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Strengthening The Stabilizer Muscles

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  • Strengthening The Stabilizer Muscles


    If you have been involved in bodybuilding for a while, you've probably heard fellow lifters discussing stabilizer muscles. There are many things out there that might sound complicated, but you're lucky, this isn't one of them.
    Much like how a foundation stabilizes a house, your stabilizer muscles help to keep you balanced and upright when moving. Your stabilizer muscles are not directly involved in the lifting of the weight, but help keep your body steady, through isometric muscle contractions.



    Stabilizer Muscles Help Keep Your
    Body Steady During A Lift.

    Now if you think about it, these muscles sound pretty important. If you didn't have stabilizer muscles your knees would buckle during squats and your elbows during the bench press. The good thing is that if you've been doing many full-range-of-motion, free-weight movements you've already been training them.
    Free-weight movements, which includes any exercise done with a barbell, dumbbell or cable (I consider cables redirected dumbbells, as you are not lifting the weight in a guided path) require you to balance the weights yourself, as you are not lifting the weight in a pre-set path, as with machines.



    The Methods:


    • 1. Free Weights:

      • When doing free weight movements, your stabilizer muscles contract in order to keep your body steady. Since stabilizer muscles are important to free-weight movements, it makes sense to train those using free weights.
        Exercises that recruit a great number of muscles are better for strengthening your stabilizer muscles. For example, during the squat your body needs to stabilize itself more than if you were performing curls. Some of the best exercises include:
        Bench Press, Squat, Deadlift, Pull-ups, Rows, and Shoulder Press.

    During A Squat Your Body Needs To
    Stabilize Itself More Than During Curls.

    The Workout:


    • Machine equipment forces the lifter to lift the weight in a pre-set, guided path (e.g. the leg press, or chest press); this takes many of the stabilizer muscles out of the movement because the lifter is no longer required to balance the weight.
      Non-lifters or people who have problems balancing themselves during certain activities, can benefit from this type of training. Even non-lifters who are very active will not have the muscular and stabilizer muscle development of a dedicated bodybuilder.
    Veritas Vos Liberabit

  • #2
    Re: Strengthening The Stabilizer Muscles

    Very interesting thank you.

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