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The best Fitness Instagram accounts of 2023

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The best Fitness Instagram accounts of 2023

Here are five excellent fitness and conditioning accounts on Instagram that you must follow in 2024



The end of the year is here, and for fitness enthusiasts, that means kickstarting the new one with more motivation. Well, I must say that this should also include upgrading your ‘following’ list on Instagram. After all, some of the doom-scrolling should at least involve a fitness tip or two, that could add to, or even change, the way you train in 2024. 

Social media fitness tips are usually scoffed at but if one chooses well, then it can be a goldmine. And while people may have their preferences, in terms of who to follow and why, here’s a list of pages that focus on different aspects of training: strength, mobility, prevention and rehabilitation, technique, and of course, HIIT. So, depending on what you need out of those, here are the five Instagram pages to follow in the coming year (and hopefully for longer).

ldcfitness/@ldcfitness: Lucas Diaz Colodrero is a former fitness coach at David Beckham’s football club Inter Miami. He specialises in creating short, easy-to-do workouts for people who are more interested in movement-based sport, rather than heavy lifting and muscle gain. That means working on speed and explosive strength, with a focus on conditioning-based workouts. 

While most of his videos are targeted towards footballers, anyone playing any sport—or even running or swimming—can use them. He uses resistance bands quite a lot, along with medicine balls, benches, and the cable machine. The best thing though is that he has mastered how to simplify them, and presents workouts in an order with the sets and reps mentioned. He also mentions light or heavy dumbbells in order to further break it down. 

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One of my favourite ldcfitness posts is the ‘Tired of running? Try this’ post:

The Anatomy of Therapy/@theanatomyoftherapy: With 1.7 million followers, the page doesn’t do justice to Dr. John Cybulski’s bio, which says ‘chiropractor’—a profession which is not very kindly judged in the fitness world. But there is no ‘magical’ back-cracking involved here. Cybulski has created a page that is so much more than just about the back. 

It is about strengthening hips, hamstrings, knees, and anything that can affect the posterior chain. There are strengthening tips for the shoulder and upper back and also for the neck. He even covers headaches! He uses a graphic to pinpoint the exact area of concern and that makes it so much easier to identify if the post is made for you or not. Here’s one example:

Dr. Susie Spirlock/@dr.susie.squats: Posts which provide answers to basic questions that are not usually covered by a single trainer or research are always attractive. Spirlock does really well to figure out the most common questions people ask themselves while working out. And, it must be said, it’s not easy for everyone to go and ask them out loud in a gym, or search for the right answer online. 

She also uses statements to introduce the workouts. This one: titled ‘Train your damn hip flexors’ shows people that stretching alone is not the solution for tight hip flexors which slow everything down and hurt during the most basic movements. 

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And this most common question: lower back sore after deadlifts? 

Shea Pierre/@pierreseliteperformance: Speed, stability, and barefoot training and the French contrast method—which I wrote about in detail in a Lounge piece titled Get as fit as an athlete with the French Contrast Method—are the central principles of Shea Pierre’s workouts. 

The idea of French Contrast training is simple: follow a compound heavy lifting exercise, with an explosive exercise hitting the same muscles. Example: bench press followed by plyometric push-ups. Here are two of his workouts, one for sprints and one for stability:

Derick Ansah/@derickansah_: The simplest workouts are usually the easiest to forget on a particular gym day. Mostly out of boredom or repetition, it’s easy to sacrifice the front raise on one shoulder day thinking you’ll do it the next shoulder day. Step in Derick Ansah. The Ghanaian trainer targets the most commonly worked muscles, because that is where most people need help. Biceps? Ansah has you covered with a simple routine he demonstrates with reps and sets mentioned:

And how about shoulders? This 20-minute sitting shoulder workout shows you how creative he can get. My go-to page when I want to take a break from the usual.

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Pulasta Dhar is a football commentator, podcaster and writer.

 

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Fitness

Daniela Hantuchová in Two-Piece Workout Gear Does a Deadlift

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Daniela Hantuchová in Two-Piece Workout Gear Does a Deadlift

Daniela Hantuchová is a commentator and retired tennis player. While she might no longer be playing professionally, she’s still training hard. In May, Hantuchová hit the gym, and shared a video of herself there on Instagram. In it, she is seen doing deadlifts, lunge squats with a barbell, and leg lifts while on an exercise ball. How does she stay so fit? Read on to see TK ways Daniela Hantuchová stays in shape and the photos that prove they work.

As you can see from her Instagram video, Hantuchová likes to lift weights to stay in shape. ACE Fitness states that lifting weights is a great workout. “Using maximal loads for compound (multi-joint) movements like the deadlift, squat-to-shoulder press, bent-over row or chest press can improve intermuscular coordination, which is the ability of many muscles to work together to generate and control high levels of force through multiple joints.”

Daniela Hantuchova/Instagram

Hantuchová is also seen doing lunge squats with a barbell in her Instagram video. ACE Fitness states that lunge exercises have a lot of benefits. “The lunge is one of the most effective exercises for targeting the lower body. It activates the quads, glutes and hamstrings, and helps improve lower-body strength, balance and stability. And if that isn’t enough to get you lunging, lunging activates the core muscles as well.”

