Popular :  Beauty  |  Weight Loss |  Staying Healthy  
  • Home
  • Diet & Fitness
  • Hair Loss
  • Health News
  • Mens Health
  • Mental Health
  • Staying Healthy
  • Weight Loss
  • Womens Health
Ounces of prevention? Women -- go for more!
Why More Women are HIV Positive

Strong Back and Great Legs

    Welcome to the second in a three part series designed to help you keep those New Year’s fitness resolutions. If you followed last month’s program for the arms and shoulders (if you haven’t, go out and get it!), then you should be ready to add to it with these exercises for legs and back!

    This is your program, designed for safety and busy schedules; the program is based on the most recent work of Dr Michael Colgan, Paul Chek and Constantine Darling.

    Team-up to double the fun, or ask a qualified trainer in your gym for assistance.

    Legs

    Leg extension: Use the isolation machine. Make sure you’re sitting straight. Keep your abdominal muscles engaged by sucking them up and pressing your back into the back rest. Lower the weight slowly.

    Leg curls: Use the isolation machine. Starting with the legs extended, lower the weight slowly. Bend the knees past 90°. Again, keep pressed tightly against the back rest.

    Squats: Stand, tummy firm, as shown. Squat and make sure your knees track over your big toe. Go down slow, and straighten up quickly.

    Lunges: Stand as above, and take a large step forward, and kneel–knee to the floor, now–and step back up, exhale as you do. Keep your abs engaged the whole time, sucking them up and in.

    Reverse back extension: Rest the hips on a support, as shown, let the legs hang over the side. Lift the legs in line with the body, and then lower them slowly. For an extra challenge, squeeze a ball the size of your head tightly between your ankles during the exercise. This will work your inner thigh muscles (stabilizers).

    Plié lunges: Stand, tummy tight, and step out to the side. Step the other leg behind, and kneel. Keep your back straight, and your front knee should track over your big toe.

    Back

    Kneeling dumbbell rows: Kneel on the bench as shown. Reach forward as though you are sawing a plank of wood. Pull back quick, extend slow. Keep the tummy firm, and back flat!
    Isolation pull-down: Sit on the cable machine as shown. Push the shoulder blades together as you pull the bar down. As you slooowwly let the bar rise, push your shoulder blades apart.

    Jockey rows: This one will work your legs as much as your back! Squat with legs slightly more than shoulder-width apart, as though you are sitting in a chair. Pull the lower pulley to the chest, and then slowly lower it.

    Assisted or negative pull-ups: Sit up straight! Ye trusty classic. Yes–it’s all right to cheat. You can use your legs to get up-but go down by yourself (as much as possible) with control. The more adventurous can hook a weight belt to your waist.

    Teres rhomboid: Grasp the top pulleys on your cross-cable machine and kneel as shown. Pull your elbows straight to your sides. Slowly let the weight out to the sides.

    Woodchop: (This is a favorite of Paul Chek, an American training expert.) Grasp the pulley with both hands, arm straight, and as though yielding an axe, pull on a diagonally downward angle. Great for golf.

    To recap from the arms and shoulders program: begin with a warm-up: A short jog will do–just enough to break a sweat, get the blood flowing, and joints oiled. And then, articulation of the deep core stabilizers. Lie on your back, knees bent, and as though you have a weighty golf ball on your spine, press one vertebrae at a time into the floor, from the base of the spine to the base of your neck. By placing your hands on your chest, you’ll be able to track the ball’s path. Do not miss a spot. Why? It benefits your vertebral disks, stimulates the deep lymphatic channels and increases mobilization (the neural warm-up and systems check) of the deep back and abdominal muscles.

Free newsletter

Fitness Programs

There are many fitness programs available these days all promising to be one of the best available the ideal one for you. There is no fitness program available

Out of the Boathouse

Rowing is one of those special old friends who will welcome you back at any time and tell you something new and wonderful. -Stephen Kiesling, author and former

Built Like a Greek God

Few men admit their desire to be physically attractive. Beauty, in its aesthetic sense, has long been pejoratively classified as effeminate. Yet this was not al

 
Home | Partner | Advertiser | FAQ | Privacy | Terms | Contact

Copyright © 2008 Netgoldex.com. All Rights Reserved.