loader from loading.io

Core Training

The Zac Cupples Show

Release Date: 04/12/2021

Fix Shoulder External Rotation FAST (& for Good) show art Fix Shoulder External Rotation FAST (& for Good)

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Tired of searching for how to move better on youtube? Get personalized coaching with myself and my coaches: 🚀 Unlock Your Shoulder Mobility! 🚀 🔥 Struggling with stiff, tight shoulders that ruin your high-fives and throwing game? Dive into our latest video where I'll guide you through groundbreaking exercises designed to supercharge your shoulder mobility! 🏋️‍♂️ 🤩 Witness firsthand how to improve ribcage mobility, crucial for optimal shoulder function. Start with a simple move using a yoga block to enhance your shoulder external rotation, making daily activities...

info_outline
20 Second Tight Psoas Release (& Fix Long-Term) show art 20 Second Tight Psoas Release (& Fix Long-Term)

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Tired of searching for how to move better on youtube? Get personalized coaching with myself and my coaches: 🚀 Unlock Hip Flexor Freedom in Seconds! 🚀 Discover the secret to banishing hip flexor tightness with lightning speed! Dive into a game-changing routine that promises to transform your mobility and comfort in under a minute. Say goodbye to discomfort and hello to effortless movement. You'll have the chillest psoas in da game! #psoas #HipFlexor #posture #pain #mobility ⏰ TIMESTAMPS ⏰ (00:00) - This release WORKS (01:07) - How long does it last though? (the long...

info_outline
Fix Rib Flare FAST (In Less Than 5 Minutes a Day) show art Fix Rib Flare FAST (In Less Than 5 Minutes a Day)

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Tired of searching for how to move better on youtube? Get personalized coaching with myself and my coaches: 🌟 **Transform Your Posture: The Ultimate Rib Flare Fix!** 🌟 Dive into a groundbreaking journey to reshape your ribcage and enhance your mobility. Discover three pivotal exercises designed to address the common yet overlooked issue of rib flare, transforming not just your posture but your overall movement quality. **Embark on your transformation journey now!** #RibFlare #Posture #Mobility (00:00) - Can this even be fixed? (00:41) - This MASSIVE mistake ruins your results...

info_outline
3 Exercises That Fix 90% of Problems show art 3 Exercises That Fix 90% of Problems

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Tired of searching for how to move better on youtube? Get personalized coaching with myself and my coaches: 🌟 Unlock Ultimate Mobility: A Game-Changer for Pain-Free Movement! 🌟 Embark on a transformative journey to conquer common mobility restrictions with three groundbreaking exercises. Dive into a world where enhanced flexibility, strength, and performance are within your grasp. **Experience the revolution in mobility today!** #Mobility #PainFreeLiving #Flexibility ⏰ TIMESTAMPS ⏰ (00:00) - Rotation nation (01:33) - The reason movement becomes limited (03:49) - How...

info_outline
Fix Pooch Belly Fast (In Less Than 5 Minutes a Day) show art Fix Pooch Belly Fast (In Less Than 5 Minutes a Day)

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Tired of searching for how to move better on youtube? Get personalized coaching with myself and my coaches: 🌟 **Unlock the Secret to a Flatter Belly - No Crunches Required!** 🌟 Discover groundbreaking exercises that defy traditional fat loss and posture correction methods. Dive into a revolutionary approach that reshapes your abdominal appearance by addressing the underlying postural components. Say goodbye to the pooch belly with simple, effective moves that promise visible changes. **Embark on your journey to a sleeker silhouette today!** #FlatterBelly #PostureCorrection...

info_outline
How To Improve Sitting (It's Not JUST Posture) show art How To Improve Sitting (It's Not JUST Posture)

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Care about improving your health, mobility, and fitness? Work with myself or one of my coaches. Schedule here: 🌟 **Transform Your Sitting Experience!** 🌟 Unlock the secret to comfortable sitting with groundbreaking strategies that defy conventional wisdom. From eye-saving techniques to posture-transforming exercises, this video is your ultimate guide to conquering discomfort in the digital age. Say goodbye to soreness and hello to a new era of ergonomic enlightenment. **Dive in and revolutionize the way you sit today!** #SittingComfort #Ergonomics #sitting #HealthyPosture...

info_outline
Fix Posture and Muscle Imbalances FAST show art Fix Posture and Muscle Imbalances FAST

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Care about improving your health, mobility, and fitness? Work with myself or one of my coaches. Schedule here: 🌟 Unlock Symmetry: Break Free from Imbalance and Posture Myths 🌟 Feeling off-kilter, twisted, or battling muscle imbalances? It's time to challenge the conventional stretch-and-strengthen approach and explore the truth behind achieving a more balanced body. This video is your guide to debunking myths and embracing the nuances of your unique posture. What You'll Discover: - Insight into why striving for perfect symmetry might not be the goal. - The critical role of the...

