Upper Body Built in Functional Fitness
Monday, June 08, 2009
Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM
"I enjoy the all day exercises using squat and lunge for my daily activities. Thank you for sharing your philosophy.This is a great question and understanding that fitness is something that you do during real life. In gyms and health centers, even therapy settings where people are going there for the purpose of fixing and increasing function, they sit waiting in terrible unhealthful positioning - photo at right - waiting for a class or activity for health.
"However, those exercises are mainly for lower body. I would like to ask if there are good all day exercises for upper body parts i.e., shoulder, neck.
"I found some stretches for shoulder and neck that you introduced.
"Thank you and best regards,
Vietanh"
I have read fitness books saying the posterior shoulder is "difficult to target." Hold your shoulders straight, rather than letting them slump forward. You will get built in upper body functional exercise. Apply this to exercise, to lifting, sitting, sewing, all you do.
Look at your many hours each day of real life - when you prevent round shoulders with retraction to neutral, you are getting upper back extension exercise. When you sit and bend and lift right instead of rounding forward, you get healthful, functional upper and mid range back extension. When you use neutral spine to walk, run, kick, and jump, by extending at the hip instead of allowing the lower spine to increase in arch passively into hyperlordosis, you get healthful lower back extension and abdominal exercise at the same time. It is the abdominal muscles that will flex you forward to straight, rather than overarched. They only do this when you deliberately use them. Strengthening alone does not create movement to healthful position. Healthful positioning strengthens and gives exercise. Look at the photo above again and see that how you really live, not a gym, is your exercise and health.
Apply upper body muscle use for function in daily life:
Prevent Neck Pain and Get Upper Back Exercise Carrying BackpacksUse arm and hand muscles instead of compressing wrist joints:
Upper Back Exercise and Neck Pain Prevention Too
Common Exercises Teach Upper Back and Neck Pain
Fast Fitness - Prevent Back Pain When Rowing
Overhead Lifting, Reaching, and Throwing - More Part I
Fast Fitness - Built in Upper Body and Core Exercise Carrying Children
Fast Fitness - Prevent Wrist Pain During Pushups and Cooking
Forearm, Upper Body and Hand Exercise
Have daily active upper body fun:
Fast Fitness - Make Your Own Device to Strengthen Arms, Upper Body, Balance, and Core Stability
Fast Fitness - Easy Handstand for Balance, Upper Body Strength -The Movie
Pushups and rows at the same time - Strengthen Many Places at Once
Handstand and rows at the same time - Fast Fitness - Handstand Rows
Using upper back muscles to prevent rounding forward in round shoulders gives continuous built in exercise. This is not forcing, just mobile, comfortable muscle use. How are you sitting while reading this?
There is more to this excellent question. Will come in future posts.
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Read success stories of these methods and send your own.
Questions come in by the hundreds. I make posts from fun ones. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here by clicking labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, or in the Fitness Fixer Index.
Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books. Get certified - DrBookspan.com/Academy.
Questions come in by the hundreds. I make posts from fun ones. Before asking more, see if your answers are already here by clicking labels under posts, links in posts, archives at right, or in the Fitness Fixer Index.
Subscribe to The Fitness Fixer, free. Click "updates via e-mail" (under trumpet) upper right.
See Dr. Bookspan's Books. Get certified - DrBookspan.com/Academy.
Labels: arm, endurance, neck, posture, shoulder, sitting, strength, upper back
2 Comments:
At Monday, June 15, 2009 7:23:00 PM, Anonymous said…
Dear Dr. Jolie,
Thank you for your kind response.
I have implemented the right sitting posture for awhile now.
As I stated that I also exercise my lower part using lunges and squats.
I have other question which I have been thinking for a while now.
When the lunges and squats become easy, should we slowly add extra weight? Or any other way to increase intensity only using our bodyweight?
Best regards,
Vietanh
At Monday, October 12, 2009 12:08:00 PM, Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM said…
Vietanh, your many questions around Fitness Fixer are smart, good ideas. Adding backpacks, children, groceries, gym weights, and other loads increases exercise and physical ability, and trains real life bending ability. The reminder that exercise includes lifting body weight and things you carry, is for those who think the only weight that "counts" is commercial gym equipment. Rescuers, builders, military, farmers, cleaners, some caretakers, and others squat heavy loads for daily work. You can get good weight lifting by practicing with real life loads.
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