Abdominal exercises
Lower abdominals:
Knee balancing
Lie on your back (dorsal decubitus position) with your knees bent,
soles of your feet on the floor and arms stretched and hands resting,
with the palms against the floor, next to your thighs. If it is
more comfortable, your hands may also be crossed behind your head,
without pushing it forward. Make sure that the entire spine is firmly
resting on the floor.
Look toward your navel, to force you to bend your neck forward
and rest the entire spine on the floor. You may keep your head supported
on a pillow or cushion; the aim is to keep this position as comfortably
as possible for you.
Now lift your knees toward your shoulders. It is normal that your
knees shall fail to touch them.
From this starting point, fix the upper part of the trunk and
the head and, keeping them still, slowly lift your buttocks off
the floor, vertically upward, balancing them, and make your knees,
with each movement, get closer to your shoulders. Once you have
reached a position in which your buttocks are as raised as possible,
hold this position for at least 1 second.
You must watch out for three things:
- First, this movement may be carried out only with the psoas,
which would be useless and even counterproductive. In order to
really make the abdominals work, imagine that a horizontal bar
crosses you from left to right just under the rib cage or under
your navel, and try to wrap yourself around it. You must not directly
move your knees; it must be the contraction of the abdominals
which causes the rocking.
- Secondly, if you do this movement correctly ("wrapping yourself
around" the imaginary bar) your spine will not separate from the
the floor, and on each rocking movement you will only notice how
your buttocks lift up from the floor toward your head. If you
should note that you are arching your back - making an arch between
the lumbar spine and the floor - this means the exercise is being
incorrectly performed. Stop and start again paying attention to
how you do it.
- Thirdly, when you lift your buttocks and rock your knees, you
must do this only as a result of pelvic movement. Neither the
chest nor the head must get closer to the knees, and you must
make sure they are both fixed and immobilized. Due to the contraction
of the lower abdominals, the pelvis will move forward and the
knees will approach the chest. If you do it like this, you will
notice the muscular effort in the lower part of the abdominals
and the pelvis. If you should also move the chest toward the knees,
you will notice the pull in the upper abdominals and the lower
rib area. If this is so, stop and start again, ensuring that your
chest is perfectly still.
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