info_outline
Fix Your Shoulder Internal Rotation FAST show art Fix Your Shoulder Internal Rotation FAST

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Care about improving your health, mobility, and fitness? Work with myself or one of my coaches. Schedule here: 🌟 Transform Your Shoulder Mobility: The Ultimate Guide 🌟 Struggling with limited shoulder internal rotation? Discover the game-changing exercise that's revolutionizing shoulder health and performance. This video is your roadmap to unlocking the full potential of your shoulders, ensuring you can reach, lift, and perform without pain. What You'll Learn: - The critical role of the rib cage in achieving optimal shoulder rotation. - A step-by-step guide to exercises that...

info_outline
You Won't Believe What This Does for Your Neck show art You Won't Believe What This Does for Your Neck

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Care about improving your health, mobility, and fitness? Work with myself or one of my coaches. Schedule here: 🌟 Unlock Neck Comfort: Overlooked Solutions for Persistent Pain 🌟 Tired of neck pain that just won't quit, even after stretching, chin tucks, and posture adjustments? This video is your key to unlocking the relief you've been searching for. What You'll Discover: - Innovative strategies to address often overlooked factors contributing to neck discomfort. - A transformative exercise targeting the thoracic spine, the true base of your neck, for immediate relief. -...

info_outline
3 Exercises That Fix 90% of Low Back Pain show art 3 Exercises That Fix 90% of Low Back Pain

The Zac Cupples Show

🏃 Care about improving your health, mobility, and fitness? Work with myself or one of my coaches. Schedule here: 🌟 Transform Your Lower Back Comfort with Just 3 Moves! 🌟 Battling lower back discomfort? It's time to revolutionize your approach to back health with three essential movements designed to enhance mobility and alleviate pain. What's Inside: - Discover three foundational movements to address common lower back mobility needs. - Learn techniques to distribute spinal load more evenly, ensuring each segment moves optimally. - Master the art of creating more space in your...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Core training...it’s not what you think it is.

Core training is often recommended for getting those pesky rib flares to go away, and MOS DEF going to eliminate that anterior pelvic tilt…

Right?

RIGHT??!!?

Uh, no fam.

There are tons of misconceptions surrounding core training, the stack, and all that mess.

Believe it or not:

  • Rib flares and anterior pelvic tilt have NOTHING to do with a weak core
  • A posterior tilt doesn’t always equate with a counternutated sacrum
  • You don’t have to maintain a particular “core” position with every activity ever!!!!!!

So then what does core training entail?

Check out Movement Debrief Episode 150 here to find out!

If you want to watch these live, add me on Instagram.

Show notes

Check out Human Matrix promo video here.
 
Here are some testimonials for the class.

 Want to sign up? Click on the following locations below:

May 29th-30th, 2021 Boston, MA (Early bird ends April 25th at 11:55 pm!)

August 14th-15th, 2021, Ann Arbor, MI (Early bird ends July 18th at 11:55 pm!)

September 25th-26th, 2021, Wyckoff, NJ (Early bird ends August 22nd at 11:55 pm)

October 23rd-24th, Philadelphia, PA (Early bird ends September 26th at 11:55pm)

November 6th-7th, 2021, Charlotte, NC (Early bird ends October 3rd at 11:55 pm)

Montreal, Canada (POSTPONED DUE TO COVID-19) [6 CEUs approved for Athletic Therapists by CATA!]

Or check out this little teaser for Human Matrix home study. Best part is if you attend the live course you'll get this bad boy for free! 
 
Here's a signup for my newsletter to get nearly 5 hours and 50 pages of content, access to my free breathing and body mechanics course, a free acute:chronic workload calculator, basketball conditioning program, podcasts, and weekend learning goodies. 

The movements of the sacroiliac joint - A great study outlining what positions the sacrum is in within various postures. 

Elevate Sports Performance and Healthcare - The spot that I work at in Las Vegas. 

The Difference Between Spinal and Pelvic Motion - A great debrief that will help you refine and get the most out of your posterior pelvic tilt.  

Bill Hartman - Daddy-O Pops. He has been my biggest mentor. 

Is Spinal Flexion Bad? - Here, I debunk the supposed unsafe spinal flexion that we do. 

InstantPot - An absolute must in your cooking repertoire.

Does a rib flare mean my core is weak? 

