Tuesday 13 August 2013

Yoga Positions to Improve Walking Workouts

Yoga Positions to Improve Walking Workouts

Yoga Poses for Walkers

Whether you want to work your hamstrings or hips, these easy routines will make you stronger and more flexible

iyl walkers blue
Whether you walk to relax, energize, or burn calories, walking is an easy way to build your fitness levels and enjoy the great outdoors--not to mention relieve stress and recharge your energy supplies. But, be careful--you might be tightening your hips, hamstrings, and lower back. Yoga can help by stretching and conditioning the muscles that are essential to walking properly. Try these yoga positions to complement and enhance your walking workouts. You'll find that over time these yoga positions will also help improve your overall sense of well-being.

1. The Pose: Forward Bend


Good for: Hamstrings and lower back
How to do it: Stand with your feet shoulder-distance apart and take a deep breath. Then inhale and bring your arms overhead, lengthening your body. Exhale and slide your hands down the front of your legs. Place them either above or below your knees as you lift your sit bones. Bring your chest to your knees. "By dropping your chest through, you get a stretch at the origin of your hamstrings--your sit bones," says Argie Tang, founder of Yoga for Athletes in Vail, Colorado. If you're flexible you can slide your hands to your ankles, keeping your back flat and legs firm. If not, bend your knees and keep your back flat. Rounding your back cancels out the hamstring stretch. Keep your shoulders down, away from your ears. Hold there for 20 breaths.
Release your hands and cross your arms at the elbows or clasp elbows. Hang out there, with your neck loose, for as long as you are comfortable, working up to a minute. This gives you the benefit of an inversion with blood flowing to your head and glands. Come out by slowly bending your knees and rolling up, vertebra by vertebra.

2. The pose: Crescent Lunge

Good for: Hip flexors
How to do it: Go into a lunge position, making sure your front knee is at a 90-degree angle, thighs parallel to one another. Your feet should be shoulder-distance apart. Press through the heel of your back leg. Raise your arms up above your head--but make sure you don't raise the shoulders up too. Flatten out the front of the hips by tucking the tailbone in slightly until you feel the lower back lengthen and your abs draw in. This pelvic tilt allows a deeper stretch into the hip flexors (or psoas muscle), Tang says. Hold for 20 breaths.

3. The pose: Cat pose


Good for: Lower back
How to do it: Kneel on all fours with your hands under your shoulders and knees under your hips, shoulder-distance apart. Inhale and lift your tailbone to the ceiling, exhale rounding your tailbone back down and under. Imagine that you look like an angry cat. On the inhale look up and bring your chest up. On the exhale, look down toward your navel, drawing your spine and abs to the ceiling. Repeat five times. Cat pose loosens your back after the compression caused by walking.

4. The pose: Plank


Good for: Upper-body strength
How to do it: From a pushup position (as though you are about to go toward the floor), with your body in a straight line (think of an alligator), draw your abs in to support your lower back. Keep the shoulders in line with the hips and ankles. The hips can be slightly higher than the shoulders but not lower. The goal is to hold the pose for 60 seconds, so start at 20 and gradually build it up. If your lower back is straining, drop to your knees but keep the lift in the chest and under the arms. From there sit back and rest with your chest to the floor and hands relaxed in front of your body.

Poses for Treadmill Walkers

If your walking routine involves hoofing it on a treadmill, your lower body is getting a good workout, but some parts might need loosening up. "On a treadmill, your hips and hamstrings will get toned but tight," says Robin Levine, owner of Intelligent Yoga in New York City. Adding these poses to your routine will stretch your body and add definition to your arms without further exhausting your legs.
1. The pose: Dead Bug

Good for:
Hamstrings, hips, lower back
How to do it: Lying on your back, hug your knees to your chest. Then, reach up and grab the outside of your feet and open your legs so your knees are along your body, shins perpendicular to the floor. Dead Bug opens up your hamstrings and hips, and releases your lower back, says Kimberly Fowler, founder of the YAS Yoga and Spinning Studio in Venice, California. Hold for 10 breaths before bringing your knees back to your chest and gently rocking side to side.

