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By
Charles Staley, B.Sc, MSS
Director, Staley Training Systems |
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Last article we discussed a
number of common fallacies about ab training, including belt
use, diet, and force production.
Click
here to read that article if you missed it.
This week I'll continue with
more little-known facts about your elusive six-pack.
Enjoy!
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4. Training Your Abs Correctly
Helps Your Back. Training Them Incorrectly Hurts Your Back
The average fitness wannabe will gravitate
toward doing dozens, maybe hundreds of crunches per day. After all
it worked for Brittney, right? There are at least two problems with
this not so innocent approach to ab traning:
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1) The reason you can't see
your abs is- you're too fat. Why then, would you focus your
training on one small muscle group that will not result
in significant caloric expenditure? It's a waste of time.
2) Actually, it's worse than
a waste of time- it could increase your chance of spinal
injury. Here's how: Over weeks, months, and years of sit-ups
and crunches, your rectus abdominus is likely to chronically
shorten as an adaptation to said training. Stand up right
now and contract your abs, like you're doing a standing
crunch. Notice how it takes the curvature out of your lower
back?
That's what can happen when
you do too many crunches and sit-ups. And when you can't
maintain a neutral spine, you're much more likely to injure
yourself the next time you lift something heavy.
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A better approach is
to focus more on static training for your rectus abdominus, as
well as rotational ab drills, which don't have the same potential
to shorten your abs. Here are a few examples from our You Tube
Channel (these links will open in new windows).
5. You May Be Training Your Abs More Than You Think
Most people under-estimate
how much work their abs receive through their regular training
schedule. Squats, cleans, deadlifts, snatches, farmer's walks,
kettelebell work, and even heavy dumbbell upper-body exercises
result in very high levels of abdominal activation. And honestly,
probably as much as you really need.
6. Your Abs Don't Need High Reps
If and when you do
decide to do direct ab training, just use normal loading scenarios,
just like you would with any other exercise. Where did the high-rep
myth come from? Hard to say, but I suspect is has something to
do with the (also) mistaken notion that you can "melt"
fat off of your midsection through lots of reps- I guess people
think that since high reps make them sweat, that heat helps to
burn their fat off.
This myth may also
stem from the idea that the abdominal muscles are composed mostly
of slow-twitch fibers, and therefore benefit most from high-repetition
training. While this is at least a plausible premise, I'd also
suggest that muscles should be trained based on what they need
to do, as opposed to what they're composed of. If you should happen
to slip on some ice, your abs need to explosively contract to
keep your spine in neutral. If you're a discus thrower, a golfer,
a tennis player, or any other rotational athlete, you need explosive
abdominal functionality.
7. There Is No Direct Metabolic Pathway Between Your Abs And The
Fat That Covers Them
Or to use more conventional
language, there's no such thing as isolating a muscle or sport
reduction. I covered this in an earlier point, but it bears repeating:
Your pattern of bodyfat deposition is genetically pre-determined.
Guys tend to carry fat on their midsections (android fat deposition)
and women tend to carry it on their hips and thighs (gynoid deposition).
You'll always have this pattern, no matter how lean or fat you
become. So just train the large muscle groups using "big"
exercise and heavy weights, and maybe add some heavy cardio (if
you're in the mood), and you should create the caloric deficit
you'll need to get leaner.
8. The Best Way To Train Abs Is With A Stability Ball
Obviously you already
know part of my argument against this idea from my earlier comments,
but given the popularity of stability balls lately, I thought
I'd add a few remarks on the topic here. First, I actually like
the ball for certain exercises, because it 1) increases the range
of motion you can employ, and 2) because it's more comfortable
than the floor.
Also, the ball allows
for some creative exercises, such as the ball scissors that I
provided a video of earlier. With that said however, stability
balls are a tool, and like all tools, they provide benefits as
well as drawbacks, depending on how you use them. If, for example,
you labor under the mistaken impression that you need to do thousands
of crunches per week, and that the ball is better because it provides
greater range of motion, all you'll do is end up shortening your
trunk flexors and lose your lordodic curvature. SO the ball's
OK, as long as you keep things in context.
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9.
The Best Ab Exercises Are The Ones You Can Really FEEEELLL
Uhh, wrong.
Muscles respond to the training stress they experience,
not how that stress feels. Just like any other muscle.
Whether or not you feel a particular exercise is inconsequential.
Perhaps one of the most productive ab exercises is heavy
squats while wearing a belt, but I doubt that you consciously
feel your abs while doing those squats.
10. Your Abs Can Get Too Big If You Train Them Too Much
Unlikely. Actually,
let's just go with nearly impossible. The structure and
function of the abdominal musculature makes this scenario
highly unlikely. If you happen to subscribe to this myth
based on seeing lean bodybuilders with big guts, relax:
you're looking at enlarged livers from GH and other drug
use. Unless you use these substances, you won't suffer
the same fate.
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About
The Author
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His colleagues call him
an iconoclast, a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients
call him The Secret Weapon for his ability
to see what other coaches miss. Charles calls himself
a geek who struggled in Phys Ed throughout
school. Whatever you call him, Charles methods are
ahead of their time and quickly produce serious results.
His counter-intuitive approach and self-effacing demeanor
have lead to appearances on NBCs The TODAY Show
and The CBS Early Show.
Currently, Charles competes
in Olympic-style weightlifting on the masters circuit,
with a 3-year goal of qualifying for the 2009 Masters
World Championships.

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