Fitness
16 Best Floor Exercises To Melt Belly Fat
Contrary to popular belief, the best way to lose belly fat isn’t through jogging and just performing endless sets of crunches, sit-ups, and side bends. The secret to losing fat in your stomach area is to perform strength training regularly and to get in a mixture of both steady-state and interval cardio training. Pretty plain and simple! That’s why we’ve rounded up some of the best floor exercises to melt belly fat. When you keep up this regimen along with eating a healthy diet, then the pounds and inches will start coming off.
These exercises will help increase your calorie burn, daily activity, and also keep your muscles stimulated to aid in fat loss. If you’re not a gym person and prefer to stick with bodyweight movements for now, this is a great option. Keep reading to learn the best floor exercises to melt belly fat. And when you’re done, be sure to check out 9 Lazy Ways to Lose Weight All Month Long.
Reverse Crunches
This list of floor exercises to melt belly fat kicks off with the reverse crunch. Lie down with your lower back flat on the floor. Keep your core tight. Raise your feet back toward your body, and flex your abs hard. Then, lower your legs slowly, maintaining tension in your core before performing another rep. Complete three sets of 10 to 15 reps.
Bicycle Crunches
Lie flat on your back with your hands at the back of your head. Rotate your body up by taking one elbow and bringing it toward the opposite knee. Fully extend the other leg by reaching your heel straight out. Flex your abs hard as you finish, then repeat with the opposite side. Complete three sets of 30 reps.
Side Plank Hip Lifts
For the side plank hip lift, set yourself up against a wall with your heels, butt, and shoulders touching the surface. Align your shoulder with your wrist, and stack your feet on top of each other. Keep your core tight and your glutes squeezed as you tilt and flex your hips straight up and down, maintaining tension in your obliques. Perform three sets of 10 reps on each leg.
Hand-Release Pushups
Assume a pushup position with your shoulders in line with your wrists and your back straight. Keep your core tight and your glutes squeezed, and lower yourself under control until your whole body is on the floor. When you reach the bottom, take your hands off the ground, then place them back to push yourself up. Flex your triceps and chest at the top to finish before performing another rep. Complete three sets of 10 to 15 reps.
Figure 8
Lean back with your feet fully extended. Lift your legs a few inches off the ground, and begin drawing a figure 8 (or infinity sign) with your legs, crisscrossing while maintaining tension in your core. Once you complete one loop around and draw a figure 8, that’s one rep. You can continue drawing in the same direction, or go in reverse for the next rep. Complete three sets of 8 to 10 reps.
Duck Walks
Start your duck walks by getting into a deep squat with your hips at least parallel to the ground. Keep your chest tall and your core tight, and take a mini step forward with one leg, then with the other. As you walk in this position, make sure you stay low while keeping all the tension in your legs. Walk down forward, then reverse the motion and walk backward to the starting position. Perform three to four sets of 15 reps, forward and backward.
Feet-Elevated Pushups
To perform feet-elevated pushups, begin by placing both hands in line with your shoulders in a pushup position while positioning your feet on top of a stable surface. Keep your core tight, hips high, and chest tall, and use your control to lower your body, coming down until your chest is an inch or two above the floor. Then, push yourself back up, flexing your upper pecs and triceps to finish. Perform three to four sets of 10 to 15 reps.
Side Plank with Leg Raise
Get into a side plank position with your elbow in line with your shoulder and your feet stacked. Keeping your abs tight, begin to raise your top leg up. Lift the heel as high as possible, as you squeeze the glute hard at the top. Lower using control, then perform another rep. Complete three to four sets of 10 reps on each leg.
Split Squats with Pulse
Begin split squats with a pulse in a staggered stance—one foot should be in front, and the other foot should be behind you with your toes firmly planted. Keep your chest tall and your core tight, and lower yourself until your back knee touches the floor. Come up 1/4 of the way, then return to the lowered position. Drive through the heel of the front leg to come all the way up. That counts as one rep. Perform three to four sets of 10 reps on each leg.
V-Twist
For the V-Twist, get into position by lying flat on your back with your knees bent 90 degrees. Keep your core tight, curl up, and reach to one side while extending your legs out at the same time. Crunch hard at the top, return to the starting position, and then crunch up on the other. Perform three to four sets of 10 reps on each side.
Judo Pushups
This exercise is a great variation of the pushup, as it stretches out your core and improves your shoulder mobility. Start by getting into a classic pushup position. Drive your hips up toward the ceiling, and stretch the hamstrings. Swoop down toward the ground, leading with your head by your chest. Right before your body reaches the ground, push yourself back up, flexing your triceps to finish. Complete three sets of 10 to 15 reps.
