Yoga!
I woke up this morning at 5:30AM. “Why?” you might ask… Well, I attended a morning yoga class at Local Motion Studio. “Yoga?” you might ask… Yes. Yoga.
As a strength and conditioning coach, I am frequently asked what I think about yoga, or Crossfit, or P90x/Insanity. Now, I’m not going to dive too heavily into what I think about Crossfit or the other two “training” systems, but I will discuss the benefit and limitations of yoga.
Here are my short answers as far as Crossfit and P90x/Insanity go…
- Crossfit is a sport, and you should treat your WODs as sport-specific practice, to be supplemented by traditional strength and conditioning work.
- P90x/Insanity… Stop wasting your time. Of course you’ll see improvements when you first start these systems. That’s the beauty of being a novice. Any new stimulus will result in adaptation, BUT it’s not sustainable, it’s not intelligent training, and it’s more likely then not going to hurt you at some point in time. (Read this: https://www.t-nation.com/training/p90x-and-muscle-confusion-the-truth)
Now, let’s get to the meat and potatoes….
To be clear: I am a novice when it comes to yoga. I am aware that there are different forms and variations, but I do not know the difference between them. I do, however, have a decent understanding of biomechanics, joint positioning, physiological adaptations to stress, and exercise technique. My job is to know these things, so I continue to study and learn various methods, techniques, and theories that relate to strength and conditioning. Yoga is typically marketed to women as the panceas of health, I’m simply here to present an objective look at the practice.
Individual Differences
Everyone is different. We all have various injuries that limit us in some way, shape or form. These injuries may be serious enough to contraindicate certain joint positions. We all possess different limb lengths, which vary in proportion to the rest of our body, and force us to apply subtle alterations in our movements. This is why, in a gym setting, it’s important to understand biomechanical differences, and use different techniques to take advantage of the individual’s unique attributes. (Here’s a great article by Greg Nuckels on the topic: Deadlift Technique. Also, be sure to check out the video below discussing limb proportions and how they affect the squat pattern.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Av3LO2GwpAk
In the same vein, it’s important that yogis are careful with the postures and positions that they chose when leading a class full of diverse human beings. It’s important that they preface their class by explaining that all postures can be modified based on the individual, and to never push a position too far. Renee Miller, my instructor this morning, did just that. She made the modifications of each position very clear, and insisted that we listen to our bodies while flowing through this morning's routine.
The Benefits
I am not anti-yoga. I simply have an opinion regarding what it’s useful for, and what it ISN’T useful for. Yoga is a great way to get people off the couch and moving. The practice engages millions of people world-wide, and I know quite a few people who swear by it and the positive benefits it has provided them. Obviously, I am a huge proponent of physical activity. If someone happens to enjoy practicing yoga, it isn’t causing them harm, and they find success incorporating it into their daily life, more power to them. Go for it. Keep it up, and use yoga as your modality for staying active and healthy.
Most forms of yoga, that I am aware of, are very low-stress. There are exceptions; for instance, inversion yoga incorporates a ton of hand/head/forearm-stand work. This will provide a decent stimulus towards building shoulder, arm, and core strength, but it still cannot be considered high intensity exercise in the same way that performing multiple sets of heavy squats and 100 meter sprint repeats are.
This point holds even more water when you become proficient at these movements. Proficiency leads to efficiency, which leads to less energy expended for the same amount of work. Due to the fact that yoga is very low-intensity in nature, it lends itself to being a fantastic tool for active recovery days. Moving through various postures and engaging your muscles through their full range-of-motion is going to promote blood flow throughout your tissues, which helps clear out the metabolic byproducts produced from higher intensity activity and promote tissue recovery.
This one may be the most obvious, but practicing yoga can also help improve flexibility. A ton of the postures that are utilized in yoga revolve around stretching, so obviously this is going to help with your overall general flexibility. HOWEVER, it’s important to understand why certain structures are tight, and why some of your muscles are inflexible. This article by coach Kelsey gives a fantastic introduction to your hamstrings, why they’re tight, and what you can do to fix them. Yes, stretching is a part of the equation, but it’s only one variable. A yogi in-tune with neural tension understands these concepts, and should apply activation work following the stretching movements to reinforce proper joint centration.
