Tag Archive for: core strengthening

The Right and Wrong Way to Strengthen Your Core

Good core strength is an important and vital component to life long health. Everyone knows that it’s an important factor in preventing low back pain, but having good core strength also helps you with your balance, overall stability, posture, and it can be crucial in helping you prevent injuries. Not only that, but when you have good core strength, you simply feel better, and have more confidence to do all the activities you love.

But when it comes to core strength, there’s a right and a wrong way about it.

And when you get it wrong, you’re looking at more back problems, pelvic health issues, and even neck and shoulder pain.

Here are some of the most common ways I see people getting core strength wrong – and what you can do to make it right:

 

1. All you do is crunches

Crunches are often considered to be a staple exercise when it comes to core strengthening. But growing evidence tells us that too many crunches may actually be detrimental to the health of your spine. When you perform an abdominal crunch – it typically involves lying on your back, bending your knees, and lifting your shoulders off the ground towards your knees.

This movement puts a lot of stress on your spine – especially when done incorrectly. If your core strengthening routine consists entirely of crunching – the repeated flexion of your spine will eventually lead to wear and tear on the discs in both your back and your neck.

What to do instead…

First – crunches aren’t “bad” for you. The problem is that people inherently do them wrong. I’ve been a back pain expert for over 10 years and I constantly see people doing this exercise incorrectly. If you’re going to incorporate crunches into your core strengthening routine – make sure you are doing them with proper form, proper technique, and with proper breathing. But even if you are doing crunches perfectly, you still need to include other exercises into your core strengthening routine. You have to balance out the forces on your spine and target other muscle groups that are equally important to a good, strong core.

Exercises such as planks, bird dogs, and bridges are some of my favorites. These exercises target your glutes and back muscles, and will reverse some of the stress caused by over-flexing of your spine.

2. You’re not breathing

You can’t activate your deep core if you don’t breathe properly. Your deep core consists of four parts: your deepest abdominal muscles; pelvic floor muscles, deepest back muscles, and your diaphragm. These four muscle groups work together to control intra-abdominal pressure – which is essential to facilitating a strong deep core connection. If something is off in this system, your intra-abdominal pressure will be distorted, which can create more pressure on structures such as your lumbar discs and pelvic floor region. Also, your bigger core muscles (like your outer abdominals, psoas, larger back muscles, and hips) will overwork or not work correctly.

What to do instead…

While there are good, better, and best ways to breathe when performing core exercises – I always say that when in doubt – just breathe. If you’re breathing, you give your deep core a fighting chance at activating properly. The reason being is because your diaphragm is your main breathing muscle. It relaxes and contracts with normal breath. When you hold your breath, your diaphragm stays contracted. That’s part of what disrupts the intra-abdominal pressure in your deep core. It’s also a good idea to incorporate Yoga or Pilates into your core routine. Both of these exercise practices emphasize breath as a central component and it can teach you how to breathe properly when exercising.

3. You aren’t incorporating rotational movements

Our bodies don’t interact with the world via straight-planed motions. We are constantly twisting, turning, and reacting to our environment in a variety of different ways. One of the biggest mistakes I see when it comes to core training is that people keep it very straight forward (no pun intended) and too simple. You can have a perfectly planned core strengthening routine that hits every muscle group but if you don’t challenge those muscle groups with different angles and combined multi-plane movements, your body gets lazy.

What to do instead…

Well, the obvious answer is to add rotational movements into your core routine.

But what does that look like?

You can add rotation as a challenge to almost anything. If you’re in a plank – rotate to your side and twist your arm up to the ceiling in between each rep. When you’re doing crunches – add cross body reaches each time you lift your head and chest. Rotational movements can also be incorporated into balance work – which inherently works your core.

Once you’ve mastered single leg activities – whether it be standing, stepping up, or lunging – you can add a twist or a reach to the end posture as you hold the movement. The possibilities are quite endless and you can get really creative. The point here is to not be “square”, and add variety to your core strengthening routine so that you mimic real life.

So how does your core strength training routine measure up? Have you been doing it right or wrong?

Here at CJPT & Pilates our favorite way to strengthen the core and whole body is through Pilates. If you’re struggling with pain or just getting started, I recommend consulting with an expert. They’ll be able to guide you in the right direction and set you up for success.

Are you local to Portsmouth, NH and interested in trying Pilates? CLICK HERE to schedule a call with one of my specialists. Learn more about Pilates and see if you would be a good fit!

