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Listicle: Exercise gadgets that promised but did not deliver

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Listicle: Exercise gadgets that promised but did not deliver

The vibrating belt. Classic journal adverts present that it was a success within the ’70s and ’80s. Even Utpal Dutt makes use of one within the 1979 movie Gol Maal. The declare: Vibration stimulates fats cells and the jiggle burns it away. In fact, it doesn’t work. Life is rarely this simple.

The Kardashians love the waist coach: Hooks, stretch-resistant cloth, boning and compression be a part of forces, hoping you’ll preserve it on all day, or not less than lengthy sufficient for the physique to study to maintain it snatched in.
The vibrating belt: Vintage magazine ads show that it was a hit in the ’70s and ’80s.
The vibrating belt: Classic journal adverts present that it was a success within the ’70s and ’80s.

The stationary bike. It’s been round because the Nineteen Thirties. However the acquainted model, which tracks pedalling and hypothetical distance coated, was invented in 1968 by American chemist Keene Dimick. It standard in gyms, however not often at residence (strive pedalling in a single place and see how shortly it will get boring). Over time, it’s come to serve one objective solely, as a receptacle for garments you’ve worn, however aren’t able to toss for laundry.

The stationary bike that’s been around since the 1930s.
The stationary bike that’s been round because the Nineteen Thirties.

The Bullworker. Was your uncle swayed by photographs of muscled dudes (together with boxer Muhammad Ali) crushing it on this rod-and-bow-style isometric gadget? The moveable residence health model was invented by Gert F. Kölbel in 1962 and had its heyday within the Eighties. It’s nonetheless a superb strength-building device. The hitch: You need to already be pretty match to begin with.

The Bullworker had its heyday in the 1980s.
The Bullworker had its heyday within the Eighties.

Masai Barefoot footwear. Operating low on inspiration? Head to Africa. How do the Maasai individuals handle to have toned thighs and no cellulite? It should as a result of they stroll on sand, not flat surfaces. Enter MBT, a model with convex soles on overpriced sneakers, which claimed to imitate the rolling movement with each step. Paris Hilton wore them. So did Madonna. The gimmick labored from the Nineties to nicely into the early 2000s.

Masai Barefoot shoes is a brand with convex soles, which claimed to mimic the rolling motion of the Maasai people with every step.
Masai Barefoot footwear is a model with convex soles, which claimed to imitate the rolling movement of the Maasai individuals with each step.

The Bowflex. What does each Nineties residence want? Why, a pleasant all-in-one health club machine. The Bowflex was each type of flex. It confirmed you have been eager on all-round health, had cash, and had an entire room through which to position your cumbersome system. However the place is the bench? Why are there no free weights? The corporate is nowhere close to as standard because it was.

The Bowflex showed you were keen on all-round fitness, had money, and had a whole room in which to place your bulky device.
The Bowflex confirmed you have been eager on all-round health, had cash, and had an entire room through which to position your cumbersome system.

The stomach trimmer. On the subject of stomach fats, there’s a sucker born each second. Indian ’90s youngsters will keep in mind cable-TV informercials for these double-spring instruments that claimed to spot-target abdomen muscle groups, make crunches simpler and promised washboard abs. 3,999+ delivery and taxes (and lots of again ache) later, midsections proceed to unfold out. And stomach fats is usually the primary to seem and final to go.

Indian ’90s kids will remember cable-TV informercials for these double-spring tummy trimmer that claimed to spot-target stomach muscles, make crunches easier.
Indian ’90s youngsters will keep in mind cable-TV informercials for these double-spring tummy trimmer that claimed to spot-target abdomen muscle groups, make crunches simpler.

The steadiness board. Go on. Pull it out from the place it’s accumulating mud beneath the mattress. These upside-down UFOs confirmed up within the final decade as low-cost, elegant methods to construct core energy, enhance steadiness, right posture and tone the physique. All of the physique needed to do was keep standing or wobbling, like on a skateboard that went nowhere. It obtained boring to lengthy earlier than it ever confirmed outcomes.

These upside-down UFOs, aka balance boards, showed up in the last decade as cheap, elegant ways to build core strength, improve balance, correct posture and tone the body.
These upside-down UFOs, aka steadiness boards, confirmed up within the final decade as low-cost, elegant methods to construct core energy, enhance steadiness, right posture and tone the physique.

