100+ Best Fitness & Workout Tips
100+ Best Fitness & Workout Tips - everinsta.com |
Build a powerful body and get in the greatest shape of your life
A great tip is an awesome thing. Whether it's an undiscovered restaurant, a sleeper stock, or a Sure Thing in the late double at Pimlico, savvy inside info imbues a man with confidence. Control. Strength.
It's also the secret to a powerful body, as you're
about to find out. In our never-ending mission to get you in the greatest shape
of your life, we've grilled the world's top experts and combed our own archives
to find 100 perfect fitness training tips—small gems that will make a huge
difference in any man's life.
Build Better Abs
Don't work your abdominal muscles every day.
"Physiologically, your abs are like any other muscle in your body,"
says David Pearson, Ph.D., C.S.C.S., an exercise scientist at Ball State University.
Train them only 2 or 3 days a week.
Protect Your Neck
Put your tongue on the roof of your mouth when you
do crunches. "It will help align your head properly, which helps reduce
neck strain," says Michael Mejia, C..S.C.S., Men's Health exercise
advisor.
Keep Muscles Limber
If you're under 40, hold your stretches for 30
seconds. If you're over 40, hold them for 60 seconds. As you reach your 40s,
your muscles become less pliable, so they need to be stretched longer.
Don't Drop the Ball
To catch a pop fly in the sun, use your glove to
shade your eyes. It's bigger than your free hand and puts the leather in
perfect position to snag the ball.
Grow Muscle, Save Time
Keep your weight workouts under an hour. After 60
minutes, your body starts producing more of the stress hormone cortisol, which
can have a testosterone-blocking, muscle-wasting effect.
Exercise in Order
Use dumbbells, barbells, and machines—in that
order. "The smaller, stabilizer muscles you use with dumbbells fatigue
before your larger muscle groups," says Charles Staley, a strength coach
in Las Vegas. So progress to machines,
which require less help from your smaller muscles, as you grow tired.
Strengthen Your Core
Don't be afraid of situps. We've changed our tune
on these, and here's why: Situps increase your range of motion, which makes
your abdominals work harder and longer. (Doing crunches on a Swiss ball or with
a rolled-up towel under your lower back has a similar effect.) Just avoid
situps with anchored feet, which can hurt your lower back.
Test the Bench
Press your thumb into the bench before lifting.
"If you can feel the wood, find another bench," says Ken Kinakin, a
chiropractor in Canada and founder of the Society of Weight-Training Injury
Specialists. Hard benches can cause T4 syndrome—a misalignment of your thoracic
spine that affects the nerve function of your arm, weakening it.
Swim Faster
To build speed in swimming, develop your ankle
flexibility. Flexible feet will act like flippers and propel you faster through
the water. To increase your flipper flex, do this: Sit on the floor with your
shoes off. Extend your legs in front of you, heels on the floor. Point your
toes straight out as far as possible, then flex them toward your shins as far
as you can. Repeat for 1 minute.
Buy Shoes That Fit
Shop for workout shoes late in the day. That's when
your feet are the largest. Make sure there's a half inch of space in front of
your longest toe, and that you can easily wiggle your toes. Then slip off the
shoes and compare them with your bare feet. If each shoe isn't obviously wider
and longer than your foot, go half a size bigger.
Kill Your Excuse
If you think you're too busy to exercise, try this
experiment: For one day, schedule a time to work out, and then stick to it—even
if you can exercise for only 10 minutes. "At the end of the day, ask
yourself if you were any less productive than usual," says John Jakicic,
Ph.D., an exercise psychologist at the Brown University school of medicine. The
answer will probably be no—and your favorite excuse will be gone.
Help Your Forehand
To build forearm strength for tennis and
racquetball, crumple newspaper: Lay a newspaper sheet on a flat surface. Start
at one corner and crumple it into a ball with your dominant hand for 30
seconds. Repeat with your other hand.
Muscle Up Your Back
When doing lat pulldowns, don't wrap your thumb
around the bar. Instead, place it on top, alongside your index finger. This
decreases the involvement of your arm muscles, so you'll work your back harder.
Works for pullups, too.