2. The pose: Side Plank

Good for: Upper body, arms, wrists, balance How to do it: Start on all fours--fingers spread wide, wrists under the shoulders, knees under the hips. Extend the left leg back and rotate the thigh upwards. This action results in your left hip stacking on top of your right hip. The kneecap and toes face left as you bring the entire bottom of the foot to touch the floor. Raise your left hand and extend it skyward so you have one long, straight line from middle finger to shoulders to right wrist. For an added challenge you will stack your ankles left on top of right requiring you to balance on the right arm, lift the hips and extend the legs. Use your abdomen to stabilize this balance. The only body parts touching the floor are your right palm and the inside edge of the right foot. Breathe and lengthen as much as you can in the torso and through the arms for that long, strong feeling. Hold for 3-5 full breaths. On your last exhale, return to your hands and knees and repeat to the left.  Or if it's natural for you, come right into Plank pose and do this on the other side.

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  Fitness challenges for a stronger, fitter you

Yes, you can do these fit body moves!

Doing a push-up or holding a wall squat till your thighs burn isn't just about pushing yourself to your limit over some crazy, seemingly impossible goal. These are fitness challenges you can accomplish not just to brag (well, you can), but because they tone your arms, flatten your belly, and improve your fitness levels so you feel and look even better.
Each of these 7 mini-challenges offers you beginner moves and more advanced variations, so start at the appropriate level for you and progress as you get stronger and more flexible. We've got tips to help you master each move at your own pace.
What are you waiting for? Choose your challenge and get started!
Plank Pose

Plank Pose

Why It's Good: Holding a plank pose with proper form is hard because it challenges your entire body to work harder. Your hips want to lift to give your core a break; your chest wants to sink so your shoulders aren’t engaged; your knees want to bend because it seems like it’ll make everything easier. But each of these tweaks only means you’re cheating yourself out of a powerful full-body toner. Meet the challenge by building up stamina gradually and pretty soon you’ll be a plank pro! Work on this 3 times a week.
Get Started: (image A) 1) Come to all fours with wrists under shoulders, knees positioned directly under your hips. 2) Lift your right leg and straighten it behind you; flex your foot so your right heel is up, toes are pointing down. Lift your left arm straight in front of you, reaching your left fingertips away from your right leg. Pull your abs in, hold for 10 seconds. Look straight down so that you aren’t lifting your head or dropping your chin. Come back to all fours. 3) Repeat, alternating sides for 5 rounds.
Make It Harder: 1) Start on all fours. Walk your hands about six inches forward. Shift your shoulders over your wrists to lift your feet off the floor. Look at the floor about a foot in front of you. Don’t sag in your belly and back, you want to find a long, straight line through your head and your butt. Be careful not to sink your chest down between your shoulders; press into the hands to engage the upper back. 2) Hold this modified plank for 10 seconds. 3) Lift your right knee off the ground to straighten your leg. Then extend your left leg. Hold for 5 seconds and bring the knees back down. Repeat 3 rounds.
Try the Challenge: (image B) 1) Start on all fours. Extend your right leg behind you, ball of the foot on the ground and heel lifted. Extend your left leg back, so the inner feet touch. Reach the top of your head away from your heels so your gaze is a few inches forward of your fingers and your neck is relaxed. 2) Pull in belly and hold for 20 seconds. Rest for 30 seconds and repeat.
Wall Squat