The Fitbit. Who knew monitoring one’s exercise would turn into such a superb health motivator? And who knew that we’d hand over our private knowledge and site so simply? The primary trackers counted steps even when you have been in a bus, boat or elevator. The highest-end ones, which tracked sleep and oxygen ranges would even predict an incoming bout of Covid. Alas, the corporate goes out of enterprise, bowing right down to the cheaper Garmin and smartphone apps.

The first Fitbit trackers counted steps even if you were in a bus, boat or elevator.
The primary Fitbit trackers counted steps even when you have been in a bus, boat or elevator.

Waist coach. If a corset is sort of a bra for the torso, consider the waist coach as a corset for simply the abs. Hooks, compression, stretch-resistant cloth, boning and wicking all be a part of forces, hoping you’ll preserve it on all day, or not less than lengthy sufficient for the physique to study to face up straight and preserve it snatched in. The Kardashians find it irresistible, so no marvel their followers do too. Do they work? Under no circumstances. As a substitute, core muscle groups keep unused, getting weaker and customers complain of being in need of breath, similar to in a corset.

Even in the 2000s infomercials of butterfly abs, these vibrating stick-on devices looked too good to be true.
Even within the 2000s infomercials of butterfly abs, these vibrating stick-on units appeared too good to be true.

Butterfly abs. Even within the 2000s infomercials these vibrating stick-on units appeared too good to be true. Place them on flabby arms, the abdomen or jiggly thighs, and so they promised to pulsate the fats away, leaving you with a toned physique. These have been glorified massagers, and never excellent ones both – they vibrated so strongly, their very own glue couldn’t maintain them on to the pores and skin.

From HT Brunch, April 22, 2023

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Fitness

All you need to know about the good morning exercise

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All you need to know about the good morning exercise

When it comes to exercises that deliver bang for your buck and work muscles across your whole body, you’re probably thinking of big-ticket exercises like your squats and deadlifts. But what about the good morning exercise?

A hip hinge move, it strengthens your whole posterior chain (including your hamstrings, glutes, spinal erectors), much like a hip thrust or glute bridge. What’s more, according to research, the exercise is helpful for hamstring and erector spinae activation, and may be helpful for reducing the risk of hamstring injury.

We spoke to Lewis Paris, PT, founder and award-winning lead trainer of London-based Lewis Paris Fitness to talk about this movement that 2.9k of you Google every month – as demoed by our Women’s Health Collective expert trainer, Izy George – including what it is, how to do it, good form and more.

What is the good morning exercise?

‘The good morning exercise is a hip-dominant movement that primarily focuses on your posterior muscles,’ says Paris. ‘So that means your hamstrings with support from your lower back and glutes.’

Which muscles does the good morning exercise work?

‘The good morning is a compound exercise and is posterior dominant,’ says Paris. The main muscles worked are predominantly:

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Compound exercises (or multi-joint movements) are moves work multiple muscle groups at the same time. For example, a lunge works your quads, core, glutes, hamstrings, and calves.

Since compound exercises tend to use large muscle groups, you’ll increase strength in multiple areas. One Frontiers in Psychology study showed that training using compound exercises provided higher gains in physical performance than training with single-joint exercises. It’s also an efficient way to exercise, since you’re hitting multiple groups at the same time.

How do I do the good morning exercise?

Women’s Health Collective expert trainer Izy George demonstrates the good morning exercise with a barbell

If you are doing it with a barbell, Paris recommends these steps:

1.Position the barbell on your back the same height you would a back squat, but not too high, as this will add stress to your neck and lower-back muscles. Take a wider grip with your hands.

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2. Pinch your shoulder blades together while shrugging down to contract your lats and protect your spine. Position your feet between hip and shoulder width apart.

3. Brace your core by inhaling and creating tension in your mid-section. Prepare to keep your torso straight and avoid rounding your back.

4. This is primarily a hip hinge, so begin the movement by leading from your hips and slightly bending at your knees, bringing your chest forward towards the floor and driving your hips back.

    Keep in mind not to squat as you bow down. Your focus is to feel your hamstrings engage as you make your descent.

    5. As you continue to come down, maintain a rigid back and neutral spine. Avoid tilting your head too far up or too far down: imagine a tennis ball between your chin and chest.

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    6. You should now start to feel the tension build up in your hamstrings. Go as far down as your hamstrings and mobility will allow before your form breaks. If you find it difficult, slightly bend your knees to allow for greater range of motion.

    7. Avoid shifting all your weight into your heels and aim to keep your weight in the midsection of the feet for a more rooted stance.

    If you feel pain in your lower back at any point then stop going down any further.

    8. Once you’ve reached your maximum depth (which will never be more than parallel to the floor), stop, exhale and come up. As you ascend, focus on pushing your hips forward.

