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Hip airplane: An exercise to improve hip mobility and balance

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Hip airplane: An exercise to improve hip mobility and balance

Improve your balance, and hip mobility by mimicking the motion of a flying airplane. Spread your arms, and balance on one leg to do the hip airplane exercise.

Squats and lunges may be your go-to exercises to strengthen your lower body. Add the hip airplane to this list to make your legs, and hips stronger. Your legs, and hips have to be in good shape, as they support your body, and keep you moving. This exercise, which involves spreading out your arms, and standing on one leg, can help to improve balance, and mobility of your hips. It may look like child’s play, but it is not that simple to do this exercise. Coordination failure can lead to a fall, and you can end up with injuries. That’s why it is important to learn how to do it properly.

What is the hip airplane exercise?

The hip airplane exercise is carefully designed for dynamic balance to enhance the strength and flexibility of the lower body. “This exercise, involving the leg and the hip, mainly focuses on improving the hip’s stability, balance and mobility,” says fitness expert Aman Puri.

Hip airplane mimics the motion of a plane. Image courtesy: Adobe Stock

It is performed by standing on one leg while balancing the body in a controlled manner. The movement and body posture imitate the motion of a flying airplane, earning it the name hip airplane exercise.

What are the benefits of the hip airplane exercise?

This balance exercise should be part of your fitness routine, as it has many benefits:

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1. Improves alignment and posture

With the help of controlled rotation of the hips, this exercise helps in aligning the hips, pelvis area and spine. “This leads to a better aligned posture, and helps in overcoming the risk of lower back pain,” says the expert. You should work on your posture, as poor posture can increase mechanical stress in the lower back, and in turn, lead to low back pain, as per research published in EFORT Open Reviews in 2023.

2. Good for mobility of hips

“This exercise involves proper rotation of the pelvic and hip area, which helps strengthen hip joint muscles,” says the expert. It specifically improves the internal and external rotation of the hip and loosens tight hips, which can be a risk factor for musculoskeletal injuries in the lower extremities, as per research published in the Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics in 2021.

3. Better balance

The hip airplane exercise helps improve the body’s balance by involving muscles like the glutes, foot, core and hip muscles. “Proper coordination involving hip rotation or leg extension helps enhance neuromuscular control to create a balance,” says Puri.

4. Activates the core

The hip airplane exercise activates the core muscle, which helps control the required motion, providing stability while rotating. It tightens and strengthens the core, which encompasses the abdominal, pelvic floor, back, diaphragm, hip, and gluteus muscles. It connects the upper and lower extremities, according to research published in Biology Of Sport in 2023.

5. Helps prevent injuries

While working out with weights or gym equipment, you can easily get hurt. “This exercise can help prevent injuries, as it does not involve intense movements or weights,” says the expert. It can be done by most people, but you should be cautious while performing it.

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How to do the hip airplane exercise?

Here are steps to do this exercise:

  • Stand using one leg and bend your knee slightly while spreading your arms out to the sides. Engage your core area to maintain a careful balance.
  • Extend your other leg backward, and lean forward with a straight spine.
  • Rotate your entire torso gradually outwards and keep your leg extended outward just like an extended airplane wing.
  • Hold for a few seconds in the extended leg position.
  • After that, move your hip back to the centre and move back to your starting position.

“If you find it difficult to perform this exercise, you can take help by holding a wall,” suggests Puri.

Hip pain
Avoid mistakes while performing the hip airplane exercise. Image courtesy: Adobe Stock

Common mistakes to avoid

Focus on controlled and coordinated movements while doing the hip airplane exercise. Here are some mistakes to avoid while doing it:

  • Hip overrotation strain: Uncontrolled movements can lead to overrotation of the hip, which can lead to dislocation.
  • Overbending back: Another common mistake is slouching the spine or overbending which can lead to stress on the knee or the hip joints.
  • Loose leg positioning: Loosely placing the legs or letting them hang without stretching them completely won’t give maximum benefit as it does not activate the muscles, especially the hip muscles and glutes.

Who should avoid the hip airplane exercise?

It can be done by most people, but some may have to be more cautious:

  • The elderly and beginners can perform this exercise with a supported variation as there is a risk of falling.
  • Those with weak bones or have a history of past injuries should avoid performing this exercise or use support initially.
  • People with chronic medical problems should consult a doctor before performing the hip airplane exercise.