The Limitations
Yoga isn’t going to produce the strength improvements that many people are looking for. It’s just that simple. Improvements in strength and hypertrophy require progressive overload, and in yoga, you can only progress things so far. Since you are working with bodyweight, technically, you will need to gain weight in order to make a certain posture more challenging. Assuming this weight gain is fat, this is obviously counter-productive to why you’re engaging in physical activity in the first place. Resistance training provides a much more efficient and long-term solution to building strength. You can always add more weight to the bar.
Yoga isn’t going to be the modality that fosters improvements in power production, or rate of force development. I really can’t think of a single way to improve power using yoga. Please, if someone has a method, I would love to hear it.
Yoga alone isn’t going to prepare you for high-level sports. You need speed, you need strength, and you need power to succeed in sports at a high level. The ability to stand on your hand, or contort yourself into the shape of a pretzel is not going to help you tackle that 200 lb running back barreling down at you full speed.
In Conclusion
I hope that you don’t feel that I am bashing yoga, because that was not my intention whatsoever. The intent of this article was simply to help point out the positives, and the negatives, that are the reality of the practice. I will dive into how to incorporate yoga into your weekly routine in a future article, but I’ll leave you with this for now: Do your best to never look at any form of exercise with the idea that it can be either “good” or “bad” for you. What is good for you might be really, really bad for me. There are always exceptions, and there are (almost) always instances where a modality is wildly appropriate.
Band Resisted Lateral Walks
For the lateral athlete such as a short stop or defended who primarily moves in a lateral or side to side manner it is important to strengthen these patterns to help the athlete move more efficiently. One exercise I like to help develop the hip abductors would be the Band Resisted Lateral Walks. It's an incredibly easy to set up as you just have to step into a band and because the band is around the back of your neck it serves as a constant reminder to keep your head and torso upright throughout the exercise..Here are a few quick cues to help get the most out of this exercise:
- Keep your chest up. Stabilize against the band which is working to pull you down. If someone was looking at you they should have no issue seeing the design on your shirt
- Your working leg will be the leg opposite the direction you are moving. For example push with your right leg when moving to the left and focus directing yourself across the ground as opposed to moving vertically
- Focus on staying low throughout the movement
http://youtu.be/0A44Oy2Jaoo
Concussions- How Can We Protect Our Athletes
The Washington Post ran a great article a few weeks back on Concussion Rates in Female Athletes. Spoiler alert: women/girls suffer a higher rate of concussions than their male counterparts. The main push of the article is the need for a greater awareness. The NFL concussion hooplah brought concussions in sports, particularly football, to the forefront and calls for better equipment and stricter safety standards. Unfortunately, the laser-focus on football has yet to encompass other sports such as lacrosse, soccer, rugby, and cheerleading.
The Journal of Athletic Training found in a study that looked at 15 NCAA sports across 16 years. The majority of the injuries reported were ankle related (which is not surprising) but the second highest were concussions- particularly in women. This Table is a great snap shot of concussion rates in NCAA sports. Take note that in all the sports that involve both genders, the women have higher incidences of concussions!!
If these rates are pretty high in NCAA athletes- who are arguably stronger and more skilled than the younger teenage athletes- imagine what the concussion rate is amongst our middle- and high school athletes!
The WP article postulates on both the reasons for the increase rate and what we can do about it. I don't know much about the rules of the various sports so I cannot offer a valid opinion in that department. I, too, agree that we need to have prominent female athletes to advocate for awareness and change to the system. As a strength coach, I can speak to the area of strength training. To quote the article:
The greatest attention has been directed to their head and neck size and musculature; researchers speculate that girls have smaller, weaker necks than boys, making their heads more susceptible to trauma.
Being weaker stinks, doesn't it? (They blame our higher rate of ACL tears on this too.) Now, naturally we don't have as much of that awesome muscle-building hormone testosterone nor are we encouraged to be strong. This is a risk factor we can reduce dramatically. Doesn't it seem obvious that providing strength training opportunities for females, both for school and club sports, would be a no-brainer (no pun intended)? We can't help it if we're smaller but wecancounteract it if we're stronger.