Drink A Pint, Get Ripped
If you're a beginner, train to failure—the point at
which you absolutely can't do another repetition—then throw back a pint. In a
new study, beginners who trained to failure with three sets of six exercises
per day then drank a supplement immediately afterward gained over 5 pounds of
muscle in just 8 weeks. A pint of 1 percent chocolate milk will provide all the
nutrients you need to achieve the same result.
Lose Your Weak Spot
If you don't like an exercise, start doing it.
"You're probably avoiding it because you're weak at it," says Mejia.
Overcome Injuries, Build Big Arms
If you hurt your right arm, don't stop exercising
your left arm. Researchers at the University of Oklahoma found that people who
trained only one arm for 2 weeks managed to increase arm strength in their
nonexercising arm up to 10 percent. The reason: Exercising one arm stimulates
the muscle nerve fibers in the opposite arm.
Cut Pain, Increase Gain
Count your repetitions backward. When you near the
end of the set, you'll think about how many you have left instead of how many
you've done.
Turn Heads with Your Legs
Do standing and seated calf raises. You'll get
better results. "Your calves are made up of two different muscles, so you
have to do the straight-leg and the bent-leg versions of the exercise to hit
them both," says Mejia.
Keep Your Stats, See Amazing Results
Test yourself often. Every 4 weeks, measure a
variable—waist size, body fat, bench press—that equates to your end goal.
"It'll show you the tangible results of your training," says Craig
Ballantyne, C.S.C.S., a trainer in Canada. And that translates into motivation.
Kill the Pill
Don't pop a pill after you work out. Researchers at
the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences found that ibuprofen (Advil,
Motrin) and acetaminophen (Tylenol) were no more effective than a placebo in
relieving postexercise muscle soreness. More important, they say the drugs may
actually suppress muscle growth when taken after a workout.
Putt Like a Pro
Roll a golf ball across the carpet to improve your
putting. The distance doesn't matter. Just toss it by hand and try to make it
stop at a specific target. You'll hone your ability to judge speed and line
without even picking up a club.
Blow Off Your Belly
Exhale forcefully at the top of the movement when
you do abdominal crunches. It forces your abs to work harder.
Build Big Biceps
Bend your wrists to work your biceps harder. That
is, extend them backward slightly—and hold them that way—while you do arm
curls.
Heal Faster
Don't exercise when you're sick—unless your
symptoms are above the neck. And even then you might do better taking a day
off. "Your body will use its resources to heal itself, not build muscle
and endurance," says Alwyn Cosgrove, C.S.C.S., a trainer in Santa Clarita,
California.
Pick Up Your Pace
Increase the speed of your running strides—not
their length—to get faster. Your foot should always land under your body, rather
than out in front of it, and you should push off with the toes of your rear leg
for propulsion.
Ditch the Weight Belt
Don't train with a weight belt. Over time, regular
training in a weight belt actually weakens your abdominal and lower-back
muscles. Wear it only when attempting maximal lifts in such exercises as
squats, deadlifts, and overhead presses.
Ride More Efficiently
Practice cycling one-legged to ride more
efficiently. This forces you to concentrate on pulling up at the bottom of the
stroke, which better distributes the work among the major leg muscles. Lock
both feet on your pedals, but let your left leg go limp while you do all the
work with your right leg. Do this for 30 seconds, then switch legs. Ride
normally for 5 minutes, then repeat the drill. Continue this way for a 20- to
30-minute workout.
Pay Now, Build Later
Pay your trainer in advance. "You'll be more
likely to follow through on exercise sessions," says Mejia.
Flatten Your Gut
Work your invisible abdominal muscles. Your
transversus abdominis lies beneath your rectus abdominis—the six-pack
muscle—and flattens your waistline when you suck in your gut. Work it with the
vacuum: Pull your belly button toward your spine and hold for 10 seconds while
breathing normally. Repeat five times.
Stretch for Strength
Between sets, take 20 to 30 seconds to stretch the
muscle you just worked. Boston researchers found that men who did this
increased their strength by 20 percent.
Save Your Shoulders
Decrease the weight by 10 percent when you change
your grip. So if you've been benchpressing 135 pounds for 10 repetitions with a
medium grip, drop to 120 pounds when you switch to a wide grip. "You'll be
stressing your joints and muscles in a different way than they're used to,
which can cause injury," says Kinakin.