Question: I have anterior pelvic tilt as well, and one thing that I often hear about treating anterior pelvic tilt and rib flare is to strengthen your core. I guess I'm wondering how to go about core exercises with my narrow ISA. Often times when I exercise my core, my upper obliques want to do all the work, which squeezes my ribs together and makes my ISA narrower. Do you think that as of right now, I should just stop doing all core exercises to prevent this, or should I continue to do the more standard types of core exercises like planks and dead-bugs?

Watch the answer here.

Answer: Before we go through what to do for my main man Bob, we need to clear the air on a few different pieces:

  1. Anterior pelvic tilt is normal to see when you are standing upright. According to this study, the sacrum is nutated during standing. 
  2. The key is to restore any loss of movement that may be occurring versus static posture.
  3. Anterior pelvic tilt and rib flare does not occur because of a lack of core strength.

We don't have any evidence to point to a specific or series of causes for the body assuming the aforementioned positions.

If I had to hedge my bets, my thought would be these orientations occur because of one's genetic structure and attempting to manage internal anatomy to maintain being upright against gravity. 

This position doesn't weaken the abdominal muscles but eccentrically orients the abdominal wall, more so the lower portions. This orientation would reduce force production at the abs to alter the position.

A similar situation to the abs would be trying to do a bicep curl from an extended elbow as opposed to 90 degrees of elbow flexion. We can all agree that it's much harder to perform the bicep curl when the arm is fully straight compared to when the elbow is bent 90 degrees. 

[caption id="attachment_13955" align="alignnone" width="785"] Trust me, I've done extensive research on bicep curls, how else would these gains exist???).[/caption]

However, we don't say that it's harder because the bicep is weak. The curl is more difficult because of the starting position.

So too with the abs when you see a rib flare and anterior pelvic tilt. In this orientation, the diaphragm is descended far (concentric), which places the lower abs in an eccentric orientation, as these muscles act in opposing fashion during respiration. 

This position is especially the case with a narrow infrasternal angle, as the diaphragm is descended further in comparison to a wide infrasternal angle. This narrower angle will give the upper abs a bit more leverage than the lower, hence why when Bob does his core exercises it's all upper obliques all...day...every...day. 

The "fix" isn't to stop all core training, but to perform activities that act in opposition to this current movement behavior. 

The first step is to stack

Watch how to stack here.

What the stack aims to do is the exact opposite movement strategy that our caller refers to:

  • Posteriorly tilt the pelvis instead of anteriorly tilt
  • Restore relative sacral motion by breathing
  • Fully exhale to reduce rib flare and make infrasternal angle dynamic

You might start with a move that helps drive each of these positions without compensatory strategies. The hooklying tilt with a one-arm reach might be a great starting point. 

From here, it's just a matter of being able to demonstrate a wide variety of movements without falling into these compensatory strategies. That would include lower body work like squats, split squats, hinges; and upper body stuff like pushes and pulls. This training could even extend to higher-speed activities or other terminal tasks.

All traditional "core training" serves for in my opinion is a lower level drill to teach your body to move while expressing desirable movement options.

Take a half-kneeling cable chop for example.

Instead of thinking this move is great for them oblique gains. Think that I am teaching my body to rotate in a split stance position. I can use these activities to aid in shifting into the downside hip, which is important to loading a cut if we related this to a terminal task.

If you think of core exercises as a build-up to a greater purpose or task, then NO ONE will mess with you :) 

Why do we drive a posterior tilt? 

Question: I am very confused about core training. Why do we maintain posterior tilt throughout the range, when in real life the sacrum would nutate with hip extension?

Watch the answer here.

Answer: The reason is that most of us wonderful fam have a bias towards anterior pelvic tilt that we struggle to overcome. We would know that this orientation would be struggle bus because of the range of motion loss in the hip joint.

What the posterior tilt does is it helps teach the individual to be able to move the pelvis in the opposite direction of their current bias. The hope would be that this helps restore some movement loss in the lower extremities.

Now, Mohamed is correct. The sacrum ought to relatively nutate when in hip extension, and counternutate with the hip flexed. However, there is an important nuance to know that we are leaving out of the equation:

The tuck does NOT counternutate the sacrum

There is only about 2 degrees of available motion in the sacroiliac joint. So to think that we can isolate nutation and counternutation by a posterior tilt is highly unlikely. We aren't that precise of movers.

Yet restoring these motions is important when creating a dynamic pelvis. 

So how in the heck do we nutate and counternutate like bosses?

What drives these sacroiliac movements?

The answer: breathing.

Nutation and counternutation occur by tension changes in the pelvic floor. The relative tension and shape of the pelvic floor os determined by the natural visceral movement that occurs with breathing.

That's why you cannot tuck alone and hope for the best. Ensuring you have the breathing portion down pat, the top part of the stack, is key to driving this motion.

