Startling Facts
If people are not active in sports or physical education (in other
words doing something that challenges their stability and ability of
muscles to react), they start to lose balance at the age of 15 or 16.
After the age of 70, nearly 85% of people die from complications due to
breaking their hip.
If those aren’t reason enough to incorporate core and functional
training into your exercise program, perhaps learning more will convince
you.
What is Functional Training?
Functional training is defined as “activity that trains movement” and
includes: balance training, stabilization training, core training, and
dynamic movement training. The result of functional training is agility – improved
reactionary forces where your body has the ability to compensate for
changes in your center of gravity and can move quickly and efficiently.
In other words, if you’re falling or suddenly caught off guard, your
body is trained to react quickly, meaning you are less prone to injury.
Exercises promoting core strength and stability improve or maintain posture
and alignment as well as challenging balance and equilibrium.
Core training is different than just training your abdominals. Although
the abdominals are an important part of your core musculature, true core
training is amore integrated approach; it combines strength, balance,
agility, and flexibility of the muscles that control the entire trunk
and spine. Regular conditioning of the core muscles is essential to prevent
injuries, correct posture, and making you more efficient with all that
you do.
Core training is about QUALITY of the movement, not quantity!
Why are Functional Exercises Important?
There are many reasons why functional exercises are important; here are some of the primary reasons:
- They promote maintenance and improvement in Active Daily Living tasks
- They promote spinal health and longevity
- They mimic motor patterns that translate into daily tasks, recreational
sports, and work activities.
- Traditionally, when people exercise, they are working on “cosmetic
fitness” – exercising to look good and working on surface
muscles or those that we see. The problem with this is that it doesn’t
help you in daily tasks. How often do you hear that someone hurt themselves
reaching to the back seat of their car, turning quickly, or bending
down quickly to pick up something? These are daily living tasks; therefore,
it makes sense to train the muscles doing similar movements. You aren’t
lying down most of the day doing crunches, yet your abdominal muscles
are constantly working to stabilize your spine. So why not train them
in a way that makes sense (i.e. standing, sitting, twisting)? That’s
what core and functional training are about, and there are several
methods you can use.
But I LIKE my “Traditional” Exercises; How Can I Make Them
More Functional?
Making your regular exercise more functional and beneficial simply requires
some basic problem-solving and creativity.
- Any exercise that you would normally perform
standing on a floor can easily be made functional. Try standing or kneeling on a piece
of equipment that challenges your balance; you will force your core
muscles to work at the same time and improve balance and stability.
And when you recruit more muscles, you also get the added benefit of
burning more calories and finishing your workout quicker!
- Any exercise
that you would normally perform on your hands and knees or on your
hands and feet (i.e. push-up) can also become functional. Simply
place one or more of your bases of support on something unstable and
experience the challenge as you engage your core and stabilizing muscles.
For example, place one or both of your hands or feet on
one of the pieces of equipment described in this section while
doing a push-up; it then becomes a core exercise as well as strengthening your
upper body.
- Perform two
exercises at the same time. Combining actions requires stability,
improves coordination, and allows you to more quickly complete your
workout. For example, try doing an overhead shoulder press at the same
time you do a squat; better yet, do it standing on a piece of balance
equipment. Or try doing a standing leg extension while working your
biceps or triceps.
- Practice basic balance exercises. Try standing on one foot;
then progress to closing your eyes at the same time or adding some
dynamic movements. When you feel comfortable doing that, perform your “regular” exercises
while standing on one leg (i.e. arm exercises, squats).
- What if you
don’t have any special equipment? The best thing
you can do is learn what neutral alignment is and try to maintain it
throughout the day with all that you do. Think of drawing your navel
in towards your spine like you have a string running from your navel,
up your spine, and out the crown of your head. When you do this, you
should feel your deep abdominal muscles engage. Your ears should be
in line with your shoulders. People often ask “what is the
BEST abdominal or core exercise I can do?” It’s simple,
learn how to get into neutral alignment; keep your navel drawn in,
and maintain it – that is the BEST exercise there
is!
- If you try to maintain neutral alignment while
sitting in your car, there’s a good chance
you’ll have to raise your rear-view mirror. This can then be a physical
cue for you; rather than adjusting your mirror, adjust your body! If
you find that you slouch during the day, get yourself into neutral alignment
and then tie a string around your torso, directly on your skin just
over your navel; have it snug enough that you don’t really feel
it when you’re in proper alignment. If you let your navel go or
lose your neutral alignment, you will have that physical reminder when
the string presses into your skin (for best results, use an “uncomfortable” material
like curling ribbon or a rough-textured rope). No one will know you’re
wearing the string but you, and you just might find your posture improving!