Improve Quickness
For faster foot speed in sports, try this move:
Start with your feet hip-width apart and your hands at your sides. Lift your
left foot in front of you, touch it with your right hand, and lower it to the
floor. Lift your right foot, touch it with your left hand, and lower it. Then
touch your left foot behind you with your right hand, then your right foot
behind you with your left hand. Go for 20 seconds at a time, moving as fast as
you can, and repeat for a total of three to five sets.
Repair Muscle Faster
Recover faster from a hard workout by lightly
exercising the same muscles the following day. Use a light weight—about 20
percent of the weight you can lift one time—and do two sets of 25 repetitions.
This will deliver more blood and nutrients into your muscles so they repair
faster.
Dress Better
Buy only workout clothes that are black, white, or
gray. They'll go with everything, and you'll never again waste time looking for
a T-shirt that matches your gold-and-purple Lakers shorts.
Eat Meat and Grow
Eat meat—4 to 8 ounces every day—to grow more
muscle. A study reported in the American Journal of Clinical Nutritioncompared
two groups of older male weight lifters: One group ate meat, the other didn't.
Both groups grew stronger, but only the carnivores gained significant muscle.
Chicken, turkey, and fish count, too.
Save Time in the Gym
Don't worry about specific rest periods between
sets. Instead, rest as you need it—less in your early sets when your muscles
are fresh, and more as they become fatigued. "You'll cut your workout time
between 15 and 20 percent," says Staley.
Get Home-Run Power
To hit more home runs, swing with a slight uppercut
at high pitches. The high swing utilizes your powerful hip and midsection
muscles instead of just your hands and arms.
Shake a Defender
To come open for a pass in football, run near
enough to your defender that you can shake his hand. The closer you get, the
easier it'll be to blow past him. As you close in on him, shorten your strides
without slowing down—it'll help you cut faster.
Stay in the Saddle
When you cycle, keep your pace between 80 and 110
rpm. You'll ride farther and faster with less fatigue and knee strain. To gauge
your pace, count how many times your right leg comes to the top of the pedal
stroke in 10 seconds, then multiply that number by 6. The result is your pedal
rpms.
Build Arms Faster
Work opposing muscle groups—your biceps and
triceps, for instance—back-to-back for a faster workout. "While one muscle
is working, the other is forced to rest," says Staley. You won't need as
much time between sets.
Get a Better Handle
To improve your ball-handling skills in basketball,
practice dribbling while wearing leather or canvas work gloves. The thickness
of the gloves helps improve the sensitivity of your fingertips, so you'll have
better ball control when you take them off. Jason Williams, a Memphis Grizzlies
guard, credits his ball-handling mastery to this training method.
Make More Contact
Play foosball to become a better softball hitter.
It improves hand-eye coordination.
Improve Balance
Use a sofa cushion to improve your balance. Stand
one-legged on the cushion and move a medicine ball (or a 1-gallon milk jug or
heavy phone book) from hand to hand, side to side, and behind your head. Once
you've mastered the move, try it with your eyes closed. "You'll improve
your balance, coordination, and body control, all important athletic
attributes," says Greg Brittenham, assistant coach of player development
for the New York Knicks.
Get Stronger Fast
Do the same amount of exercise in 10 percent less
time. It forces your muscles to work harder and improves your endurance at the
same time. If it takes you 30 minutes to do a full-body workout on Monday, try
to do it in 27 minutes on Wednesday.
See Ball, Hit Ball
Play better tennis by training your eyes to focus
faster. You'll hit more winners by learning to change your visual focus from
distance, when your opponent is hitting the ball, to close up, when you're
hitting it. Try this drill while riding in a car: Focus on an object about a
tennis-court length away. Then quickly shift focus to a closer object.
Double Dip Benefits
Do dips with your elbows in and your body straight
to work your triceps. But lean forward and flare them out to focus on your
chest.
Bench More Now
Look at your dominant hand—without turning your
head—while you're bench-pressing. "You'll be able to lift more
weight," says Staley.
Do More Chinups
Don't think about pulling yourself up when you do
chinups. Instead, imagine pulling your elbows down. The exercise will seem
easier.
Climb Like Spiderman
For rock or wall climbing, buy shoes that fit your
bare feet so tightly you can stand but not walk comfortably. They'll give you
optimal control, and you'll be better able to use your legs—the key to successful
climbing.
