dinsdag 16 december 2014

Reset & Warm up

A decent body prep is always obligatory preceding heavy training.
Not only for the sake of injury prevention but also to perform better.
A warm, sweaty body prepares the body for the incoming stress & strain a good training incorporates
Especially now during the winter days warming up is more than essential
Notice: puffing & sighing, being breathless can be symptoms of a warmup, BUT a decent warmup comes with the taste of SWEAT

Start every training with an "original strength"- sequence followed by some crawling
you'll be ready to go in no time!!!

A. ORIGINAL STRENGTH
 
Every Human body grows up with reflexive strength. As baby you cross a lot of motor skills that are intended to make us body strong & resilient against life. Rolling/nodding/rocking & crawling builds up a lot of motor control because it's a process meant to be gone through by every human being. We really destroyed our bodies since the age of 7 when we were put on a chair and never left it since.
Make your core stability stronger, tightly tying your body, increasing the reflexive strength & stability.
Make everything your body does, more efficient, from digestion to hormonal profiles, allowing to slow down the aging process just by following this sequence a few times a day. 
Because the origin of the sequence is based on the neuromotor development of babies this sequence is also called a "reset" for the body

A1. Neck Rolls
1 on each side
- Start supine on the floor, hands crossed on the body, feet together
- Initiate the roll from the eyes & lift the head up
- Feel the vertebrae rolling one by one from head to sacrum
- Don't use the foot, hip or pelvis to initiate the roll
- If you've done it right, you'll feel when you crossed the center the legs will naturally fall towards its place
- Roll back the same way
Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3aEbL8oCZY

A2. Arm Rolls
1 on each side
- Start supine on the floor, hands crossed on the body, feet together, hands overhead
- Initiate the roll from the eyes & lift the head and one arm up
- Start rolling by elongating the arm, you should feel the shoulder blade being pulled away
- Feel the vertebrae rolling one by one from head to sacrum
- Don't use the foot, hip or pelvis to initiate the roll
- If you done it right, you'll feel when you crossed the center the legs will naturally fall towards its place
- Roll back the same way
Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W6I0G3EHV7s


A3. Leg Rolls
1 on each side
- Start supine on the floor, hands crossed on the body, feet together, hands overhead
- Initiate the roll from one leg, bending the hip and the knee 90°
- Start rolling by crossing the leg over
- Feel the vertebrae rolling one by one from sacrum to head
- Don't use the head or arms to initiate the roll
- If you done it right, you'll feel when you crossed the center the arms & head will naturally fall towards its place
Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LzSfAiC400

A4. Prone neck nods
10 reps
- Start Prone on the ground, feet together, supporting on the forearms
- Chest up & strong
- Bring the chin towards the chest & try to feel the stretch in the back of the neck all the way down to the lower back
- Put the head up & elongate the neck to feel the stretch in the lower part of the chin, the chest and the abs 
video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPwsPiEBEYg


A5. Rocking
10 reps
- Start in a quadrupled position, knees a little broader, but in the same line of the hips
- Feet plantar flexed in the same line as the shin
- Elbows or hands right beneath the shoulders
- Create tension by pulling the shoulders back and pushing the chest up & strong, maintain a curved lower back
- Now remain the tension in the spine & arms while pulling the butt towards the heels
- Go as far as you can maintain the tension without losing the arch in the back
video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-mY8v_AaTY


A6x. 6-point-neck nods
 10 reps
- Stay in the lowest position of the rocking
- repeat the neck movement from the prone neck nods
A6y. 6-point-shoe look
 10 reps
- Stay in the lowest position of the rocking
- Look sideways to your heels one by one
- feel the upper back moving alone
video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6d3Inn_zeLc


A7. Baby crawls
 20 steps front and back
- Start in quadrupled position
- look and keep looking at the horizon
- Create tension by pulling the shoulders back and pushing the chest up & strong, maintain a curved lower back
- Crawl in a crossed pattern: the hand goes first, the opposite leg follows
- The dorsum of the feet stay on the ground (not shown in movie)
- Crawling backwards foot first, the opposite arm follows
video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePzzoUryf8k


CRAWLING

The crawl isn't so much different from the baby crawl presented in the original strength sequence, but it's way tougher. Here is how you perform it:

- toes straight
- knees low
- butt down
- chest up
- try to look forward
- Hand first, opposite leg follows (cross-pattern)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKK6NDktcfU&feature=youtu.be

Only if the forward crawl is going easy & steady you can progress to the backward crawl
Crawling is a very easy, yet tough way to get your body aligned & stable. Babies are the most strong and stable forms of human beings considering their size. Keeping their melon-sized head in balance on their little body requires a lot of strength and stability. Months of crawling eventually lead to us, walking warriors & moving ninja's.





Because it are only concentric movements, it doesn't need recovery or cooling down & is very suitable for warming ups & cooling downs
Get on the ground and crawl!!!!

All credits go to the amazing authors: Tim Anderson & Geoff Neupert
Read the book if you're more interested: BRAIN FOOD!!!

http://originalstrength.net/


The Road is the goal - Kaizen

maandag 8 december 2014

Improving the squat


Mastering a skill like a squat is actually "RE-learning" a natural resting position.
If we take a look at the asian & african regions squatting is actually a habit.
 



 Looking back to the days we played as kids, squatting was a very normal thing to do. We played on the ground sitting in a squat, we took sand & rocks as snack sitting in a squat, untill someday we lost the ability to do so.




We were made for squatting, moving & playing like kids. Somewhere during growing up we just lost our movement gamma. The amount of different "rich moves" as a child has been overwhelmed by the poor, static postures & movements we make as adults. Because of the invention of PC's, smartphones & videogames the age of immobility has already reached school-going youngsters

“Enrich yourself with the gamma of movement, the richer it is, the more of nature sudden surprises you can handle” -Ido Portal-

The big  culprit in this story is the "chair". From the time we entered  elementary school our bodies were doomed to alter.




Luckily this process is also reversible, we only need time to relearn the pattern again.
Our brain has a special ability called SAID (specific adaptations to imposed demands) or "neuroplasticity".
"The brain's ability to reorganize itself by forming new neural connections throughout life. Neuroplasticity allows the neurons (nerve cells) in the brain to compensate for injury and disease and to adjust their activities in response to new situations or to changes in their environment." 

Simply put:
"use it or lose it"
In most people's cases it'll sound more like "use it and regain it" 

Check this video explaining neuroplasticity

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Vo-rcVMgbI

learning a motor skill involves focusing attention on each part of the skill and internalizing proper execution. Like I said before, a squat isn't a skill to require, you are born to do this.
Remaster it, claim your movement freedom again & scour the grounds like we used to do.


Guidelines

First step: squat more often!!

these videos below where a big inspiration for me getting myself more on the ground, make sure you watch them. Gratitude for the inspiration towards Ido Portal & Kelly Starret.  

https://www.facebook.com/groups/30squat/
http://i2.wp.com/richardshealthmusings.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/30-Day-Squat-Challenge.jpg





For sedentary people, getting into a comfortable squat can take a long time
But rest assured --> SAID

The road is the goal - Kaizen
Good luck ninja's