For many years now, sit ups and their variations have gotten a bad rap by fitness “experts” who claim that sit ups are damaging to your spine. In this article, we will further investigate this claim. We will also compare the sit up to the most commonly performed ab exercise to see which one produces the best results.
For years now, sit ups have gotten a bad rap by many fitness “experts” who tout that sit ups are damaging to your spine. Where did this strong opinion come from? The way the sit up has been ostracized by the fitness community, you would suspect that hundreds of thousands of six pack abs seekers have destroyed their backs while performing this “dangerous” exercise! Fortunately, that’s not the case, not even close.
From the meager beginnings of muscle-bound bodybuilders, steel barbells, medicine balls and once-a-day vitamins, the health and fitness industry has transformed into a multi-billion dollar juggernaut. Health and fitness professionals have evolved from spandex and headbands to being highly trained sales and marketing snipers. Your cash is their target.
If history has taught us anything, it is that when an industry exhibits the potential for growth, people and companies exploit the opportunity. The fitness industry has transformed into a multi-billion dollar juggernaut with highly trained sales and marketing snipers who have their cross hairs on your cash.
For many years now, sit ups and their variations have gotten a bad rap by fitness “experts” who claim that sit ups are damaging to your spine. In this article, we will further investigate this claim. We will also compare the sit up to the most commonly performed ab exercise to see which one produces the best results.
For years now, sit ups have gotten a bad rap by many fitness “experts” who tout that sit ups are damaging to your spine. Where did this strong opinion come from? The way the sit up has been ostracized by the fitness community, you would suspect that hundreds of thousands of six pack abs seekers have destroyed their backs while performing this “dangerous” exercise! Fortunately, that’s not the case, not even close.
For many years now, sit ups and their variations have gotten a bad rap by fitness “experts” who claim that sit ups are damaging to your spine. In this article, we will further investigate this claim. We will also compare the sit up to the most commonly performed ab exercise to see which one produces the best results.
For years now, sit ups have gotten a bad rap by many fitness “experts” who tout that sit ups are damaging to your spine. Where did this strong opinion come from? The way the sit up has been ostracized by the fitness community, you would suspect that hundreds of thousands of six pack abs seekers have destroyed their backs while performing this “dangerous” exercise! Fortunately, that’s not the case, not even close.
The belief that doing high reps and low weight will tone up your muscles is wrong and completely outdated. You will never get lean or toned training this way. Here’s why.
Probably the biggest training fallacy that get’s under my skin the most is that to tone up, you should lift lighter weights and do more reps. This misconception, just like many others in the fitness industry have now become the gospel truth.
I would often hear people say “Oh I don’t want to do heavy weights I just want to tone up.? In this article, I’m going to show you why I believe this is completely wrong.