Run Injury-Free
One week out of every six, cut your weekly training
mileage and frequency in half. You'll give your body a better chance to
recover, and you'll avoid permanent, nagging injuries.
Drink Up, Get Lean
Drink low-fat milk. Scientists in Canada found that
people who consumed more than 600 milligrams of calcium a day—roughly the
amount in 2 cups of milk, a cup of broccoli, and a half cup of cottage
cheese—had lower body fat than those who consumed less than 600 milligrams a
day.
Slash Your Score
When you're putting, aim high on breaks.
"Whatever you think the break is, double it and you'll come much closer to
being correct," says Dave Pelz, author of Dave Pelz' Putting Bible and a
consultant to dozens of PGA pros.
Multiply Your Muscles
Follow this simple formula to build more muscle:
Multiply the amount of weight you lift for a particular exercise by the total
number of times you lift it. Try to increase that number every workout by
lifting heavier weights, increasing your repetitions, or doing more sets.
Be More Flexible
Spend twice as much time stretching your tight
muscles as your flexible muscles. "Focus on problem areas instead of
muscles that are already flexible," says Bill Bandy, Ph.D., a professor of
physical therapy at the University of Central Arkansas. Typical problem areas
for men: hamstrings, shoulders, and lower back.
Recover Faster
When you're recovering from a muscle injury, begin
exercising again as soon as you can. Try a few minutes at low intensity to test
yourself. Go slowly—no explosive movements. If you experience pain, stop
immediately. Afterward, ice the area for 20 minutes and exercise again the next
day. You should be able to go a little harder and longer each workout.
Reach Your Goals
Set your goals in reverse. That is, pick a date of
completion and work backward, writing down short-term goals as you go.
"The goals then seem more like deadlines," says Ballantyne.
Run Hills Faster
When running uphill, keep your head up and your
eyes focused on the top of the hill. This opens your airways, making it easier
to breathe than if your upper body were hunched forward.
Manage Your Middle
Do your ab exercises at the beginning of your
workout if you can't pass this test: Sit with your feet flat on the floor and
your legs bent—as if you had just performed a situp. Then place your fingers
behind your ears with your elbows pulled back. Lower yourself to the floor as
slowly as possible. "If it doesn't take at least 5 seconds, you need to
prioritize your abdominal training," says the Australian strength coach
Ian King.
Win a Marathon
To build speed and endurance, train like a Kenyan:
Go slowly for the first third of your run, at a normal pace in the middle
third, and at a faster-than-normal pace at the end. Gradually increase your
starting pace each week, and you'll increase your normal and fast paces, too.
Outdrive Your Pals
To hit a golf ball farther, take some practice
swings from the opposite side. It strengthens and balances your muscles, which
may help you clear that water hazard. Do a few opposite swings on the first
three or four holes, or for a minute at the driving range.
Sit Back, Squat More
Use a bench to squat with perfect form. That is,
stand in front of the bench when you squat. Lower yourself as if you were
sitting down. When your butt touches the bench, push yourself back up. Try it
with a light bar or a broomstick first.
Shake Your Muscles
Eat immediately after your workout. A 12-week study
conducted by Danish researchers found that older men who drank a shake with 10
grams of protein, 7 grams of carbohydrate, and 3 grams of fat (about the same
as in a cup of milk) within 5 minutes after their weight workout gained muscle,
but men who consumed the drink 2 hours later did not. For a serious postworkout
muscle-building shake, try this formula from Thomas Incledon, M.S., R.D.: Blend
a half cup of fat-free frozen chocolate yogurt, a quarter cup of egg
substitute, a cup of fat-free milk, a large banana, and a tablespoon of
unsweetened cocoa powder, and drink. You'll down 23 grams of protein, 52 grams
of carbs, and only 4 grams of fat.
Get Stronger Legs
Do lunges in reverse. This forces your front leg to
work throughout the entire exercise. Use the same movement pattern as in a
traditional lunge, but step backward instead of forward.
Tape Your Jams
If you have a finger that is frequently jammed,
tape it to a neighboring finger when you play sports. Together the two fingers
will be stronger and less likely to bend at an odd angle.