Dr. Carrie Jose, Physical Therapist and Pilates expert, owns CJ Physical Therapy & Pilates in Portsmouth and writes for Seacoast Media Group. To get in touch, email her at [email protected].

Five Ways Adding Pilates to your Life will Enhance your Fitness.

Pilates has been around for about 100 years, and it still amazes me how many people have NOT heard of this incredible exercise method. It was first created by Joseph Pilates and initially gained popularity among the dance community as a way to recover from and prevent injuries. But you don’t have to be a dancer to practice Pilates — or enjoy the benefits. 

We’ve been incorporating Pilates into our physical therapy practice for the last 10 years and it’s been transformational for both our clients AND our practice.

Pilates is a full body strengthening system that emphasizes breath, precision, coordination, and core strength. It helps our clients connect to their bodies in a way that they haven’t been able to achieve with traditional strengthening methods. Most of my clients are well into their 50’s, 60’s, and 70’s, and they love Pilates because it helps them have more energy, better balance, improved strength, and more mobility. It allows them to participate in all the activities they love with more ease, and most importantly, significantly decreases their risk for injury.

Here are five reasons why I personally love adding Pilates to any fitness routine, and why you should consider adding it to yours too!

1. Pilates helps prevent back pain.

Once you hit 40, your risk of back injury starts to climb. We specialize in back pain, so see a lot of folks with this problem in our office. They’ve often worked with traditional physical therapists or chiropractors in the past to successfully get rid of back pain in the short term, but it keeps coming back. And our clients want it gone for the long-term. A regular practice of Pilates is a safe and sustainable way to help keep your back pain-free. It focuses on core strength but is also a well-balanced exercise system. Full body strength and balance is a critical component for life-long back health, and it is not always addressed in traditional back rehabilitation programs or treatments.

2. Pilates strengthens your whole body, not just your core.

One of the keys to truly enhancing your fitness is what I call “balanced strength.” That’s when each part of your body works together to produce the right amount of force, at the right time, to do your favorite activity in the most efficient way possible. Efficiency means you’ll be able to do it for longer and with more ease. We see lots of strong people in our office, and they can’t understand why they’re in pain. It’s entirely possible to be “strong,” but still have certain muscles working harder than others. This creates an imbalance, which eventually leads to problems. Pilates emphasizes full body strength that is coordinated, which helps promote balanced strength throughout your body and leads to fewer injuries over time.

3. Pilates helps you get more flexible and mobile.

Do you stretch your hamstrings every single day and get frustrated because they’re still tight? It’s probably because you’re not stretching the right way. What I love about Pilates is that it stretches your body in a dynamic way – with movement – so that muscles lengthen the right way. The days of statically holding a stretch for 30 seconds are long gone. Plus, mobility is extremely important for strength. Muscles work better when your joints move fully and freely. “Mobility before stability” is a phrase you hear daily in our office. And Pilates is a great way to get your joints and muscles mobile while ALSO promoting stability.

4. Pilates puts minimal stress on your joints.

Aging is a real thing, and along with it comes arthritis. The key to combating arthritis is optimizing the area around the affected joint or joints. When you have good mobility, and balanced strength, you have less compressive forces around your joints.  Arthritis doesn’t like compressed, crowded joints. So when you strengthen and stretch your whole body in a good, balanced way – arthritis becomes less painful and stiff. Pilates helps with all this and doesn’t cause any added stress on your joints. There’s a good reason you see lots of folks in their 60’s and 70’s enjoying our classes.

5. Pilates trains your nervous system.

Huh? Is that even a thing? Yes it is – and it’s almost ALWAYS the missing link for people who feel stuck, or can’t seem to get beyond a certain point in their fitness. It can also be the reason why an activity you’ve been doing “for years” suddenly becomes problematic or painful. If you don’t train your nervous system, it gets lazy, and compensations will develop in your body. Compensations lead to problems when unchecked. Since Pilates is a mind-body exercise, it helps to keep the communication between your brain and your muscles fresh. Pilates emphasizes precise and coordinated movements, which enhance and reinforces this connection.  In other words, your nervous system can’t get lazy when you do Pilates!

If you’re not yet incorporating Pilates into your fitness or rehab routine — what are you waiting for?

As a specialist physical therapist it’s my go-to exercise system for folks over 40 and my favorite way to help people keep their back pain gone.  We’re actually re-launching our signature 8 week program, Pilates 101 ! Pilates 101 is completely dedicated to folks who are new to Pilates, or who have back pain and want to learn how to develop a safe core-strengthening routine. If you want more information, just click here!