6 Exercises to Stimulate Your Abs
By: Jonathan Ross
When it comes to the abs there is training for “show” and for “go.” The distinction between form and function is often misrepresented as an either/or choice. But I believe you can have both—proper function and great looking muscles.
Show
The abs get a lot of work in many non-ab exercises, but to get the look people are after when they think of “nice abs,” some direct abdominal training is typically necessary. Direct ab training also provides the additional benefit of giving you a sense of which muscles are working at various points in a movement. This awareness allows for more accurate ab muscle contraction when you are doing full body exercises.
Go
The abs also have several jobs to do:
- They help us flex, extend and rotate the torso in everyday life.
- They have to move at various speeds.
- They create both movement (mobility) and prevent or accommodate movement (stability).
This challenging series of ab exercises hits upon all of the jobs our abs do.
A note about stability and mobility: most exercises exhibit both, but one of the two is considered the more dominant characteristic for each movement.
Shin Balance Leg Lowering
Performance Tips:
- Extend and lower the legs only as much as the stability of your abs will allow. Any increase or decrease in the space between your low back and the ground means your abs are not maintaining a neutral low back. Once that starts to happen, you’ve gone beyond the limit of your range of motion.
- The ball resting on the shins forces you to move slowly so pay attention to the feedback the ball provides.
Tripod Plank with Leg Switch
Performance Tips:
- Maintain stiffness in the trunk and support leg.
- Adjust work interval time as necessary to provide a challenge while allowing for solid performance. When your abs fatigue you’ll notice the early signs of slight arching in your low back. This should be avoided. It’s best to perform really well on a shorter work interval rather than perform poorly on a longer one.
Torso Offset Crunch on Ball
Performance Tips:
- The recommendation to avoid crunches is an overstatement of their relative risk. This variation ignites more of your ab muscles by putting you slightly off-center from the ball.
- You only need a very small shift to make this work. Less is more.
- Move with slow, controlled intention through full range of motion.
- Perform three reps shifted to one side; then perform the next three reps shifted to the other side. Continue alternating in this manner until you’ve finished the set.
Mt. Skater
Performance Tips:
- Try to create a little hang time and land with each foot wide.
- When tucking the bent leg in, use the momentum from the quick movement to reach the bent knee toward the opposite arm.
- Keep your hips low when you land as they may tend to creep up if you allow your feet to move closer to your hands.
Lateral Rolling Plank on Ball
Performance Tips:
- The start isn’t the hardest part; it’s the sides. You’ll need to hit the brakes as your body rotates around to finish with the ball on the back of your upper arm.
- As soon as you stop rotating one way, reverse direction immediately. If you stop for too long, you’ll lose the stored energy in your muscles that you need to smoothly begin rotating to the other side.
Iso-Tuck Knee Tuck
Performance Tips:
- Tuck the non-moving leg in as far as you can. This helps work the abs harder on that side and also helps prevent any loss of integrity in low back position when your other leg extends.
- Move at a controlled tempo and resist the urge to speed up to finish as you fatigue. Ensure every movement of your body is happening because you are creating it rather than allowing momentum to move you.
Wrap Up
Start by completing one set of each of these exercises. Perform them three times per week. After two weeks, repeat the circuit of six exercises twice. You should feel a challenge when you do the workout and feel how you’re moving more mindfully in your abs when you aren’t working out.
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