The hip airplane exercise is perfect for your lower body. It does not involve high-intensity movement, so it can be performed by most people. But if you find it hard to balance, opt for a supported version to avoid any risk of falling.

Related FAQs

Which muscles does the hip airplane target?

Hip airplane mostly targets the glutes minimus, gluteus medius, maximus, and posterior hip muscles. These muscles play a crucial role in stabilising hip and leg movement. The gluteus maximus strengthens control of the hip joint. Gluteus minimus and medius support in stabilising pelvic movements while piriformis is the posterior hip muscle involved in maintaining balance and assisting in hip rotation. Foot muscles and core muscles are also involved during this exercise.

Is the hip airplane exercise good for seniors?

Yes, this exercise is good for the elderly if performed in the right manner using controlled movements. It can help improve the flexibility of hip joints, enhance coordination and balance, prevent hip and pelvic injuries among seniors, and strengthen the muscles of the hip and legs. Seniors can also perform this exercise without overexerting their body as it does not involve any high-intensity movements. As seniors have a higher risk of injury involving weights or intense training, this dynamic exercise can be easily performed without equipment.

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A 71-year-old trainer says these five moves are all you need for full-body strength after 50

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A 71-year-old trainer says these five moves are all you need for full-body strength after 50

Compound moves work multiple muscle groups at the same time, making them an efficient way to build full-body strength.

Liz Hilliard is a 71-year-old fitness instructor and founder of the Hilliard Studio Method. She believes she’s stronger now than she was at 40.

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DeTar Health & Fitness Center Announces New Member Special to Kick Off a Healthy 2026 – The Victoria Advocate

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DeTar Health & Fitness Center Announces New Member Special to Kick Off a Healthy 2026 – The Victoria Advocate

DeTar Health & Fitness Center Announces New Member Special to Kick Off a Healthy 2026

Published 11:45 am Monday, December 22, 2025

As the New Year approaches, DeTar Health & Fitness Center is inviting the community to start 2026 on a healthy note with a limited-time New Member Special designed to make fitness more accessible than ever. Now through January 31, 2026, new members can join DeTar Health & Fitness Center for $75 for three months with no joining fee. DeTar Health & Fitness Center is located at 4204 N. Laurent St. in Victoria.

“We pride ourselves on creating a welcoming environment where members of all fitness levels feel comfortable and supported,” said Stephanie Schuckenbrock, Director of DeTar Health & Fitness Center. “From our diverse group exercise schedule—including popular Les Mills classes—to our wide range of cardio and weight training equipment, our knowledgeable staff is here to help every member reach their personal health goals.”

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DeTar Health & Fitness Center offers a full suite of amenities, including:

  • Indoor pool

  • Full schedule of group exercise classes

  • Locker rooms with showers

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Cardio and weight lifting equipment

  • Certified personal trainers and registered massage therapists

  • Since 1986, DeTar Healthcare System’s Health & Fitness Center has served the Victoria area as a trusted fitness and wellness facility, supervised by a professional team of fitness instructors, personal trainers and massage therapists. The center emphasizes the importance of exercise as a cornerstone of living a healthier life.

    Programs and services offered include:

    • Adult fitness programs

    • Group fitness classes

    • One-on-one sessions with certified personal trainers

    • Sessions with registered massage therapists

    • Corporate wellness programs

    The facility is well-equipped with a wide range of fitness equipment, including arc trainers, treadmills, stationary and recumbent bikes, rowing machines, spin bikes, Jacob’s Ladder, stair steppers, circuit weights, free weights and kettlebells.

    Community members interested in taking advantage of the New Member Special are encouraged to sign up soon, as the offer ends January 31, 2026. For more information or to join, call 361-578-5884 or visit https://www.detar.com/fitness.

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    How Dad’s Fitness May Be Packaged and Passed Down in Sperm RNA | Quanta Magazine

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    How Dad’s Fitness May Be Packaged and Passed Down in Sperm RNA | Quanta Magazine

    In March 2025, in a preprint uploaded to biorxiv.org, Mansuy and colleagues reported that EVs in mice can transport certain RNAs, metabolites and lipids linked to early-life stress from circulating blood to sperm, with consequences for offspring. The offspring produced by these sperm cells had stress-related metabolic dysfunction as adults and bore the stress signatures in their own sperm RNA. “These changes imply a mechanistic link between sperm RNA modifications and phenotypic features in the offspring,” Mansuy’s team concluded in their paper, which has not yet been peer-reviewed.

