair
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way from the ceiling. You hang upside down with an underhand grip. If
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you're using a bar, the bar has to be behind you so try hanging with the bar in
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front of you and walk you legs through.
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When you have the position, lower yourself, pivoting at your shoulders until
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your body is parallel to the ground (or as close as you can safely get) belly
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facing downwards and hold the position for several seconds. When you can't
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hold it anymore bring your self back up to vertical.
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Take care as you have to be able to get out of any situation you get into, so
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don't go too low on the first try and make sure you only do it over a crash
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mat or with a couple of helpers to catch you if you have to let go.
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If you're confused about the description, the HTML version of this FAQ
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available via the World Wide Web, contains pictures which will be below if
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you're using a graphical browser like Mosaic.
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Many thanks go to Keith Smith for patiently explaining the back lever to
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me.
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QUESTION 12: Are there any special abdominal exercises during
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pregnancy?
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Yes there are. The following brief summary is from Colleen Porter .
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Modifications for Pregnancy and Postpartum
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During pregnancy, abdominal exercises can help preserve muscle tone and
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take strain off the lower back. However, you might need to learn new
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routines, since most experts have counseled against lying on your back after
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the fourth month due to pressure on the vena cava, the blood vessel that
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returns blood from the lower body to the heart. The books "Pregnancy and
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Exercise" by Raul Artal and "Essential Exercises for the Childbearing Year"
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by Elizabeth Noble offer many suggestions for safely strengthening the
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abdominals during pregnancy. One exercise is the Rocking Back Arch: kneel
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on all fours and count to five as you rock back and forth, then return to the
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original position and arch your back. Repeat five times, several times a day.
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Postpartum moms should check their abdominal muscles for separation
|
||
|
before starting any abdominal exercise program, because damage can be
|
||
|
exacerbated by exercise if there is separation. Test this by pressing your
|
||
|
fingers into the area by your belly button as you attempt to do an abdominal
|
||
|
crunch. If you can put more than one or two fingers in between the muscles,
|
||
|
they have separated and you will need to modify your crunches. Place your
|
||
|
feet the same way, but cross your arms across the abdomen and squeezing the
|
||
|
muscles together as you exhale and contract the abdominals, lifting only
|
||
|
your head (not the shoulders). You may also use a length of material (such as
|
||
|
old sheeting) wrapped around the abdomen and pulled across to achieve the
|
||
|
same effect.
|
||
|
|
||
|
III. REFERENCES
|
||
|
|
||
|
Legendary Abs and Legendary Abs II are available from:
|
||
|
Health for Life
|
||
|
8033 Sunset Blvd.
|
||
|
Suite 483
|
||
|
Los Angeles, CA 90046
|
||
|
(800)874-5339 (U.S.)
|
||
|
+1 310 306 0777 (International)
|
||
|
+1 310 305 7672 (Fax)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Stretching FAQ is available "...in ascii, texinfo, postscript, dvi, and html
|
||
|
formats via anonymous ftp from the host `cs.huji.ac.il' located under the
|
||
|
directory `/pub/doc/faq/rec/martial.arts'. The file name matches the
|
||
|
wildcard pattern `stretching.*'. The file suffix indicates the format. For
|
||
|
`WWW' and `Mosaic' users, the URL is in
|
||
|
`http://archie.ac.il:8001/files/CS-HUJI.html'."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Aerobics Instructor (ISBN 096 180 16162) is available from:
|
||
|
The American Council On Exercise
|
||
|
San Diego (Address unknown, please contribute)
|
||
|
|
||
|
To subscribe to the Weights Mailing List, send mail to Michael Sullivan at:
|
||
|
weights-request@fa.disney.com
|
||
|
You can also check out the archive of the mailing list at
|
||
|
gopher://cyberdyne.ece.uiuc.edu/11/rec
|
||
|
|
||
|
IV. CONTRIBUTIONS OR COMMENTS
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you disagree with anything from this FAQ either from personal
|
||
|
experience, or because you've read or learnt otherwise or if you have any
|
||
|
tips, information or exercises to add or you notice any typos, please send
|
||
|
them to the FAQ maintainer:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tim Mansfield
|
||
|
|
||
|
The maintainer derives no money from maintaining this FAQ. Any requests
|
||
|
to publish the FAQ in another form must be made to the maintainer.
|
||
|
Provided that the maintainer derives no money from re-publication s/he
|
||
|
reserves the right to decide where and how the FAQ is to be re-published.
|
||
|
|
||
|
V. CONTRIBUTORS
|
||
|
|
||
|
The following people contributed material for this FAQ:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tim Mansfield <timbomb@cs.uq.oz.au>
|
||
|
Nigel Ward <nigel@cs.uq.oz.au>
|
||
|
Kevin Digweed <ked@mfltd.co.uk>
|
||
|
Steve Cariglia <sjc@cyclops.haystack.edu>
|
||
|
Michael Sullivan <sullivan@disney.com>
|
||
|
David Will <DavidW@ccsdsmtp.columbiasc.NCR.COM>
|
||
|
John Blaska <blas0003@gold.tc.umn.edu>
|
||
|
Patrick Wai ??? <pwai@mv.us.adobe.com>
|
||
|
Keith R Smith <krw@cbnewsk.cb.att.com>
|
||
|
Colleen Porter <SDP@gnv.ifas.ufl.edu>
|
||
|
|