As coaches, we need to be aware of this information and freakin' do something about it. If your athletes aren't strength training, they're only getting weaker as the season progresses. This increases their risk of sustaining an injury and increases their recovery time. If you don't have access to a facility, ask us- we can help!! We can come to you. We also have a distance training option: we can send you the programs to incorporate with your teams. Our passion is to make athletes stronger and prevent injuries such as concussions.
For example, a while back I wrote up two training circuits for one of my volleyball players who had two concussions in a row. Note: A "chin tuck" is pulling the neck into a neutral position by pulling the chin back as if you're making a surprise face.
Circuit A:
1. 4-way neck ISO holds, lying on ground*
- Supine neck flexion x 10 with :03 hold
- Lateral neck flexion, left and right side x10/side, :03 hold
- Prone neck extension x 10, hold :03
2. DA Band Row x 8, hold :02
3. Scapular Wall slides, head against wall x 12, hold :01
4. Quarduped Chin Tuck and hold x 8, hold :02
5. Side Plank with chin tuck x :30/side
6. DA Farmer walk x :30-:60
Repeat 3-5 times through
Circuit B
- Towelor Band-Resisted 4-way Neck ISO holds, forward, back, left, and right x 10 each :03 hold
- Facepulls with external rotation x 10
- 3 Pt Row, ensure chin is tucked, x 8/side, hold :01
- Banded Ws x 12
- PUPP with chin tuckx :30-:60
- SA Farmer walk x :30-:60/side
Repeat 3-5 times through
* As neck is strength improves, increase ISO hold to :05, then :10.
Incorporating drills such as this, even if it's only in the warm-ups, would go a long way to strengthening necks. Also, Jarrett wrote a great article on concussion prevention techniques that are more generalized.
Bottom line: GET. STRONGER. Strong people are harder to kill and are more useful in general. And seriously, ask us, we can help.
Quick Thoughts on Chewing Gum While Training
Recent research within the field of human movement has put more of an emphasis on the temperomandibular joint and its global affects to the body. Elite athletes have started utlizing neuromuscular dentistry to create mouth-pieces to hold their jaw in the precise spot to hold the jaw for maximal power output, performance and repeated maximal efforts. Studies have also shown that the extra stabilization provided to the TMJ of any mouthgaurd can actually decrease the likelihood of concussions. And of course, I can't forget the recent articles that have talked about the muscles of the jaw and their relating to posture, neck stability/position and weight shift patterns.
With all this hub-bub buzzing around, I think it's important, as a coach, to take a look at the information and apply it. My main thought was, "how does gum affect this?" I know this sounds silly, but the evidence is there..
Chewing gum creates a dynamic position of the jaw, always moving and never symmetrical as the gum stays to one side. This can not only create a fixation that, after enough repetition, it may have an impact on neuromuscular control. It can also inhibit certain cervical stabilizers to engage during the movement. Of course most people are going to chomp down and clench that trident as they pick up heavy things, but even this can cause the TMJ to be slightly out of position and possibly affect the head position and recruitment of stabilizers within the frontal plane. And as the information from the neuromuscular dentists has told us, this can impede training.
Though this may seem like a minor detail, it's a detail that you can control in your weight room. With TMJD on the rise in the general population, I think separating any jaw fixations from our training is a detail that we can't just ignore. Some people may claim that gum actually helps their training, but for these people, I would argue that they probably have some compensatory patterns that the clenching is feeding. I'd be willing to bet that these are the same folks that grind their teeth at night and get tension headaches near the tempal.
Internships Part 2: SAPT
Hello cherished SAPT blog readers! In last Thursday's blog post, we reminisced about my experience as an Olympic sports intern with Virginia Tech's strength and conditioning program. The big takeaway from last week's blog post is this: Ask questions, and be engaged.As an intern, I realized that my job was, first and foremost, to learn. Asking questions was the way I accomplished this. It showed I genuinely wanted to learn more about training, and that I valued what these coaches had to teach me. During my internship with Virginia Tech, I started looking for more opportunities to get involved in the field of sports performance. I was referred to SAPT by a local high school football coach who spoke very highly of the internship program, so I decided to check them out. After filling out an online interest form and sitting through an interview, I suddenly found myself locked in for a summer internship following my college graduation.
Obviously the internship went extremely well or I wouldn't be writing this blog post. I couldn't believe how lucky I had gotten to have found SAPT. I moved from my unpaid internship to a paid one, and subsequently received an offer to come aboard as a full-time coach. I've now had the opportunity to coach through 2 semesters of interns, and understand what it takes to succeed in the position.
