Push-Up Exercise Tips for More Muscle Power
Enjoy Whole-Body Strengthening Without Any Fancy Equipment!
A great body position on push-ups, makes the exercise so much easier to do! And with great technique you’ll be getting a lot more bang for your buck from every repetition to improve your upper body strength and fitness.
Push-ups in Pilates normally are done at the end of a Mat workout, but they’re a great exercise that you can do anytime, anywhere without any fancy equipment to maintain your fitness.
To Start the Exercise:
- Stand with your feet in a V-position, arms extended over your head.
- Walk your hands down the front of your body while you bend forward to reach the floor.
- Walk your hands out on the mat taking 3-5 steps to get into a long and strong push-up position.
While you are getting into your push-up position…the following things should happen in this order:
- Heels lengthen away from the head
- Tailbone tucks under and reaches towards the heels
- Lower abdominals lift up and in
- Glutes & Inner thighs squeeze
- Shoulder blades pull down the back
- Spine lengthens through the top of the head
To do a Push-Up and keep a great body position, the sequence of what happens is really important.
Inhale to lower the whole-body, exhale, pull the low belly up, shoulders down, then engage the muscles under the shoulders, around the ribcage and into the belly to help lift the body up while straightening the arms.
Here’s a video clip with my fitness tips and a Push-Up demo to help you improve your body position and Push-Up power.
Have Fun Practicing Your Push-Ups!
OH…….The Neck Pull – by Guest Blogger, Julie A. Schonfeld
This post is brought to you by guest blogger, and Pilates Teacher, Julie A. Schonfeld. Julie owns Pilates-Barre Studio in Farmington Hills, Michigan. To read more posts on Julie’s blog go to: http://pilatesforthepeople.blogspot.com
Is this exercise everyone’s nemesis or what? Is it because the abs are tired by the time we get to it? Let’s break this one down a bit.
Start lying down on your back with feet as wide as your mat flexed (or slightly wider than hip width apart). There are two different placements for the hands. Place your hands to your forehead elbows wide or behind the neck.
Start to bring the chin to the chest on the inhale and then exhale to round all the way up and over into a round back with the head towards the knees and the belly in. Gently stack the spine to an upright, seated position on the inhale and then gently roll back down one vertebrae at a time till your laying flat on the mat. Exhale at about the halfway point of the rolldown. I’ll save the flat back and twist variations for another day.
I’m taking a guess that most of you got stuck at the chin to the chest part right?
Here’s some helpful hints to get up past that hump.
1. Watch the position of your pelvis. It should be gently flattened with the ribcage closed.
2. Make sure to let out that exhale as soon as you begin the roll up. It is the exertion portion of the exercise.
3. Still having problems? Try securing your feet under something to keep them down. Maybe a strap, under the couch or have someone hold them down.
4. Use light weights (2 or 3lbs.) and hold them in the hands.
Keep in mind that this one is tricky for most people. Mat thickness, core strength and spinal articulation are other factors that make it tough to roll up.
Practice makes perfect. Keep pulling away at it.
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Thanks Julie! Great Tips!! Learn more about Julie and check out her Pilates blog
Do you have any helpful hints that make it easier for you to do or teach Neck Pull? If so, please leave a comment below and share your tips. Help your fellow Pilates enthusiasts learn to love Neck Pull! And change that “OH……” to “AHHHHH – that was Easy!”