Use Iron, Get The Lead Out
Lift weights to run faster. A study in the Journal
of Applied Physiology found that 8 weeks of resistance training improved
experienced runners' 5-K times by 30 seconds.
Save Your Back
Squeeze your butt muscles when you lift weights
over your head. "You'll force your body into a position that automatically
stabilizes your spine, which lowers your risk of back injuries," says
Staley.
For a Better Warmup, Train Your Brain
Don't forget to warm up your brain. "Preparing
your central nervous system for activity is just as important as preparing your
muscles," says Vern Gambetta, former director of conditioning for the
Chicago White Sox. That's because your central nervous system tells your
muscles when to contract. Try standing on one leg while you squat down, and
touch the floor in front of it with your opposite hand. Do two sets of 10 to 12
repetitions with each leg.
Loosen Your Hips
Keep your heels on the floor when you squat. If you
can't, your hip flexors are too tight. Try this stretch: Hold onto the sides of
the squat rack and lower yourself until your thighs are parallel to the ground.
Hold for 30 seconds. Return to a standing position, then repeat five times.
Squeeze Out Gains
Squeeze the bar inward when you bench-press. This
works more muscles in your chest. But squeeze it outward when you do the
close-grip version of the exercise—this hits your triceps harder.
Make More Birdies
For straight-on putts, aim exactly 17 inches past
the hole. That's because the 17 inches of green surrounding the cup will be
free of footprints, meaning blades of grass there are thicker and more upright
and will slow down your putts dramatically.
Finish Faster
To save time, use the same weight for your entire
workout. Pick the weight based on your weakest exercise—choose an amount you
can lift only six to eight times—and do the moves in a circuit.
Save Your Calves
If you're a runner and your calves feel tight when
you wake up in the morning, try sleeping on your stomach with your feet hanging
off the bed. Gravity will take over, lightly stretching the calf muscles all
night.
Go Short, Get Fast
Go faster for shorter distances to improve your
running form. You'll not only perform better, but you'll also be less
susceptible to injuries.
Go Light, Get Strong
Lift light weights fast to build strength. Your
muscles will generate as much force as if you were lifting a heavier weight
more slowly. Try it with the bench press: Use a weight that's 40 to 60 percent
of what you can lift one time, and do eight sets of three repetitions, pushing
the weight up as fast as possible. Rest 30 seconds between sets.
Isolate Your Abs
When you do reverse crunches and hanging knee
raises, round your back by rolling your hips and pelvis toward your chest,
instead of simply raising your legs. Otherwise, you're mainly working your hip
flexors—the muscles at the top of your thighs.
Stay Healthy
If you're not exercising at all, just try to fit in
two 20-minute aerobic or weight-training sessions a week. Researchers at
Oklahoma State University examined absentee records of 79,000 workers at 250
sites and found that those who did this minimal amount of exercise had fewer
sick days than those who didn't exercise at all.
Swipe the Rock
To make a steal in basketball, swipe up, not down.
Refs and whiny opponents are just waiting for you to hack down on the ball.
Flicking up is more subtle and surprising—and if you do poke the ball away,
it'll be higher and easier to grab.
Build Sprint Muscles
To sprint faster, work your hamstrings. They help
you push off and develop speed. Try this variation of the leg curl: Pull the
weight toward you with your ankles flexed (as you normally would) so that your
toes are pointing toward your shins. But when you lower the weight, extend your
ankles so that your toes are pointing away from your shins. Your hamstrings
will work harder than with the traditional version of the exercise.
Get Up Faster
To mountain-bike uphill faster, edge forward in the
saddle to distribute your weight more evenly between the front and rear wheels.
If you slip back too far, you'll cause the front wheel to skitter off the
ground. If you lean too far forward, you'll lose traction on the back tire.
Save Your Neck
When doing squats, rest the bar so that as much of
it as possible is touching your shoulders. Holding it only on your lower neck
causes the entire weight to compress your spine, which can lead to spinal and
muscle injuries.
Isolate and Grow
Exercise one arm at time. Do a set of shoulder
presses with your left arm, then do a set with your right. "You'll get
higher-quality sets than if you work both arms at the same time," says
Ballantyne.
Come Clean
Throw all your dirty workout clothes into one mesh
laundry bag. At the end of the week, tie a knot in the bag and throw it in the
washer. You'll always know where your favorite workout shirts are, and you
won't have to touch your sweat socks when they're fully ripe.