Hantuchová likes to do Pilates to keep herself in shape. She shared this video on Instagram of herself doing exercises on a reformer. Hantuchová captioned the post, “As in life, focus on the balance in all you do.” The Cleveland Clinic states, “The benefits of Pilates are both therapeutic and preventive. The practice may help you recover from an existing injury or manage a chronic musculoskeletal issue. It may also help you establish a healthy baseline, so that when those injuries or issues arise, you’re able to bounce back faster.”

Hantuchová likes to set goals for herself each year. She talked about this in the caption of this Instagram photo. “Setting up goals for next year starts with understanding that it is a continuous work through out the entire year🫶♻️. Think long term, taking small steps every day.”

Tennis is naturally one of the main ways Hantuchová keeps herself in shape. She shared this video of herself on the court on Instagram. Hantuchová talked about her love of tennis in the caption. “Once a passion, forever a passion.🎾 For me playing tennis is like playing piano,it is the art and the beauty of every shot that makes our sport so special and what I was attracted to every since being a little girl🥰. And it is still the same feeling today🫶. What is your passion?”

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No, not sit-ups — here’s the one abs exercise you should do to strengthen your core without weights

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No, not sit-ups — here’s the one abs exercise you should do to strengthen your core without weights

Maybe you’re just bored of sit-ups or they’re off the table from back pain, tight hips, or limited mobility. Great news — you don’t them to build a stronger core. Here’s one abs exercise you can do without sit-ups or weights.

In recent years, the tides have turned as instructors turn their backs on sit-ups in favor of the best abs exercises that are low impact for your back. That doesn’t mean a sit-up doesn’t have value — just that you don’t need the ab exercise to strengthen your core.

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Exercise Really Can Make You Smarter, Especially Certain Forms, Study Finds

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Exercise Really Can Make You Smarter, Especially Certain Forms, Study Finds
Aerobic exercise and resistance training help improve cognitive and executive functioning, with older populations seeing the biggest boost, according to a new meta-analysis

In the longevity game, health and wellness have evolved into more than just obtaining an ideal BMI; they’ve become tools to improve and extend mental acuity — and aerobic exercise and resistance training could be the keys to positive cognitive and executive functioning. 

Aging is inevitable for all, but one systematic review and meta-analysis — described by its authors as a comprehensive “one-stop shop” — has offered new insights into exercise’s impact on cognitive function and provides a new perspective for longevity-seekers.

Exercise is commonly recommended to boost cognitive function, but researchers say few meta-analyses have truly evaluated the cognitive advantages associated with variables such as exercise frequency, intensity, duration, type, volume and progression (FITT-VP) in healthy populations.

In their review, published in Ageing Research Reviews, researchers used PubMed and Web of Science to gather 54 randomized controlled trials with 6,277 participants (aged 6 to 60) to examine each FITT-VP variable’s effects on healthy individuals’ cognitive function, including executive function, memory, attention and information processing. 

The included 54 studies met the following criteria:

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  • The study was a randomized controlled trial with healthy participants to explore the effects of chronic exercise on cognitive function
  • The interventions included any type of exercise training with supervision
  • Control group participants received no intervention, usual care, health education, sham exercise training, or were on a waitlist for the study
  • Studies had to report at least one cognitive outcome, which included global cognition, executive function, memory, attention or information processing

The key takeaway? Aerobic exercise performed with moderate duration, frequency, intensity and overall length was associated with the greatest improvement in global cognition, the authors found.

When it comes to improving executive functioning, researchers suggest that resistance training is better than aerobic exercise, although both modalities offer strong benefits.

Mind-body exercise (in this case, yoga and tai chi) with moderate duration, frequency and overall length but high intensity also showed benefits to memory, although the authors caution that the results assessing attention and information processing should be interpreted cautiously due to the low number of included studies. 

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Perhaps most interesting is the finding that older participants benefited the most from exercise interventions — a point complemented by recent research on the powers of daily, low-intensity physical activity.

“This study offers new insights on the dose-response relationship of chronic exercise and the use of FITT-VP exercise principles to improve cognitive abilities or prevent cognitive decline in the process of aging,” the authors concluded. 

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The longevity space continues to soar, with many emerging solutions and products that proponents say can slow down the ticking clock of age or, at the very least, support health in the present. From mushroom-powered drinks and gummies to enhance focus to GLP-1 and other weight loss management solutions to assisted stretching, analysts are bullish on the wellness boom.

Courtney Rehfeldt

Courtney Rehfeldt has worked in the broadcasting media industry since 2007 and has freelanced since 2012. Her work has been featured in Age of Awareness, Times Beacon Record, The New York Times, and she has an upcoming piece in Slate. She studied yoga & meditation under Beryl Bender Birch at The Hard & The Soft Yoga Institute. She enjoys hiking, being outdoors, and is an avid reader. Courtney has a BA in Media & Communications studies.

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