Heel Elevated Single-Leg Glute Bridge
Place your heel on top of an elevated sturdy surface with your knee bent and your other leg up in the air. Keep your core tight, and push through the heel and the hip of the working leg, extending your hip up. Flex your glute hard at the top, then lower back to the ground, keeping control, before performing another rep. Perform three sets of 15 reps for each leg.
Floor Dips
Sit on the floor with your knees bent and your arms behind you. Push yourself up by driving through your palms, extending your arms out as far as you can. Flex your triceps hard at the top, then come all the way down until you’re seated before performing another rep. Perform three sets of 15 to 20 reps.
Side Plank Oblique Crunches
Assume a side plank position with your bottom leg in front of the top one. With your top hand holding your head, perform a side crunch by bringing the top elbow toward the bottom knee. Flex your oblique hard, then return to the starting position before performing another rep. Perform three sets of 10 to 15 reps for each side.
Supine Vacuum Pose
Lie flat on your back with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor. Once you’re in this position, exhale all of your air, and hollow out your stomach. Draw your belly button in toward your spine as much as you can. This will activate your transverse abdominis muscle. Hold this position for 15 seconds to start, then build yourself up to a longer hold, up to 60 seconds.
Hollow Body Hold
This list of floor exercises to melt belly fat wraps up with the hollow body hold. Lie flat on your back with your arms extended over your head and your feet straight out and together. Press your lower back into the floor, and slightly curl up, lifting your legs and arms in the air. Your body should be in the shape of a banana.
Be sure to keep tension in your core at all times and try not to compensate with your lower back. You can regress the exercise by raising both your legs and arms higher until you get the strength to have it lower. Do the hollow body hold three times for 20 to 30 seconds.
Fitness
New Osage Nation exercise complex has walking trail, pickleball courts
Improve gut health with these targeted exercises
These targeted exercises can help with bloating, inflammation and gas.
Reviewed
The Osage Nation executive branch on Oct. 28 celebrated the completion of the first phase of the development south of Main Street in downtown Pawhuska of a new outdoor health complex.
The complex is located between Lynn Avenue on the east and Kihekah Avenue on the west. It stretches along what once was a depot site for the Midland Valley Railroad. A new concrete walking trail forms a perimeter for it. Pickleball courts, as well as fitness equipment and courses, are available for free public use. Publicly accessible parking is available on three sides.
Casey Johnson, secretary of Development for the Osage Nation, said during the ribbon-cutting ceremony that future additions to the complex are expected to include sports fields. The loop of walking trail will offer safety from motor vehicle traffic to persons walking to lose weight or achieve other health-related goals, he said. Johnson shared that he recently needed to lose weight and ended up walking along public streets, one result of which was that he was nearly run over more than once.
Principal Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear said the continued development of the exercise complex will require additional political and financial support. The Osage Nation executive branch established the facility without the backing of the Osage Nation Congress. Ribbon cuttings for new Osage Nation amenities typically feature recognition for members of Congress, but that was missing Oct. 28.
“We’re working on it every day,” Standing Bear said regarding additional backing for the exercise complex. Standing Bear is in his third four-year term as principal chief and has been an energetic proponent of expanding health, education and housing services.
“It’s real. It’s really happening,” Standing Bear said regarding the exercise complex. “You see, I’ve got to exercise.”
Johnson said that the idea for the new complex came from Osage Nation executive branch deliberations during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“One of the things we talked about was getting people healthy,” Johnson said. Survey work was done regarding the health of people in Osage County and the results were disturbing, he said.
“And they found that the farther away from Osage County you get, the healthier you get,” Johnson said.
Johnson recently told the Osage News that the executive branch had invested more than $7 million in the exercise complex so far. Funding used to pay for the work came from amounts already approved and available, though not expressly earmarked for the outdoor facility in Pawhuska, he said. The Osage Nation also received donations for the project, he said.
“We’re shooting big on this thing,” Johnson said during the Oct. 28 ribbon cutting. The outdoor complex is located immediately south of the new Osage Nation Visitors Center at the intersection of Lynn Avenue and Main Street, as well as the new Osage Nation health clinic that is under construction on the south side of Main Street.
Standing Bear reiterated the political aspect of the continued development of the exercise complex,
“It’s political. I’ll just say it,” he said, adding that some people apparently don’t agree about the value of the complex. “There is a future to grab ahold of here.”
Fitness
Too Much Sitting Harms the Heart, Even in Folks Who Exercise
MONDAY, Nov. 4, 2024 (HealthDay News) — There’s just something about sitting.
New research shows that too much time on sofas and chairs harms the heart — even among people who get the minimum recommended amount of daily exercise.
“Taking a quick walk after work may not be enough” to offset the health dangers of sitting, said study lead author Chandra Reynolds. She’s a professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
Her team published its findings recently in the journal PLOS One.
The data comes from an ongoing study of over a thousand former or current Coloradans, 730 of who are twins. Reynolds’ team focused on participants aged 28 to 49.