Squat for a Six-Pack
Do squats and deadlifts . . . to build your abs.
Research shows that these two exercises force your abdominal muscles to do a
significant amount of work to maintain your posture.
Flex for Muscle
When doing standing arm curls, completely
straighten your arms by flexing your triceps at the end of each repetition.
This ensures that you work the muscle through its entire range of motion.
Run Longer, Easier
When you run, breathe so that your belly rises as
you inhale. This ensures that your lungs are inflating fully with oxygen, so
you'll be able to go longer. Practice by lying on your back and placing a book
on your stomach. The book should rise when you breathe in.
Jump Higher
Do this simple jumping exercise to improve your
vertical leap: Stand on the edge of a step that's about 8 inches high. Step off
backward with both feet. When your toes hit the ground, immediately jump back
onto the step. Concentrate on pushing off the ground as quickly as possible,
rather than on the height of your jump. "The speed of the jump is more
important than the height," says Brittenham. Do three to five sets of 10
to 20 repetitions twice a week.
Make the Catch
To catch a football, focus on the tip of the ball.
You'll watch the ball into your hands, instead of just tracking the blur. Plus,
by concentrating on that specific spot, you'll block out oncoming defenders.
Replace Your Shoes (Not Your Knees)
To avoid injuries, write an "expiration
date" on your shoes as soon as you buy them. Shoes last about 500 miles,
so simply divide 500 by your average weekly mileage to determine how many weeks
your shoes are likely to last.
Get Up and at 'Em
If you want to exercise before work but aren't a
morning person, try this trick: For a set period—say, 4 weeks—force yourself to
get up 15 minutes earlier than normal and do any type of physical activity
(walking, for instance). "Make it so easy that you don't even have to
change into your workout clothes," says John Raglin, Ph.D., an exercise
researcher. As you near the end of the 4 weeks, you'll have a new habit and
will then be able to progress to greater amounts of exercise.
Build Quality Quads
Push from your toes when you do leg presses. Your
quadriceps will work harder.
Warm Up the Right Way
Skip the treadmill warmup before lifting weights.
Instead, do a warmup that targets the muscles you'll be using. For a full-body
warmup, grab a bar and do two sets of 10 repetitions each of the squat,
deadlift, bench press, and bent-over row.
Get a Better Grip
To strengthen your grip, wrap a towel around the
bar when you do arm curls. It makes the bar thicker, which forces your forearm
muscles to work harder.
Improve Your Max
Before you try a maximal lift, load the bar with a
weight that's 20 to 30 percent heavier than what you think you can handle. Then
simply lift it off the rack, hold for 1 to 2 seconds, and put it back. Wait 3
to 4 minutes, then try your true max—the weight will feel noticeably lighter.
Never attempt this without a spotter.
Avoid Burnout
To see if you're overtraining, check your pulse
first thing in the morning the day after a workout. If it's 10 beats per minute
or more above normal, your body is still recovering.
Skip Tendinitis
Use a shoulder-width grip when doing upright rows.
Unlike the traditional narrow grip, it'll help you avoid shoulder-impingement
syndrome—an injury that causes tendinitis and bursitis.
Build Real Strength
Don't use machine weights exclusively. A study at
Georgia State University found that older adults using exercise machines
improved their strength on the machines an average of 34 percent in 2 years.
But their strength measures for everyday activities actually declined 3.5
percent.
Get a Big Back
Break cable rows into two parts. Hold the bar with
your arms outstretched and squeeze your shoulder blades together. Then pull the
bar to your body.
Feed Your Muscles
Satisfy your sugar cravings immediately after your
workout. Eat at least 20 grams along with some protein. The sugar will help
carry protein to the muscles you've just worked. So have a soda with your tuna
sandwich, but limit your sugar intake the rest of the day.
End Back Pain
For every set of abdominal exercises you perform,
do a set of lower-back exercises. Focusing only on your abs can lead to poor
posture and lower-back pain.
Stop Screwing Up
Don't try to lose your gut by working your abs.
Researchers at the University of Virginia found that it takes 250,000 crunches
to burn 1 pound of fat—that's 100 crunches a day for 7 years.
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