all Squat

Why It's Good: Thigh exercises are a pain, generally speaking. But it doesn’t mean they don’t have some pretty amazing benefits! Our bodies like to store fat below the waist, but you can fight back against excess flab by building lower body strength. A recent study found that strengthening your quad muscles helps you walk faster, which helps you burn fat more quickly. A wall squat strengthens your hamstrings, quads, butt, and lower ab muscles while building stamina for other lower-body whittlers. Try this 3 times a week on nonconsecutive days. (Squats too tough on your joints? See how you can love your lower body sans squats and sit-ups.)
Get Started: (image A) 1) Stand with your back and head against a wall. Walk your feet forward about 18 inches, shoulder-width apart. Your arms will be hanging straight from your sides, palms facing into the wall. Keeping your head and back against the wall, slide down until your knees are at about a 90-degree angle or less. 2) Keeping your feet where they are, push your back into the wall to slide up to stand with the legs straight. Pause for a breath, then slide back down to a squat. Pause, then slide up to stand. Do this 15 times, but never squat so deeply that your hips drop below the level of your knees.
Make It Harder: 1) Stand with your back and head against a wall. Walk your feet forward about 18 inches, shoulder-width apart. Your arms will be hanging straight from your sides, palms facing into the wall. Keeping your head and back against the wall, slide down until your knees are at about a 90-degree angle or less. 2) Hold this position for 15 seconds.
Try the Challenge: (image B) Repeat the move, holding for 30 seconds. Repeat two more times, resting in between. Later try for 45 seconds, and eventually 60 seconds. For an even greater challenge, try doing a squat against an exercise ball.
Pilates Hundred

Pilates Hundred

Why It's Good: Experts say the best ab exercises are those that engage the deepest stomach muscles to pull in your waistline like a corset. The classic Pilates Hundred works the arms and contracts the core and teaches you to coordinate your breath and movements. Practice this 3 times a week. Eventually you'll build up to 100 arm pumps, hence the name of the move. (Check out even more ways you can power up with pilates.)
Get Started: (image A) 1) Lie on your back with your arms at your sides, palms facing down. Bend your knees so your feet are flat on the floor, under your knees. 2) Lift your head, neck and chest up off the floor. Gazing at your knees, or tucking your chin into your chest, lift your arms up, palms facing down. If this is too hard on your neck and shoulders, keep them on the floor. 3) Inhale. Press your palms down rhythmically as you exhale five short breaths, pumping your hands with each breath. Then turn your palms up, and press up rhythmically with five short inhales to complete one set. Aim for 25 breaths.
Make It Harder: 1) Start lying on your back. Bend your legs to form a 90-degree angle so your knees are directly over your hips and your calves are parallel to the floor. Scoop your belly in so your low back is flat on the floor. 2) Exhale as you lift your head, shoulders, and arms off the floor. The gaze is on the knees. Again, if your neck is uncomfortable, keep your head and shoulders on the floor. 3) Inhale. Press your palms down rhythmically as you exhale five short breaths, pumping your hands with each breath. Then turn your palms up, and press up rhythmically with five short inhales to complete one set. Aim for 50 breaths.
Try the Challenge: (image B) 1) With the same set-up as above, this time straighten your legs so they’re on a 45-degree diagonal off the floor. 2) Aim for a complete set of 100 breaths and arm-pumps. For a bigger challenge, loop an exercise band around the tops of your shins to create resistance.
Cross-Legged Stretch

