aou've probably done an elbow plank
so many times by now that you know the drill by heart: straight back,
belly button pulled in, and palms flat on your mat (trying not to clasp them in prayer pose if possible). But Cassandra Bodlak, group exercise manager at Equinox Sports Club,
recommends her clients do a slight modification that's a little more
challenging: when in elbow plank, flip your hands over so your palms are
facing up.
Pressing
through an elbow plank with palms facing down will help keep back
muscles engaged and clasping hands together in a fist will enlist your
chest muscles to help stabilize you, but flipping your hands over will
make your plank even more about the core, Cassandra explains.
"Performing a plank with palms up [will] disengage some of the support
from the muscles of the hand and forearm," she says. In other words,
simply moving your hands will help you get on the fast track to sculpted
abs.
Another reason to go palms up? You'll help unround those
hunched-over shoulders. "It takes the pronator teres (one of the major
forearm muscles) and positions it in what is called the 'anatomical
position' (palms forward when standing, palms up when prone in a plank),
which is the most desirable position in which to function," Cassandra
explains. "We are all busy typing on keyboards these days, encouraging a
particular position of the forearm: palms down. Simply repositioning
the forearms in your plank helps to create a balance."
Sculpted
abs and looking taller are two great reasons to try the "palms up"
modification the next time you're in an elbow plank, but don't worry if
making this change has you collapsing into Child's Pose
sooner than you're used to. Cassandra offers this encouragement: "When
you perform a plank, perform it to the best of your ability in the
moment you're in—palms in prayer, palms flat, or palms up, it's probably
one more plank than you did yesterday, right? Keep it up!"source by www.shape.com
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