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Somatic exercise coach shares 3 stretches to boost your mind-body connection and release tension

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Somatic exercise coach shares 3 stretches to boost your mind-body connection and release tension

You may be most familiar with exercises that involve repeating the same movements over and over, like lifting the best adjustable dumbbells for multiple reps and sets to build strength and muscle, or taking stride after stride to perfect your running form and get faster.

However, amidst your usual workouts, how often do you slow down and truly connect with what your body is doing and how it feels? This is exactly what somatic exercise is all about, and it offers some impressive benefits. 

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Core, Cardio and Legs: How This Multifaceted Military Fitness Workout Will Improve Your Rucking Ability

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Core, Cardio and Legs: How This Multifaceted Military Fitness Workout Will Improve Your Rucking Ability

Working a combination of cardio and the core system of muscles can complement a leg day focusing on muscle stamina. If you are looking for a routine that can help you with the demands of rucking or other load-bearing activities, consider this moderate-intensity workout idea:

Warm up with a squat and toe touch pyramid 1-10, with 100-meter walks/jogs in between (stop at 10/10 each): This warm-up mixes in jogs, walks and other dynamic stretches during the 100-meter distance between each set of the progressive 10-set pyramid/ladder. It looks like this:

  • 1 air squat, 1 toe touch*, jog 100 meters
  • 2 squats, 2 toe touches*, jog 100 meters
  • Continue up the ladder until you get to 10 squats and 10 toe touches and stop.

* The toe touch exercise involves bending at the waist with your back straight and touching the lower leg or foot, depending on your flexibility. You may see improvement in each set as you warm up with this movement. Treat it like a straight-legged deadlift but with no weight. 

After the warm-up pyramid, run or walk one mile or bike for 10 minutes. Depending on your cardio preferences, you can run or bike to work the heart, lungs and legs to continue the warm-up.

Leg and Cardio Section: The section below requires only a kettlebell or dumbbell and a place to run or cardio equipment of your choice. Run or bike for four minutes, and while catching your breath, start lunging for 10 lunges per leg. Then have your kettlebell or dumbbell ready to perform the swing and squat. Hydrate and stretch as needed and start the next set. Make this a limited rest circuit:

Repeat three times.

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  • Run 800 meters or bike for four minutes — steady pace
  • Lunges 10/leg
  • Kettlebell/dumbbell swings 10-20
  • Kettlebell/dumbbell squats 10

Core System and Cardio: The section of the workout below involves faster-paced cardio activity (near sprint), followed by a circuit of core exercises. The farmer’s walk is a single weight in one hand only. Change hands at the halfway mark of the 50-meter farmer walk and walk upright and fast. Then drop the weight and perform 10 hanging knee-ups. After that, drop in the plank pose for the next two minutes, doing a regular plank for one minute and holding a side plank for 30 seconds on each side. Hydrate and stretch as needed and start the next set. Make this a limited rest circuit.

Repeat three times.

  • Run 400 meters or bike for two minutes fast
  • Kettlebell farmer’s walk 50 meters
  • Hanging knee-ups 10
  • Plank pose one minute
  • Left side plank 30 seconds
  • Right side plank 30 seconds

Final Option — Cooldown Section: For the remaining time in your training time budget, pick an easy cardio activity and cool down for the next 20-30 minutes. This can be a walk, ruck, jog, easy bike, elliptical machine, rower or stair stepper. You can also do a series of short cardio and stretch/foam-roller exercises if you prefer to use them as your cooldown section.

Repeat two times.

  • Bike or row for five minutes.
  • Stretch or foam roll for five minutes.

For more ideas for your training goals, check out the Military.com Fitness Section. It contains hundreds of articles with workouts for any fitness and military standards goal.

Want to Learn More About Military Life?

Whether you’re thinking of joining the military, looking for fitness and basic training tips, or keeping up with military life and benefits, Military.com has you covered. Subscribe to Military.com to have military news, updates and resources delivered directly to your inbox.

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Train Like An Astronaut

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Train Like An Astronaut

On Earth, we’re constantly working against gravity. When we stand, walk, or lift things, our muscles and bones are battling Earth’s gravitational pull. This natural resistance keeps our bodies strong. But in space, it’s a whole different story!

On a space station, astronauts experience microgravity. They can float around and use their muscles with little effort. That may sound fun (and it is), but it can also harm an astronaut’s health. Without the stress of gravity, the body doesn’t maintain or build muscle and bone. So muscle weakens, and bones lose density. To counteract the effects of microgravity on the body, astronauts on the International Space Station exercise between two and two-and-a-half hours a day, six days a week. As they say, use it or lose it!

The heart may also weaken in space because it doesn’t have to counteract gravity to pump blood throughout the body. As a result, astronauts can experience changes similar to those caused by aging or illness. Meanwhile, blood and body fluids are pushed from the legs and abdomen to the heart and head, which causes swelling, leading to hearing loss, eye injury, and pressure on the brain.

Do you think it’d be fun to exercise in microgravity? Why or why not? Credit: NASA

Exercise helps astronauts—and you—improve mental health as well. Physical activity reduces depression, anxiety, and stress. It also helps people sleep better, which positively affects mental health and regulates circadian rhythms, your body’s clock that controls when you feel alert or tired. Plus, exercise has been shown to improve memory and cognition.

So exercise in space isn’t just about staying fit. Astronauts need to maintain their mental health, heart health, muscle strength, and bone density. But here’s the exciting part: The research done on the ISS isn’t just helping astronauts. It helps people on Earth too!

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An astronaut wearing a harness to hold him in place pedals a bicycle on the ISS.
Why do you think the CERVIS has no handle bars? Credit: NASA

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Fitness

Reverse lunge – Today's Tip

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Reverse lunge – Today's Tip
  • Today’s Tip

Fit this workout into your day!

By6abc Digital Staff

Friday, October 4, 2024 8:52AM

Fitness tip: Reverse lunge

Shoshana gets us to move our body with a reverse lung to help work our legs and core.

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Shoshana helps us move our bodies with a reverse lung to help work our legs and core.

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