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Tip Your Hips: How to Isolate Your Lower Abs in Knee Lifts

May 17, 2017 by Nicky Leave a Comment

Are you doing a million knee lifts but getting nowhere? Here's the tweak you might be missing to target your lower abs.

**Oh hey! This post contains affiliate links. They don’t cost you anything extra, and they help to keep me tangling from the ceiling. I like that.**

We need to talk about knee lifts. You know that exercise your teacher probably makes you do, hanging from the trapeze bar and lifting up your knees a million times? Are you feeling nothing? Or maybe just wearing out your thighs?

You’re doing them wrong.

This drives me crazy, because it rarely ever gets explained to new students. We’re trying to target those elusive lower abs, so that eventually you can invert (go upside down) easily.

But if you’re just mindlessly bending your knees, you’re wasting your time.

Here’s what I want you to do: right now, as you’re reading, think of trying to push your belly button into your spine. Without holding your breath or just sucking your stomach in. You should still be able to breath normally, but try to push your belly button through your stomach to your spine, and try to hold it there.

Do you feel those muscles that are working?

Hi lower abs!

(By the way, this exercise is great to do when you’re driving or sitting at a desk. Sneaking extra conditioning in whenever we can!)

Okay. Back to hanging from the trapeze bar. Or the lyra. Or the silks. Or your pullup bar. Whatever you’re hanging from.

I want you to think about those muscles you just found, and focus your attention on them. Once again try to pull your belly button to your spine. Those lower ab muscles are what should be initiating your knee lift, not your quads.
At the top of your knee lift, tip your hips back. That should dig into those lower abs even more.
If you’re not sure what I mean, I always tell students to imagine they have a tail coming out of their spine, and trying to pull that tail between their legs. Like a rolled up armadillo.

Reference.

 

Do that every time.

This is how your initiate going upside down. Most people think it’s all about throwing your body back, kicking your feet for all you’re worth.

Nope.

It’s rolling back. That’s how it can be done slowly, with no momentum. It’s how you will eventually be doing these with straight legs, if you aren’t already.

(Crappy quality, I know. But it shows the hip tip, and that’s what you need.)

Do you have a pullup bar at home? (If not, get one!) This is the one that I use. It can be placed in a doorway and is perfect for doing these at home between classes. Plus it’s great for like a million other exercises. Don’t worry, we’ll cover those soon.

If you’re still trying to get your invertions, start with 10 of these a day. Go slow and really focus on the hip tip at the top of the movement. Move up to 15, then 20 a day.

When that gets easy, start straightening your legs into a straddle instead of tucking your knees. Then continue to initiate the movement from your hips instead of throwing your feet up.

For real, guys. It’s all about those hips. Just like Shakira has been telling us all along.

Filed Under: Beginner, Training Tagged With: aerial fabric, aerial hoop, aerial silks, aerialist, training, trapeze

Let Yourself Heal

January 27, 2016 by Nicky Leave a Comment

Let yourself heal before you make an injury worse.

 

I popped a rib out of place.

It sucked. Like, a lot. It sucked a lot.

And unfortunately, it’s still sucking.

I’ve had a lot of issues with my back throughout my life, so at the moment when I’m fairly sure it happened (at least when I think it really dislodged itself) I thought I’d just aggravated my back again and I’d be fine the next morning.

Four weeks later, it still hurts. I still feel constantly like the wind has been knocked out of me. I guess sometimes you’re uncomfortable for a day or so with a wonky rib, and sometimes it goes for longer. I seem to be in the longer category, and everytime I try to rush it, it goes back to bad.

So here’s my long-winded point:

Let yourself heal.

My chiropractor told me last week (when I figured out finally what it was) that I have to let it rest for a couple of weeks. And that sucks. I want to be back in the air. I’ve taken a lot of time off of actual training, and I’m ready to get crazy again. Spinning in ropes? YES! Dropping in silks? YES! YES!

Oh, but my rib is screaming no. And I’ve been good, mostly, since finding out that I need to sit facing forward and ice it and sleep on my back and all those unfun things. And it has gotten better. And then I thought that I’d be fine teaching the dolphin pose to BOTH my silks and trapeze students. And it got worse.

So I’m taking his advice, and really, truly trying to let it heal. And I hate it, but I hate the constant discomfort even more.

I’m once again reluctantly learning that you just have to let yourself heal. Circus is hard on your body. I believe it’s great for your body, but what we’re doing isn’t easy, and it’s a full body commitment. And I’m only setting myself back further when I don’t listen.

So please, if your body is screaming in unusual pain, don’t just try to fight through it. You could end up doing a lot more damage, and you’re only going to set yourself back some more.

And I’ll be damned if I’ll miss our new corde lisse workshop because I couldn’t sleep on my stupid back.

Filed Under: Training Tagged With: aerial injury, aerialist, training

Hello! Welcome to Hang By a Thread. I'm Nicky. Here you'll find tips on aerial training and technique, conditioning you can do at home to boost your performance in the air, and recipes to keep you going strong. I offer aerial support for those sad, sad moments when your feet are stuck on the ground.

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