    Can I do the good morning exercise with dumbbells?

    Yes, you can do the exercise with dumbbells and using your body weight.

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    Performing the good morning with one dumbbell

    Paris notes: ‘Rather than placing the weight on your back with a barbell, you can place the dumbbell on the front side of your body just above the chest (front-rack position).’

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    Women’s Health Collective expert trainer Izy George demonstrates the good morning with a single dumbbell

    The same rules apply when performing the exercise with a barbell, so:

    1. Focus on lat contraction by pinching the shoulder blades together.

    2. Brace your core, leading from your hips and slightly bending at your knees.

    3. Go as far down as your hamstrings and mobility will allow before your form breaks.

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    4. Once you’ve reached your maximum depth (which will never be more than parallel to the floor), stop, exhale and come up.

    Performing the good morning with two dumbbells

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    Women’s Health Collective expert trainer Izy George demonstrates the good morning with two dumbbells

    Performing the good morning using your body weight

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    You can also perform the good morning exercise using a resistance band, standing with both feet about hip-width distance apart on the band and with it looped around your neck. This movement has the benefits of a barbell good morning, but without the compression and pressure on your upper back and shoulders. It can be useful as a warmup or a low-risk, lower-intensity variation.

    Five common form mistakes to look out for with the good morning exercise and how to avoid injury

    Here are five form mistakes to watch out for, according to Paris:

    1. Rounding of your back

    ‘This will lead to lower-back strain and lack of engagement in your hamstrings,’ says Paris.

    2. Leading from your head

    ‘If you lead with your head down, you’re likely to relax your upper back and force the weight towards your neck, which will increase instability and put more strain on your lower back and neck,’ warns Paris.

    3. Leaning too far back on your heels

    Avoid shifting your weight onto your heels to protect your lower back. ‘With your feet fully rooted into the ground and the weight distributed throughout your whole foot, you’ll encourage the weight to stay in your core and hamstrings,’ advises Paris.

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    4. Going too heavy

    Paris reminds us that, ‘This is an accessory movement so going heavy can cause serious strain to your spine due to how the weight is positioned’.

    5. Not bracing

    ‘Learn how to engage your core to perform the exercise safely. This protects your lower back and encourages a neutral spine. In turn, that will help to distribute the weight to your hamstrings, which is the focus of the exercise,’ says Paris.

    good morning exercise

    Keep your torse straight and avoid rounding your back

    What are the benefits of the good morning exercise?

    Paris says that ‘the good morning is a great accessory exercise to improve and strengthen your posterior chain, which can aid in:

    • posture development
    • core stability
    • hamstring strength
    • improved Romanian deadlift technique
    • increasing isometric control (contracting a muscle without it changing length) of your back and dynamic control of your hips and hamstrings.

    This can also be part of your warm-up routine to prime your posterior muscles before a big lift such as a squat or deadlift.

    According to Paris, ‘Yes, the good morning is a compound exercise, but it’s also classed as isolation for the hamstrings.’ As a multi-joint move, it works your hamstrings, glutes, lower back, spinal erectors, core and upper back.

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    Can I do the good morning exercise seated?

    Yes, says Paris. ‘If you find it difficult whilst standing, you can take the load off your knees, increase balance and focus primarily on hinging at the hips for further engagement of your hamstrings.

    ‘The same sequencing follows but just in a seated position’, continues Paris.

    1.Your feet will be wider than your hips

    2. Brace at your core throughout inhalation. With your back and core engaged start your descent by leaning forward and hinging at your hips.

    3. Go as far down as your hamstrings allow and when you reach your depth, exhale and sit back up leading through with your core and glutes.

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        What are some good morning alternatives?

        1.Romanian deadlift (including the single-leg variation)

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        Similar to the good morning, the RDL engages your glutes, hamstrings, quads, lower back, erector spinae and core.

        1. Begin by standing with your feet hip-width apart and knees slightly bent. Hold one dumbbell in each hand, and place them in front of your hips with palms facing thighs.
        2. Keeping your spine in a neutral position and squeezing the shoulder blades, start sending your hips back
        3. Keeping the dumbbells close to your body, lower them down so they are in front of your shins. Once they pass your knees, do not allow the hips to sink further.
        4. Maintain a neutral spine and drive through heels to fully extend hips and knees, squeezing your glutes at the top.

        A study in the Strength and Conditioning Journal revealed that the good morning is a helpful alternative to the Romanian deadlift if you have lower levels of grip strength or upper-limb injuries, as you can still work your posterior chain without having to use your forearms or lats.