Study lead author Ryan Bruellman said the cohort was relatively young, because “young adults tend to think they are impervious to the impacts of aging. But what you do during this critical time of life matters.”
Bruellman is now a PhD candidate at the University of California, Riverside.
A lot of the participants were sitting a lot of the time: An average of almost nine hours per day, according to the study.
Exercise rates ranged from 80 and 160 minutes of moderate physical activity per week and less than 135 minutes of vigorous exercise weekly.
The Boulder team then assessed each person’s “heart age” using two key heart health indicators: total cholesterol/high-density lipoprotein and body mass index (BMI).
The result: As sitting time increased, heart aging did, too.
Even when folks met minimum daily exercise recommendations — about 20 minutes per day of “moderate” exercise — the deleterious effect to the heart of all that sitting didn’t budge.
Adding in “vigorous” exercise (for example, running or cycling) for about 30 or more minutes per day did seem to help counteract the harms from sitting, however. But it still didn’t bring those harms back to zero.
According to a news release from the university, data from the twins in the study suggests that “replacing sitting with exercise seemed to work better to improve cholesterol than simply adding exercise to a full day of sitting.”
The researchers’ suggestions for folks who sit a lot: Try using a standing desk at work, get in at least 30 minutes of vigorous exercise per day or add in strenuous workouts on your days off as a “weekend warrior.”
More information
Find out more about the health dangers of sitting at Johns Hopkins University.
SOURCE: University of Colorado Boulder, news release, Nov. 1, 2024
Fitness
Once bodybuilders, Gold Coast couple breaking world records in their 80s
David and Gioia Berry aren’t your typical octogenarians.
Rather than travelling the world, the 81-year-olds have opted to spend their retirement years breaking world records in fitness competitions.
“Our prime function is to try and stay as fit and healthy as we can for as long as we can,” Mr Berry said.
The pair already have an impressive list of achievements between them.
David currently holds three world records for various indoor rowing events in the men’s 75-to-79-year age category and another for the 100-metre sprint for his 80-84 age group, with a time of 17.9 seconds.
Gioia, on the other hand, recently broke the world record on the SkiErg – short for skiing exercise machine – in the 80-to-84-year age category for 100 metres, clocking 25.5 seconds.
The Gold Coast couple, who have been married for more than 60 years, have no plans of slowing down either.
They’ve spent the past few months training at their local gym and pool for the indoor rowing event at the Pan Pacific Masters Games on the Gold Coast this week.
“I do a split body routine: chest and triceps on a Monday; back and biceps on Wednesdays; and we do legs and arms as well as shoulders on Fridays — so that keeps us pretty busy,” Mr Berry said.
On alternate days, they swim about a kilometre, followed by an ice bath for recovery.
“I used to do yoga and pilates but I can’t fit that in anymore because I’m trying to train for the Pan Pac games,” Mrs Berry said.
Bodybuilding after having kids
Despite their lifelong love for health and fitness, it wasn’t until they were in their late 30s that they decided to take it more seriously by opening a gym and entering body building competitions.
“I was training with weights in the backyard when I was 16 years of age, but I was pretty skinny then,” Mr Berry said.
“I trained reasonably hard up until I met Gioia [at 17 years], and then we got married [three years later in 1964], and we had kids, and everything went on hold for a few years, and we started again probably 10 years after we were married.”
At 37, Mrs Berry entered the very first Miss Australia bodybuilding competition in 1990.
But Mr Berry said convincing his wife to compete was “a real challenge”.
“She was horrified but like a true champion she bit the bullet and lined up for the comp and did very well,” he said.
“She placed fourth out of about 25 girls, most of them aged between 19 and 22 … but she got the Most Outstanding Achievement Award.”
Mr Berry entered his first bodybuilding competition about a year later at 39 and won the masters category for his age group in the Mr Australia contest.
He ended up going on to become the first person to also win the 50s, 60s and 70-year age categories.
Mr Berry says despite being prone to injuries these days, he hopes they’ll be able to continue doing what they love together.
“So far, the future is looking good as we both are still breaking records in our age categories and certainly hope we can continue for a while yet,” he said.
‘Never too late to start exercising’
Bond University academic Kieran Le Plastrier says the couple are proof that it’s never too late to start exercising.
“It turns out the literature is pretty good in that it reminds us that even if we don’t make changes till our 30s, 40s or 50s … the things we do in our 40s can make a huge difference into our older age and even into advanced age, which is anybody over 80 years of age,” Dr Le Plastrier said.
He encourages older people to prioritise resistance training, like lifting weights, because it reduces the risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes and falls.
“Now, you don’t necessarily need to enter a competition and become a bodybuilder, but we know that resistance training actually leads to long-term health benefits,” he said.
“So what I would encourage us to all take away from this story is that no matter when we start, as long as we get started, we can improve our health outcomes into old age.”
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