That said, I don't expect peeps to make sure that the pelvis is just so and the ribcage must be in the perfect position before doing any movement or else they'll die! That's unrealistic, unnecessary, and counterproductive when it comes to dynamic and explosive movements.

[caption id="attachment_13956" align="alignnone" width="810"] Just ain't gonna cut it! (Image by Alexandra Voicu from Pixabay)[/caption]

What's important is the body is moving in the directions necessary to maximize force production for a given task.

If you are trying to jump as high as possible with little ground contact, you want vertical pelvis displacement, not bending over at the waist and knocking the knees together. 

If you are cutting and changing direction, your body needs to change levels and lower in position, again, not drastically anteriorly tilt the pelvis and staying too high into the cut. 

If you are explosively rotating as in a golf swing, dumping the pelvis forward restricts range at the hips and will limit your ability to rotate fully. 

All of these examples can be improved with technical coaching and appropriate drill selection that produces the desired outcome. This could be using resistance to assist to slow down people in specific directions. limiting motion with boxes, and many other things.

Slow speed exercises, however, are the prime time to focus on stacking and breathing, as technique can be better emphasized. The hope would be that this strategy increases movement options and helps build context to be used in terminal tasks. 

Personally, I've found by emphasizing stacking and such in slow speed and with appropriate fast speed drill selection, you can marry both worlds effectively. 

Ab contractions during gait

Question: Thoughts on abdominal activity during gait. 

Answer: The abs should be active during the gait cycle, as your obliques are your big trunk rotators.

HOWEVER!

Gait should be a fairly automatic activity, so you shouldn't have to actively tense them during gait. This may impact your movement capabilities.

The most that I'll do is encourage someone to swing their arms or develop awareness of heel contact when they step. 

Breathing exercises with hypertension?

Question: Are the breathing exercises I do safe for people with high blood pressure?

Watch the answer here.

Answer: HELL TO THE YES.

The breathing activity that we have to be most careful of is the valsalva maneuver, where you take a big breath of air in and exhale against a closed glottis.

Essentially, this strategy creates a high pressure environment in the body, which is useful when lifting heavy ass weights.

The problem, however, is that this action increases blood pressure considerably. So for those with hypertension and heart disease, it is often avoided.

The easy breathing exercises that I encourage, whether gentle nasal breathing (which can reduce blood pressure), or even exhaling with a controlled pause, are safe. And the reason why they are safe is because you are not creating a high pressure environment within the body during these activities, and blood pressure doesn't raise up (#joshgroban). 

Are crunches and situps useful?

Question: Do crunches even have a purpose? Is it better to do planks, glute-focused core training, and dead bugs?

Watch the answer here.

Answer: First off, spinal flexion is totally safe. The in vivo evidence seems to suggest very much so.

Though safety is there, are crunches, situps, and the like useful?

In certain instances, yes.

What a crunch or a situp can do is encourage segmental flexion within the spine; aka posterior expansion.

This maneuver, however, can be quite difficult for someone who has TONS of anterior expansion. They may not be able to push their stuff posteriorly, which can limit situp efficacy. In a similar vein, they may end up just bending at the sternum to complete the action. No bueno.

I start first with things that would drive posterior expansion a bit more easily. Moves like reverse crunches are a good starting point.

Propulsion arc and core training?

Question: Is using the propulsion arc a great way to choose core exercises?

Answer: Absolutely. You can select exercises to drive particular movements depending on how you place the body within these arcs.

If you have someone who needs external rotation to improve, you may choose exercises that involve:

  • hip flexion at 0-60 or 100+ degrees
  • Shoulder flexion at 0-60 or 120-180 degrees

A low sit cable chop fits really well here.

If you need internal rotation, you could go with:

  • hip flexion at 60-100 or at 0 degrees
  • Shoulder flexion at 60-120 degrees

A diagonal might be an option for this. 

And if you are feeling REAL frisky and need frontside and backside expansion, then any rotational activity can be useful. To get rotation through the sacrum and thorax, the high split chop is a wonderful choice. 

Sum up

  • Though we don't know why compensations occur, we want to select activities that place one in the exact opposite orientation; restoring the full spectrum of movement options
  • Tucking doesn't driver counternutation, but places the pelvis in an orientation to drive sacral dynamics
  • We don't assume the stack in explosive activities. Coach position during slow-speed work, then choose drills with constraints that force desired positions. 
  • Breathwork is safe for those with hypertension as long as the valsava maneuver is minimized
  • Situps, where there is some posterior expansion available, can be useful for further driving this adaptation.

Image by Keifit from Pixabay 

Song Credit: Bensoun