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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Re-defining The Quadruped Position

Photo #1
Photo #2
Photo #3
Photo #4

Photo #5

We know the quadruped position to be on all fours: hands and knees.
However, this position is not truly considered on all fours because our hands, knees, and toes touch the ground (wow, I forgot the photo). A real or revised quadruped position should look like photo #1, where only four points touch the floor: our hands and our feet or toes. Reminiscent of a sprinter start.

The current quadruped position (six-points) is great for rehabilitation, Pilates, warm-ups, upper body, and lower body glute and hip exercises. For example, a good "Quadruped Straight Leg Front-Lateral Kick" fires up your glutes (photo #2). But, simply holding this new quadruped is tough (photo #1). Performing opposite arm and leg reach outs is a difficult move in itself with this position (photo #3 and photo #4).

A true or revised quadruped position (four-points) challenges your core. It challenges your shoulder and ankle stability. It has been echoed in some martial arts such as capoeira, though capoeira is a little more dynamic.

Observe any animal that stands on all-fours and their knees are not on the ground. So, I question the current positioning of quadruped exercises. Dogs, cats, horses, pigs, bears, lions, and tigers (cannot forget them), and more all stand on all-fours...not all-sixes. Of course, the human body is made differently; so being on all-fours feels different and requires a lot of strength.

The pros of a revised quadruped position: more core control, more core strengthening (it will be important to find a neutral position, as not performed by the dip in my lumbar spine in photo #5, the non-revised quadruped position, in this matter - sounds like a good video), more stability needed, more motor recruitment.

The cons: easy on the toes, buddy! You might want some padding under your toes or at least wear shoes.

Take care of yourself,
Derek

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Thanksgiving Active Exercises - Be Active

#4 - The fourth reason on how to be active over Thanksgiving:

Exercise #1 - Camel stretch --> Child pose --> Upward Dog/Cobra = hold each position for 1 to 2 seconds before switching, 8 reps
Exercise #2 - Rapid Squats into Single Leg Toe Touch = 30 second squats as fast as possible, 8 toe touches without tipping over.
Exercise #3 - Downward Dog into Push-up = 8 to 10 reps total
Exercise #4 - Plank Series: Front plank, side plank, reverse planks = hold each plank for 15 seconds
Exercise #5 - Sumo Squat Holds with one hand overhead and one hand behind head = hold 30 seconds each side

Repeat the entire sequence for 3 sets. No rest between exercises. 30 second rest at the most between sets.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Photos From the Wellness Retreat/Seminar


Saturday, November 6, 2011 at UMASS-Boston, Campus Conference Center.

 Stephanie and Lisa focused on getting information. Chandace with the photog skills!

Gamah Toney of Beauty Food Products with the best hair and skin materials!



Megan getting a massage

Megan Miralgia of Wellness Workdays Nutrition giving us the word on nutrition

Stephanie getting a massage

Jeffrey, Amy, and Kelly massaging

Zumba with Leoni
Justine Siegal of Sport In Society from Northeastern University

Chandace receiving a massage. Ah, relaxation!!!

 Everyone is Zumba-ing!
More Zumba-ing!
 Leoni showing her expertise.
 What's that move?
 Get'em Stephanie and Jeff!
 Whopa! Whopa!
 We've got moves...And we know how to use them!
 In unison now.
 No, it is NOT the hokey-pokey! Sweat.
 Rapid movement blurs and sweat!

 We're learning!
Joel and Derek catching a photog moment.

 Lisa enjoys her massage.

 Megan simplifying nutrition!

 Gamah

Justine

 Derek

 Zumba

Criss-Cross!

Flow to the right...

Slide to the left...

Whoo!

Waka-waka, hey-hey! And, cheese!