Get
Off Your Rear!
by Stephen Holt
How You Can Use More Muscles, Burn More Fat and Work Your Abs,
Low Back and Thighs All at the Same Time with this One Simple
Change in Your Workout
Why
do people sit while lifting weights?
Sounds
like an oxymoron, doesn’t it? Most will reply, “That’s the way
I learned to do this exercise,” without taking into account that
they may have learned a less efficacious method for achieving
their goals.
An
argument can be made that seated exercises work the target muscle
“better.” That’s true to a degree.
But
is that your goal? Should it be your goal?
If
your goal is strictly bodybuilding, then seated exercises are
great. Bodybuilders care only about the muscles that show and
care little about the “unsung” muscles that many bodybuilders
have never even heard of.
For
example, did you know that muscle weakness in the lumbar multifidus
and transversus abdominis have been correlated to the incidence
of low back pain?
Did
you also know that standing exercises can work these muscles effectively,
yet the seated versions of the same exercises do not work these
muscles at all?
It’s
also important to note that, at least in healthy people without
back pain, the transversus abdominis (TA) is the first muscle
to fire with most movements of the arm or leg.
That
means that if you are not working the TA, you may be developing
a faulty motor pattern, that is, your muscles are not working
in the order and with the relative timing that they need for coordinated,
efficient and safe movement.
Maximizing
the size of certain muscles - as in performing traditional body
building exercises - often means making sacrifices in other areas
of the body.
If, however, you are interested in improving performance and function
outside of the weight room, seated exercises may predispose you
to injury.
Seated
exercises do a great job of working the target muscles, but do
nothing to exercise the stabilizing muscles, especially the stabilizers
of the trunk.
It’s these other muscles that you need to use concomitantly with
the prime movers in the real world.
Otherwise,
you are creating an imbalance between the prime movers and the
stabilizers.
A joint is simply where two bones meet. Those bones are kept in
place by passive tension in ligaments and by active contraction
of the muscles surrounding the joint.
In order for the joint to move properly, your stabilizers have
to work with the prime movers to maintain an optimal relationship
between the two bones.
If
the stabilizers are not proportionately as strong as the prime
movers - or if you have taught your prime movers to work without
your stabilizers through overuse of traditional machines and other
seated exercises - your joints cannot move naturally.
Joints that do not move naturally cause bones to meet at surfaces
that are not designed to take as much stress; this can lead to
arthritic changes in the joint.
Prime movers that are inordinately strong in relation to the stabilizers
change the mechanics of the joints.
At
the shoulder, for example, the rotator cuff muscles keep the humerus
(upper arm) in the socket; the stabilizers of the shoulder girdle
keep the socket in place on the rib cage; while the muscles of
the abdominal region stabilize the ribcage with respect to the
pelvis.
As
Dr. Mel Siff says in the book Supertraining:
And
as I tell the athletes I work with, if you sit down to lift weights,
you’re only preparing yourself to do a lot of sitting – on the
bench.
Besides
leading to joint dysfunction, overuse of seated exercises lead
to faulty motor programs.
Seated
exercises train the prime movers to work without the stabilizer
muscles of the body. This pattern of movement can become a motor
engram - a complex motor pattern that you follow habitually without
thinking.
Your
brain does not work in terms of muscles; it works in terms of
movements. If you train your biceps on an arm curl machine, for
example, your brain remembers that group of muscle contractions
and generalizes it.
That
means that when you use your biceps in the real world, you will
tend to use the same pattern that you used in the weight room,
that is, not using stabilizing muscles of the trunk.
This
can lead to back injury when lifting a box or a bag of groceries
because you have not trained your trunk how to work along with
your biceps.
Standing
exercises are simply more functional. When you have to lift something
you usually stand up, you rarely sit down.
When
was the last time that you have to lift up something heavy - while
sitting down?
Conversely,
when you have to pick something up, do you usually sit down first?
No, you stand and use your trunk and legs along with your arms.
Do
you want to work your abs?
How
about your inner and “outer” thighs?
Simply
spend more of your time performing standing exercises instead
of passively sitting on a machine.
It
makes no sense to do 45 minutes of seated exercises then take
an "Abs Class" when you could have been working your abs the whole
time you were in the weight room just by choosing the proper exercises.
Machines
have their purpose; they are excellent for "isolating"
muscles.
Just
remember that in order to improve the way you function and perform
in the real world, at some point you have to integrate your muscles
by performing standing exercises.