How To Get A 6-Pack Without Doing Crunches
By John Barban
Crunches
are probably the single most misunderstood and abused exercise in the
entire fitness industry. Somewhere along the way, people realized that
if they squeeze their midsection together they will end up ‘feeling it’
in their ‘abs’ and some how they equate this to having a flat stomach or
mid section. In the case of doing crunches for a flat stomach and
showing off your abs we can just throw logic right out the window.
Trainers and many people who know better still ignore the most basic
principles of anatomy and physiology all in the quest for a flat
stomach.
Here are the facts:
1) Crunches will provide stimulus for your abs to get stronger and
probably grow. (yes that’s right, if you do enough of them and do
them intensely they will grow) A crunch is basically a weight training
exercise for your abs, the same basic idea as doing a bicep curl. You
are working the muscle, which will eventually make it stronger and make
it grow. But for some reason people think that a crunch will burn the
fat off their stomachs and keep the muscles there small and compact.
2) You cannot spot reduce fat. In other words, working a specific
muscle does not burn the fat around that muscle. Your body burns fat
systematically all over, not just on one place. For example: if you did
100 bicep curls every day on your left arm, you would end up with a
muscular left arm, but your left arm would have just as much fat as your
right arm, same deal with crunches. If you do 500 crunches every day,
you will just have bigger stronger abs, but all the fat you always had
around them will still be there unless you adjust your diet and the rest
of your daily activity and workout schedule to lose fat.
This last point is probably the single most misunderstood point of all.
People continue to do crunches thinking they will reduce the fat around
their mid section and stomach.
3) Crunches may not be the safest exercise for your spine and lower
back. A growing body of research shows that a crunch is in fact one
of the worst positions you can put your spine in. Most fitness
professionals and so called ‘experts’ do not have any formal
biomechanics research training. Therefore they are most unaware of the
science behind the shape, structure and function of the abdominal
oblique, and lower back muscles. If they did they would definitely think
twice about doing or recommending anyone to do a crunch.
Colleagues of mine are doing research on spinal and lower back injuries.
And in their lab the only way they can guarantee to herniate a spinal
disc is to put a test spine into a severe crunch! Yes, a crunch! The
exact same position people put themselves in hundreds of times every
workout. In reality the abdominal muscles are not meant to pull your
body into a forceful curling or crunching position. They are meant to
stabilize your trunk or “core” as it is being called now. In other words
they are meant to simply hold your core in place as your arms and legs
move and do work such as running, jumping, throwing and the like. All of
these motions will work your abs without forcing you into the
potentially dangerous position of a crunch.
So how do you get a 6 pack without doing crunches?
Simple, eat less food, and burn more calories. Being able to see a well
defined 6 pack has nothing to do with doing any sort of ab exercises. It
has everything to do with burning fat. As soon as you strip away enough
fat you will eventually see that you already have a nicely formed set of
abs. As you have been developing them your whole life every time you
stand up walk, run, jump, and every other form of activity you can think
of.
If you feel like you need to work on your abs, avoid crunches and do
exercises that work them in a pattern that they are meant to be used in.
Such as planks, side planks, stability ball roll outs, planks on a
stability ball, all forms of push ups and modified push ups, medicine
ball throwing, sprinting, swimming. There is more, but I think you’re
getting the picture. Incidentally all of these exercise will work the
muscles of your core in a balanced manner (unlike crunches which do not
work your oblique or your lower back muscles).
Even though crunches will work your abs to some degree there is good
evidence to show that this is by no means the best or the safest way to
work them. The associated risk to your lower back in most people’s case
should outweigh any benefit they think they are getting by working their
abs in this way. Each person should weigh the risk and reward of doing
crunches for the sake of having bigger stronger abs, and the risk of
injury and chronic pain and problems with their lower back. And lets
make no mistake about it, crunches never have and never will give you a
flat stomach or cause you to lose fat off of your midsection.
****
John Barban is a certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist and a
varsity strength and conditioning coach. His trademarked workout program:
The 6
Minute Circuits Workout is designed to get a full body cardio and
muscle toning workout in the comfort of your own home. John is a senior
contributor at http://www.grrlathlete.com where you can sign up to get insider information
in the nutrition and fitness industry. You can ask John a question on the
http://www.grrlathlete.freeforums.org dedicated to support women with their
fitness and nutrition goals.
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