Below is a short "How-to" list that will help you with your next internship. I hope they help you succeed during your next learning experience, whatever that may be.
- ASK QUESTIONS! If a coach is busy when a question comes to mind, write it down and save it for later.
- Watch the clients lift. Take note of the individuals proportions and observe what adjustments they have to make to accommodate their genetics. Perfect technique is not one-size-fits-all. Optimal form will vary greatly based on individual proportions.
- Spend at least 2-3 hours a week on continuing education. Whether you're reading blog posts, strength and conditioning books, or established strength programs and the philosophies that they're based around, make sure you're putting time in outside of the internship to learn.
- Introduce yourself to every client who walks in the door. Not only is this common courtesy, but it will be way less awkward if you know Alice's name when you're watching her perform glute bridges.
- Get to know the clients. Get to know what they like doing outside of the gym. Ask them about their day, their kids, their dog. Showing you care about the clients as people will go a long way towards getting them to enjoy their experience at your gym.
- Help the clients with their session. Help them set up their next exercise, put equipment back where it belongs, make sure they're comfortable and enjoying their session.
- Show up to work in a good mood. Even if you're having a crappy day, come in with a smile and greet everyone who talks in the door in a warm, friendly manner. Be infectiously upbeat.
- Be aware of your surroundings, and take the initiative to help the coaches organize the floor. Put away misplaced equipment, keep the training floor neat and organized, and take the initiative to ensure a safe workout environment.
- Train at your internship facility. Most internships will allow you to lift during your working hours. We put interns through our assessment process, write them programs, and have them lift during client hours. This allows us to coach them, get their technique up to speed, and familiarize them with the exercises.
- Use common sense. Don't put yourself or your clients in danger. The weight room can be a dangerous place if used improperly, so have respect for the iron.
The Art Of Pull Ups: After The First Rep
Last week's post had thoughts on conquering the first pull up. It's always the hardest, but the subsequent reps are much easier to accumulate. As an avid pull-upper, below are tips I've used to increase my max pull up number.
1. Do more pull ups.
The best way to get better at pull ups is to do more pull ups. Halt! Before you leap onto a bar, I don't mean rep out as many as possible until the pull up resembles a raw, wriggling fish.
Practice makes permanent, not perfect.
I really like doing reps throughout my training session. It's a sound way to accomplish a higher volume without sacrificing form because each set only has a few reps. Two years ago, I set a goal to be able to perform 10 pull ups at the drop of a hat (or an off-hand challenge). Note: I could already do about 5 pull ups at this point, but the idea remains the same. This meant that 10 pull ups had to be easy and my max needed to be in the teens. I needed to build up both strength and endurance. Once per week I would perform pull ups throughout my workout until I hit my total rep goal, for example on week 1 I started with 7 sets of 3 working with a goal of 21 total reps. Week 2, 27 total, Week 3, 30 total. Once I hit 50 total, I upped the reps to 4. And I started back with 7 sets of 4, then 8, etc. Each time I hit my top-end total reps, I'd increase the rep count.
Fast forward a year, and I could comfortably hit 10 reps any time I wanted. Huzzah!
1.5 Grease the Groove.
This is how one should implement "do more pull ups," and whynot maxing out works. (Thank you Pavel Tsatsouline) Instead of providing a long-winded explanation, click HERE for a much better one. The bottom line of Grease the Groove training is neurological training to create a more efficient movement pattern. I'll say it again, practice makes permanent, not perfect (so practice perfectly)!
2. Do more pull ups. And be patient.
Seriously, there isn't a magic trick to this. I planned on having a couple different tips, but really, it just comes down to practicing and performing more pull ups over time (and doing them well!). Over the past year, I incorporated them into ladders, wove them throughout my regular training sessions, and did a pull up every time I went to the bathroom (that only lasted a week, though, because I drink a lot of water).
Essentially, the grease the groove article explains it well. Start small and work your way up.
It takes a while to get "good" at pull ups, especially for us ladies, and so patience is key. Remember, it took me a whole year to have a solid 10 pull ups in my back pocket. Be patient and do more pull ups.
Here's my post-workout let's-see-how-many-I-can-do