Cross-Legged Stretch

Why It's Good: When you sit on the floor cross-legged, do your knees stick up high in the air? If so, it’s because your inner thighs and hips are tight. We lose flexibility with age due to a decrease in tendon strength and an increase in tendon rigidity, making muscles and joints difficult to move. Improving your flexibility makes daily life easier--you can play on the floor with your kids and bend down to fill up the dog bowl without straining your back muscles. Plus, stretching and relieving tension in your hips makes for better sex! (Not to mention it's key in getting a long, lean body.) Try to work in three to six sessions a week.
Get Started: Seated Butterfly (image A) 1) From a seated position on the floor, bring the soles of your feet together, knees out into a diamond shape. If your knees are lifted, you can put blocks underneath them. 2) Sit up very tall, lifting the chest. Clasp your hands around your feet or shins. Focus on drawing the knees away from one another to open your inner thighs. If it’s hard to sit up straight, try this sitting against a wall. Hold for 20 seconds.
Make It Harder: Forward-Folding Butterfly 1) From a seated position on the floor, bring the soles of your feet together, knees out into a diamond shape. If your knees are lifted, you can put blocks underneath them. 2) Sitting up very tall, walk your hands in front of you as far as you can with a straight spine. Then allow the spine to round and drop the head and chin down. 3) Breathe all the way into your belly to open the hips. Hold for 10 seconds. To come out, bring your hands to the backs of your thighs to bring the knees together.
Try the Challenge: Straddle with Forward Fold (image B) 1) Sit with the soles of your feet together, as above. Straighten your right leg out to the right, then your left leg to the left. Sit up tall and lift your chest. Flex your feet so your toes are going straight up to the ceiling. 2) Walk your hands forward as far as you can go with a straight spine. Then allow the spine to round and drop the head and chin down. 3) Breathe into your low belly. Hold for 10 seconds. Carefully walk your hands in towards you to come back.
Do a Set of Full Push-Ups

Do a Set of Full Push-Ups

Why It's Good: Push-ups are the most efficient exercise for time-strapped women who want a total-body toning. (Just ask First Lady Michelle Obama!) This do-anywhere, no-equipment move tones your chest, arms, and shoulders; strengthens your back and abs; and also works your butt and legs. To master full push ups, start standing up, and work your way down to the floor. Try this instead of knee-down "girl" pushups because you’ll use more muscles. When you can do at least 5 reps in good form (body in line from head to heels), move to the next step. Work on each move 3 times a week on nonconsecutive days, doing 10-15 reps each time.
Get Started: (image A) 1) Stand about 3 feet away from a high counter or desk. Place hands flat on top near the edge. Your body should be in a straight line from head to heels with hands beneath shoulders are much as possible. 2) Bend your elbows out to the sides and slowly lower your chest to the edge of the table. Keep your head in line with your spine; don’t tuck your chin or look up. With control, push back up to start.
Make It Harder: By lowering your body closer to the ground, you’ll bring more of a challenge to your shoulders and arms then when you’re standing and your legs take more weight. 1) Place your hands on the edge of a stable chair or the second step of a staircase. Walk your feet back until your body is in a straight line and your shoulders are right over your wrists. 2) Bend your elbows out to your sides and lower your chest to the edge of the surface. Carefully push up to start. 3) You can also try adding in more levels for a more gradual challenge, moving from desk to chair, then to 2 stairs, then to 1 stair and the floor.
Try the Challenge: (image B) After trying the steps above, come down to the floor. Mix in a full pushup with the building block moves above as you get stronger. 1) Place hands on floor directly beneath shoulders. Extend legs behind you so you are balancing on hands and balls of feet. Keep head, neck, back, butt, and legs in straight line. 2) Bend elbows out to sides and lower body almost to floor. Keep abs tight and body in a line. Hold for a second, then push back up.

