Most of us are weak in the core, so we need to pay particular attention to form and quality of movement.
Keep these tips in mind to get the most out of each of your core exercises:
- Avoid looking like an old donkey. When you forget to tighten your abdominal muscles, particularly the deepest layer (the transversus abdominis), your back sags in the middle. When Shirley was guest teaching at a resort in Jamaica, she saw an old donkey — the perfect example of this curved posture. Now, when she teaches core exercises, she always reminds her students not to look like old donkeys. To avoid donkey posture, draw your abdominals in toward your spine as you exhale and keep your abdominals contracted for the duration of the exercise.
- Don’t pop out your rib cage. Another good way to check whether your deep abdominal muscles are active is to look at the position of your rib cage. Draw your lower ribs in snug toward your spine. If your ribs flare up and out, your deep trunk stabilizers aren’t active. Tighten them up.
- Don’t stick your butt up in the air. When you’re training your abs and back in positions like the plank or a push-up, you need to rely on the strength of your core muscles and not your legs. You can always tell that you are cheating by relying on your leg strength if your butt is sticking up in the air. Make sure that it is no higher than your shoulders.
- When you exhale, always lift your pelvic floor up and pull your abdominals in toward your spine. The best way to activate your deep abdominals and pelvic floor muscles is by exhaling actively as you lift your muscles up and in. Exaggerate your exhalation as you do your core stabilization exercises to make sure that you’re using these muscles.
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