    Phenotypic Translation

    Perhaps the trickiest step to understand is how sperm-borne molecules could influence an adult’s observable traits. In one form of experiment, researchers extract all the sperm RNA from mice that have been raised under stressful or health-altering conditions. Those isolated RNAs are then injected into a zygote. Pups that emerge usually “get the dad’s phenotypes,” Conine said, suggesting that the RNAs alone confer traits from dad to offspring.

    But how? During early development, epigenetic processes reign. As one fertilized cell divides into two, and those cells divide again, and so on, one set of DNA instructions is dynamically and repeatedly reprogrammed. The growing body specializes into different cell types and is sculpted into a sequence of increasingly complex forms. It’s possible, then, that early epigenetic alterations to the genome could have significant downstream effects on an adult.

    Research out of Conine’s lab, published in 2024, showed that sperm microRNAs alter gene expression in mouse embryos. Experiments like these, he said, support the idea that offspring can inherit paternal traits via the transfer of non-DNA molecular stowaways in sperm.

    The recent Cell Metabolism paper took this idea a step further by tracing a mechanism by which this can happen. A team of more than two dozen Chinese researchers focused on the epigenetic transmission of exercise benefits, homing in on a set of microRNAs that reprogram gene expression in the early embryo. These changes ultimately result in skeletal muscle adaptations in adult offspring that enhance exercise endurance. The researchers found that well-exercised mice had more of these microRNAs in their sperm than sedentary mice did. When these microRNAs were transferred into zygotes, the adults they grew into were more physically fit, with more mitochondria in skeletal muscle and higher endurance.

    But how did the molecules generate the exercise-positive phenotype? In experiments, the researchers found that the microRNAs suppressed a particular protein, which had the effect of boosting genes related to mitochondrial activity and metabolism.

    Intriguingly, the sperm of physically trained male humans also hosted higher levels of many of the same microRNAs than those of untrained cohorts. “This cross-species conservation suggests a potential role for these sperm mi[cro]RNAs in intergenerational exercise adaptations in humans,” the researchers wrote.

    The First Draft

    The notion that a father’s lived experience can become recorded by his body, transmitted to his gametes and relayed to his offspring is no longer as outlandish as it once seemed. Many researchers in the field are willing to float speculative visions of what could be going on, even as they acknowledge that gaps remain.

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    “Our hypothesis is that the epididymis ‘sees’ the world and alters the small RNAs it produces in response,” Rando said. “These RNAs are then delivered to the zygote upon fertilization and control early gene regulation and development to shape offspring health and disease.”

    Conine speculates that once certain RNAs make their way into the egg, they trigger “a cascade of changes in developmental gene expression that then leads to these phenotypes” of the father showing up in the next generation. Remarkably, this unfolds even though the sheer volume of the sperm’s contents is so much less than an egg’s contents, including the relative amounts of RNA.

    The full picture of how paternal experience and behavior might epigenetically influence offspring is not nearly in hand. Researchers are currently piecing the story together, one experiment at a time, rather than proving out every step sequentially in the same set of organisms. One of the gaps is in the characterization of what RNA and perhaps other epigenetic factors do in the zygote to modify genomic activity as it unfolds during development, Mansuy said.

    “We are still blind men describing for the first time different parts of the same elephant,” Chen said. “The underlying mechanism is almost certainly an orchestra of a sperm RNA code and factors beyond that.”

    Confirming the findings in humans would take enormous effort, but it would be key to turning these findings in mice into “informed medical advice,” Chen said. This would require well-controlled experiments following multiple generations, tracking diet, exercise, aging and environmental exposures, while also using advanced tools to decode sperm-packaged molecules — and then looking for strong correlations between the molecular and phenotypic data.

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    Even amid the uncertainties, researchers are cautiously moving forward as they learn to believe the results of their own experiments. If they’re right, they will have discovered a new fact of life, Rando said. When he thinks about his two boys, he wonders what he might have done differently when he was younger, before they were born, that might have tweaked his RNA profile in ways that would affect them today.

    “We don’t know enough yet to develop guidance like that,” Rando said. “Maybe we will get there.”

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