Toe Touch

Touch Your Toes With Ease

Why It's Good: Forward-bending opens up the back of the body, including hamstrings, calves, and hips, making you more limber. A flexible body means less pain and fewer injuries, so it's easier to handle everyday tasks like tying shoelaces. Stretching maximizes the benefits of strength training and helps your muscles recover from exercise. Try stretching slowly and deliberately at least 3 days a week to enhance your range of motion and improve flexibility.
Get Started: (image A) Use a resistance band, rolled up towel, or belt 1) Lie on your back with both legs straight on the floor. Bend your right knee and put the center of the band around the ball of your right foot. 2) Holding on to both ends of the strap in your hands, straighten your right leg, foot flexed, and pull it toward your head. Let there be enough slack in the strap to fully straighten the leg. Flex both feet. Your gaze is straight up to the ceiling. 3) Gently create resistance with your band by pulling down to open the back of your leg. Raise your leg as far as comfortably possible. Hold for 30 seconds and carefully release. Your goal is to be able to hold your leg at a 90-degree angle (or even closer) to your upper body. Switch sides.
Make It Harder: (image B) 1) Sit with both legs extended straight in front of you. Loop the strap around the balls of both feet. Sit up tall so your spine is straight and your chest is lifting. Flex your feet. Look forward at your toes. 2) Keeping your spine long, slowly begin to bend at your hips to bring your chest towards your knees, as close as comfortably possible. Choke up the band, moving your hands closer to your feet, as you become more flexible. 3) Hold for 30 seconds and release. Eventually, you’ll remove the strap and be able to reach your toes with your hands, but use the strap to help you along the way.
Try the Challenge: 1) Stand with your feet hip-distance apart. Bend your knees and tuck your chin into your chest to roll down your spine, folding forward. Touch your fingers to the floor in front of your toes and straighten your legs. 2) If you can’t reach your toes, bend your knees slightly and slowly work on straightening the legs. Hold for 30 seconds. Ease tight hips and hamstrings with these yoga stretches.

Pilates Swimming

Pilates "Swimming"

Why It's Good: A strong spine is not only sexy (goodbye, bra and back fat!), it’s also essential for good posture so we don’t "shrink" as we age. This "swimming" move from Pilates strengthens back and butt muscles, the backs of the arms and legs, and stretches the shoulders, chest, and abs. A strong lower back protects you from injury when you’re moving a heavy laundry basket and picking up loads of groceries. Bonus: It’ll perk up your tush because it works the tops of the thighs and the butt muscles. Do this 3 times a week on nonconsecutive days.
Get Started: (image A) 1) Lie on your stomach with your arms extended in front of you. Legs are straight and squeezed together. Squeeze your butt and abs and imagine you’re drawing everything into your belly button. 2) Keeping your legs on the floor, lift your upper chest and flutter your arms up and down like you’re swimming. Do this for 10 breaths and bring your head and arms back down to the floor.
Make It Harder: Lying on your stomach, keep your arms and head down. You can use your hands as a resting spot for your forehead. Lift your legs and kick them up and down without touching the ground. Do this for 10 breaths.
Try the Challenge: (image B) 1) Lying on your stomach, this time lift your arms and legs simultaneously and alternately kick the legs and arms like you’re swimming. 2) Continue until you’ve inhaled and exhaled for 5 seconds, then release. Do 3 sets. Eventually work your way up to minute.

Monday 12 August 2013

Back Exercises That Eliminate Back Fat

Back Exercises That Eliminate Back Fat

3 Moves For A Firmer Back

Get on the ball for a better rear view


There's nothing more frustrating than pulling on your favorite jeans—only to see there's a bit of extra bulge above the waist. Sigh. The good news is that you can help banish stubborn back fat—and firm your butt while you're at it!—by adding these moves to your usual workout.
Do two sets of 15 reps of each, three times a week. Bonus: A strong back also helps prevent aches and improves posture, so you'll look better in any outfit.

Back Extension 

A: Lie with abdomen on ball (available at most sporting goods stores), with upper body and neck parallel to floor. Place hands behind head and rest feet wider than shoulder-width apart on floor behind you.
B: Slowly raise upper body so that chest is several inches higher than ball. Hold for 3 seconds. Return to starting position and repeat.
Don't ...raise back higher than is comfortable
Tip: If you're struggling to keep the ball steady, do this move with feet against a wall.


Reverse Back Extension

A: Lie with pelvis on ball. Place hands beneath shoulders on floor in front of ball. Rest feet on floor behind you.
B: Slowly lift legs, keeping knees straight, until ankles and back of head are in line. Hold for 3 seconds, then return to starting position and repeat.
Don't...raise legs higher than head

Child's Pose With Twist

For a back stretch, kneel behind ball with palms on top of it. Sit back onto heels and roll ball forward so head is between arms. Hold for 30 seconds. Roll ball and twist to right as shown above. Hold for 30 seconds, then repeat to left side just once.

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