Tag: abs

  • 13 | More Core

    13 | More Core

    Today we are going to be talking about one of my favorite phrases: more core. What does it mean, why is it so important, especially right now in this holiday season? The core is important for controlling, harnessing, and moving energy within the body, and the holiday season is one of the most important times to maintain your inner energy.

    What is the core?

    While most assume it’s just the abdominals, the core is truly a channel and conduit of renewable energy. It is the area of our body which houses our life. The core is important for controlling, harnessing, and moving energy within the body.

    Why is the core important?

    The core will allow you to move and breathe with ease and depth of breath, and without recognizing this, we do a disservice to most all functional and fitness practices. A stronger core also helps keep your stress levels lower–think about it, when you pay more attention to your breath, your cortisol levels are more controlled.

    What do you do?

    If possible, lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Feel the imprint you are making on the floor. Take a few breathes in, and place your hands on the tops of your pelvis, with your fingers angling toward the pubic bone, and your thumbs near your navel. Pull all of this together as you exhale. When you have no breath left, pull that feeling down towards your back. Can you feel that sense of energy spreading?

    Deepen by pushing into your feet and pulling your body up into a low bend.

    Try this:

    Put your hands on your hips and imagine you are holding a basin filled with water. Tip your pelvis forward, and notice what is happening in your back body and your front. Repeat and tip your pelvis backwards. When you tip forward, your abdominals should become softer while your back muscles tighten, and the opposite should happen when you tip your basin back.

    This is to give you an idea of the relationship between your lower back and abdominals. Neither should be chronically tight or weak.

    Resources:

     

  • 10 | Neutral Pelvis: The Secret to a Strong Yoga Practice & Life

    10 | Neutral Pelvis: The Secret to a Strong Yoga Practice & Life

    A neutral pelvis is so important for our movement patterns and for our energy level, and that’s why today’s episode is all about creating and maintaining a neutral pelvis.

    What does “pelvis” mean? Where is the pelvis?

    In Latin, pelvis translates to “acetabulum” meaning, basin.

    The pelvis is where your lower limbs come up and meet at the hip joint. The illium, the pubic bone, the sacrum, and the tailbone all meet to create the pelvis. The tailbone actually serves as an attachment point for the lower muscular system.

    What is a neutral pelvis?

    The pelvis provides the foundation for the spine. When thinking about energy exchange and how we hold onto energy within the body, a neutral pelvis is fundamental for that. If you go against a wall and find your sacrum, pushing that against the wall will help you see where your pelvis aligns. If you find that it’s difficult, this probably means the front of your hip is tight and you have an anterior tilt.

    Why is it important?

    A neutral pelvis is important in supporting the spine, this way no excessive strain is placed on your spinal cord. It is also important for proper joint movement, and fundamental for taking big, deep breaths.

    Neutral Acronym:

    • N: Neck in line
    • E: Elongate
    • U: Un-clench your jaw
    • T: Tailbone down
    • R: Ribs broaden
    • A: Abdominals drawn together
    • L: Line between the pubic bone and tailbone