        2. Kettlebell swing

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        Like the good morning, kettlebell swings target your glutes and hamstrings, but also the rest of your posterior chain:

        • glutes
        • hamstrings
        • shoulders
        • lats
        • hips
        • core

        1. Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and squat down to pick up the kettlebell with both hands in an overhand grip.

        2. Look ahead, not down, and keep your spine aligned and your knees slightly bent throughout the movement.

        3. Drive your pelvis forward to swing the kettlebell out and up to shoulder-height.

        4. Allow the weight to drop back down, hingeing at the hips as it swings between your legs.

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        The main muscles targeted here are your:

        • glutes
        • hamstrings
        • quads
        • hip flexors
        • core
        1. Lie on your back on a mat, with your knees bent, and feet flat on the floor. Your feet should be hip-width apart.
        2. On an exhale, squeeze your glutes and push your heels into the floor to lift your hips up towards the ceiling. Pause for a moment at the top before slowly lowering back down (first shoulders, then lower back, then bum) to the mat. That’s one rep.

        Related stories:

        preview for The new Women's Health app is here!

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Move like a gorilla for the ultimate full-body workout – and five other animal exercises

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Move like a gorilla for the ultimate full-body workout – and five other animal exercises

As someone who considers themselves relatively fit and strong, animal-style exercise is shockingly and humiliatingly hard. 

Jake Dearden, a trainer, influencer and fitness racer is taking me through some floor moves and instantly I’m reduced to a puce-faced beginner. In my head, I’m aiming for the fluid motion of a cat or the contained power of a primate but instead, I’m a retiree who’s lost their reading glasses under the sofa.

‘Animal’ or ‘primal’ movement is having a moment. Chris Hemsworth has been seen making his way across the floor on his hands and feet. Conor McGregor, an MMA fighter, trained in this way many years ago and now social media is abuzz (440,000 Instagram posts on the animal flow hashtag). 

Dearden is a keen advocate: “You don’t need any kind of weights, you can do the moves anywhere, they are full body and they require mobility. If you do conventional resistance machine workouts, you’re not engaging the core, you’re not having to think about the movement.”

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The five best exercises for heart health

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The five best exercises for heart health

You can probably feel that you’re working your heart when you walk up a hill. Your heart beats faster and you might feel out of breath, but you might not appreciate the full extent of the benefits.

Any exercise that works your heart and lungs will strengthen the heart muscle, helping to prevent high blood pressure and the “bad” kind of cholesterol that can clog up our arteries. All of this is great for your health span and will reduce your risk of a heart attack or stroke. While any kind of cardio, whether it’s walking or running, is good for heart health for maximum heart benefits, you need to mix up your training sessions.

First, you’ll need some longer, low- to medium-intensity training sessions (known as “zone two” training), ideally three a week. Second, you need a couple of medium- to high-intensity interval training (also known as HIIT) sessions each week. Finally, sports training, or anything that mimics it, is also great for developing cardiovascular fitness and heart strength. So how do you go about working these into your training?

Walking

While walking in general is good for you, to truly boost your heart health your pace needs to be quick, or the terrain will need to be highly varied so that you are working hard enough. You’ll need to reach around 65-70 per cent of your maximum heart rate and for most people this is not your average stroll, it means walking at a pace with some real intent and it should feel as though you can have a conversation with someone but it’s also slightly strained. The heart and lungs thrive on this, but they need 40 minutes-plus to make it truly effective and the same is true when it comes to fat burning.   

Aim for three days per week of at least 40 mins, at a brisk pace.

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Running

For most people running is a real effort. Even when you reach a good level your heart rate will still be higher than walking at the fastest pace, so for the majority this is not your go-to exercise for longer training sessions. Instead, either opt for a short 20- to 40-minute run to increase your heart strength, or switch between short bouts of 30-90 seconds at a fast pace and 90 seconds’ recovery and make this one of your interval sessions. 

Aim for two sessions a week of 20-40 mins, either at a steady pace or interval training, switching between a fast and slow pace.

Swimming 

The effect of the cool water and the pressure of water on your body makes your heart rate slightly slower when swimming than when exercising on dry land. This makes swimming very effective as a long, constant-pace session as you will have a low to medium heart rate for that 30-40-minute duration with no breaks. However, this only holds if you’re a strong swimmer. If your swimming is not so good but you want to use it in your training it’s a perfect interval session. Good swimmers can also use it for interval sessions, as it’s frankly a tough full body exercise. 

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