Ad
If
you said the warm-up, you win! Without a proper warm-up, there are many
risks associated with working out, including but not limited to injury,
less-than-optimal performance, or slowed progress (aka plateauing).
There
are five integral parts of a warm-up that must be addressed before even
touching a weight or setting foot on the treadmill. Start strong,
finish stronger!
3 Tips For The Perfect Warm-Up:
1- Dynamic Mobility:
Dynamic
mobility is the body’s ability to move in multiple directions safely.
Closely related to flexibility (but arguably even more
important),“dynamic mobility gently increases range of motion to reduce
chance for injury,” Johnson says. Injuries caused by lack of joint
mobility can be especially debilitating for long periods of time.
According to Colin Eakin, MD, a physician at the Palo Alto Medical
Foundation, recovery from a torn labrum (a common shoulder injury), for
instance, could take anywhere from four weeks post-operation rest plus
two months of physical therapy to heal, or it could continue
indefinitely. To up your chances of staying in the game, dynamic
mobility can help. Try dynamic movements, such as arm circles and leg
swings against a wall (working the upper and lower body is key!).
2- Movement-Specific Preparation:
You
turn on your car before heading out for a drive. By the same logic, you
need to turn on the parts of your brain that control motion in
preparation for a workout. The main benefit to movement-specific
preparation is activating muscles that will be used in that day’s
workout to ensure your workout is as effective as possible. For example,
body weight squats would make sense if you are doing front barbell
squats, and light band presses or push-ups for a day you’re doing a
pressing motion, like a bench press.
3- Increase Core Temperature:
It’s
called a “warm-up” for good reason. “The increase in blood flow and
higher muscle temperature makes muscles more pliable, and that
pliability prevents strains,”.
A
muscle strain may seem like a minor setback, but once strained, the
likelihood of that strain reoccurring becomes much higher, Johnson says,
which can lead to more strains, more time out of the gym, and slowed
down (or nonexistent, gasp!) results.
No comments:
Post a Comment