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back flexibility
Posted by HollySatine on February 3, 2011 at 6:22 pmWhen I was little I was able to touch my toes to the back of my head – I want to be able to do that again! I can go into a back bridge from a standing position just fine and sometimes I can stand right back up from that on my own, but I'm at a loss about how to stretch my back beyond that without injuring myself. Does anybody have any good tips/stretches to follow to be able to get the head and feet closer together?
Thanks!
ottersocks replied 13 years, 11 months ago 9 Members · 18 Replies -
18 Replies
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I'm interested in any type of back stretches as well. My miserable flexibility needs some help. I refuse to look at what my back bridge looks like pushing up from the floor lol.
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The only advice I can give is Veena's back stretches and maybe an exercise ball? :] I hope you find what you're looking for!!!<3
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When i was taking bikram yoga my back felt stronger and more flexible. If you could find a contortion or gymnastics class in your area that would help.
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HannahElizabeth just posted this in another forum :]
http://www.flexibilityexercises.com/gymnastics/
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Back flexibility is a tricky subject. It's really easy to cause yourself serious injuries.
Make sure that you are fully warmed up and in a warm area before you do any back stretches – your back is much less forgiving than other parts of your body. Pole Dancing fortunately is a sport where climate control tends to be relatively manageable (compared to vaulting where we train in a barn or outside)
If you do a flexibility training routine the best time to do back is in the middle of the routine, I usually start with legs, do back and then finish with shoulders.
Back Flex pre-requsites
1. Back and Core Strength – Back flexibility skills require that you support your spine with the muscles surrounding it. Now when you engage your back muscles and core muscles you will probably not bend quite as far but trust me that’s better in the long run. Here are some exercises for this
-Planks all directions on your elbows (front, both sides, back) – start by aiming for 30seconds and work your way up to three minutes (Planks are also the best strength training exercise for flat, smooth tummies)
– With a partner holding your legs rest your hips at the edge of something like a sofa or the edge of your bed do lean down to the floor and sit up to a slight arch position. Then do the inverse (your butt at the edge arch down and sit up to a slight hollow) you can also use a roman chair rather than a sofa and a partner – most gyms have them,
-Hollow and arch body rocks http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8vd45ynGqQ make sure to keep the back as round as if you were doing rolls or something – then the arch is exactly the same thing on the tummy
2. Shoulder Flex – a lot of back flexibilities require a ton of shoulder flexibility (such as the bridge for example) you can get this from stretching the shoulders both in warm up and as part of your post-workout flexibility training. Here are some stretches
– Place your hands on a table or other low object and bring your back down until it is in a straight line with your shoulders. Alternate between holding your head relaxed and trying to lift your head above your arm while pushing the shoulder down.
– sit on the floor with your hands together behind your back and slide down slowly.
-place your palm against a wall with your arm at shoulder height and slowly turn away from the wall until you feel a stretch
Back Stretches
Cobra – the first image on this page except the girl is doing it wrong http://www.flexibilityexercises.com/back/ make sure your hips don’t break contact with the floor. This one is good for warm-up and also as the first in a series of back stretches.
Bridge- Everyone knows this one but here are a few key points to remember about it.
Do not allow your spine to take any of the weight – you should be lifting with your stomach, supporting with your back muscles and pushing up with your gluts
Keep your knees together and legs straight
Push back into your shoulders so they can take some of the stretch.
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=gymnastics+bridge&view=detail&id=8A3F43DBEE3DBF30BA5BBC922413DABC1E408BEF&first=1&FORM=IDFRIR this is correct
Do a few of them – at least three for fifteen seconds each.
There are lots of other stretches that you can do but these are the most basic. Once you’ve mastered these you can start working on other skills like chest stand and ring balance – with ring balances tho be sure to stretch both sides evenly.
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Great post, Sanchara!
One question though. Both links for the bridge just take me to same series of images. Can you indicate which one(s) have good form and which one(s) don't? Thanks!
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http://thegymcoach.files.wordpress.com/2010/03/bridge.jpg
this one is the correct one – the other link dosn't work right. It's annoying that this forum system dosn't have a preivew option.
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This is one of my favourite yoga postures, (Bow pose)… it's great because you can use your own body to pull yourself deeper into the stretch. But be sure to use the abs and warm up first!
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I find that one kind of difficult it's supposed to look like this eventually after years of hard work 😉 <a href="http://www.imagebam.com/image/856b5982203210" target="_blank"><img src="http://thumbnails16.imagebam.com/8221/856b5982203210.gif" alt="imagebam.com"></a>
Chest stand is one of my favorite back things becuse it is both strengthening and stretching. If you can do everything in my first post I can give some tips on it 🙂
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I was browsing the yoga site gawkpop posted a link to and I found this: this is the correct way to do the cobra.
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would help if I'd included the line *blush*
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Is the chest stand what you're doing in your photo? Cause that looks harder than the Bow! That's like contortionist style awesomeness.
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