Functional Exercise for Optimum Fitness
I'm a huge believer in working out to develop "functional" fitness and strength. This can only happen if forget about weight machines and focus instead on bodyweight movements as well as free weight exercises. Here's a great article about functional exercise that goes into more detail...
Functional Exercise That Makes Sense
By Ben Greenfield
Many people spend the majority of their workout time building non-functional muscles that rely on hinges and bolts to function properly. That's right - I'm talking about working out on weight machines. Weight machines have a strong application towards:
1) helping to provide stability and support for a weak muscle (i.e., just starting into an exercise routine or coming off a long break);
2) helping to provide a safe motion when balance is a factor (i.e., individuals with neuromuscular deficits);
3) assisting in fitness maintainance during an injury (i.e., performing leg extensions when rehabilitating a sprained ankle).
The rest of the time, people who work out on weight machines are simply building muscle that has no significant functional application. By this, I mean that none of the small, stabilizing muscles have to work to support the major muscle groups that are exerted during a repetition on a weight machine, because the machine is providing the stabilization. Therefore, the major muscle groups are strengthened, but when an individual is no longer supported by the weight machine, they simply have a muscle that can provide a strong contraction with little to no support from the other stabilizing muscles. While this is completely counterproductive for an athlete, it can also cause injury to the average fitness enthusiast.
Take, for example, the machine shoulder press, an exercise in which you sit your butt in a back-supported chair and press overhead two handles attached to a lever. Normally, in an everday situation, if you were to press a weight overhead, or exert a force in that direction, you would not be in a seated position and the item you are pressing overhead (i.e., a milk crate, a child, a basketball, etc.) would not be supported by a lever. Furthermore, the machine moves straight up and down, whereas a free object moves in countless planes of motion (i.e., up and down, side to side, around, etc.). The absence of multiple ranges or planes of motion basically means that you are getting a very strong contraction from the deltoid (the main "overhead presser"), while completely ignoring the rotational muscles (i.e., the rotator cuff), the stabilizing muscles (i.e., the neck), and the supporting muscles (i.e. the feet, legs, hips, torso, etc.). So let's say you're out playing catch and throw a baseball. The deltoid is able to produce a very strong force, but if the rotator cuff, or other supporting muscles such as the low back, are not in the same shape, you're either going to tear your rotator cuff or throw your low back out. And that, my friends, is why weight machines can often cause more harm than good (not to mention the fact that they burn up to 1/4 the calories of the exercises I'm going to talk about next).
I'd like to briefly introduce you to functional exercises, the alternative to working out with machines. The best way to think about functional exercises is to picture the primal man or woman (we're talking caveman type). Functional movement patterns simulate many of the same movements our "primal ancestors" would have had to perform in order to survive in an unpredictable environment, whether tracking a wild animal (or being chased by one!), lifting objects such as logs and rocks, or fighting via swinging, throwing, and pulling (such as a bow). Let's split these functional movement patterns into seven basic types.
-Squatting: Involves bending at the knees and the hips, while keeping the back straight, and lifting a weight from the ground or pushing a weight that is placed on the back or chest. Imagine your primal ancestors squatting down and lifting a heavy rock to dig for grubs, or using the legs and hips to lift a heavy log up onto a primal structure. Exercise examples: Barbell or Dumbbell Squat, Squat to Press.
-Bending: Involves flexing and extending at the waist, preferably in a standing position. Often, this type of movement would have been combined with a squatting, lifting, or rotating motion, such as hoisting a heavy rock out of a field. Exercise examples: Medicine Ball Overhead or Side Throw, Deadlifts.
-Lunging: Involves stepping forward with just one leg, and bending that leg down. This motion would have been used for either traversing terrain (i.e., carrying hunted game over a log), or stepping into a throw (such as hoisting a spear). Exercise examples: Walking Lunge, Barbell or Dumbbell Weighted Lunge, Medicine Ball Lunge with Twist.
-Pushing: Involves using the arms, chest, and shoulders to force a weight out and away or up from the body, an action that might have been used, for example, when herding animals, pushing a plow, or hoisting a weight overhead. Exercise examples: Standing Cable Chest Press, Push-up, Standing Dumbbell Shoulder Press.
-Pulling: Involves using the arms, chest, and shoulders, as well as the legs, to drag or pull a weight towards the body. This type of motion would have been used to pull heavy game animals, row a watercraft, pull a bow, or quickly pull onto a tree branch for safety. Exercise examples: Standing High, Mid, and Low Cable Rows, Pull-ups.
-Twisting: Involves turning and rotating with the torso to apply a force, and would have usually been combined with most of the other primal movement patterns for actions such as pulling, pushing, or lunging. For instance, a twist combine with a lunge and push would comprise a throwing motion, such as hoisting an object like a spear or heavy rock. Exercise examples: Medicine Ball Throws, Cable Torso Twists, Medicine Ball Woodchoppers.
-Gait: Involves moving over terrain, whether walking, jogging, or sprinting. This action would often have been interspersed with other movement patterns, such as walking to track a wild animal, sprinting to hunt it down, then twisting, lunging, and pushing to throw or thrust a weapon. Exercise examples: Sprint to Medicine Ball Throw, Dumbbell Lift and Press to Power Skip.
As you can see, there are countless ways that these movement patterns could be combined to design a workout routine, but there are only a few *optimum* choices. A personal trainer is equipped with the knowledge to put these movement patterns together into a routine that allows for the ideal balance between muscle groups, efficient caloric burning, fat utilization, and metabolic boosting, and injury avoidance. Imagine how much fitter you could be by incorporating all these patterns into your routine, while only using weight machines now and then for some of the reasons mentioned in the beginning of this article.
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About the Author
Head trainer Ben Greenfield runs the online training website Pacific Elite Fitness, and holds Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Sport Science and Exercise Physiology, as well as certifications from the National Strength and Conditioning Association as a Personal Trainer and Strength and Conditioning Coach (NSCA-CPT & CSCS). For over 6 years, Ben has coached and trained professional, collegiate, and recreational athletes, and helped hundreds of individuals achieve their personal fitness goals. For more information on online personal training and fitness, contact Ben at elite@pacificfit.net
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Labels: Exercise, Functional Fitness

10 Comments:
Good post! Yep, functional training is three main things:
1.client specific
2.movement not muscle based
3.applicable for ALL exercisers
We have to inform our readers that just because an exercise is on a BALL doesn't make it FUNCTIONAL.
Good topic....
Trainers and exercisers, just because an exercise is on a BALL doesn't make it functional.
Remember three things:
1. client specific function
2. movement based
3. appropriate for all clients
Where's the exercise to help strengthen the muscles used to put your child into the car seat? :^)
Ben, check out www.blazefitness.com
You can post and view free fitness videos there for free.
These terms have helped me. Thank you so much!
Ben -
I think you are right on with the functional training ideas. It always amazes me to see so many folks in the gym sitting on the machines.
Low and behold, when we perform functional exercises we elevate the HR that much more and thus burn even more calories during exercise, i.e. greater shot at weight loss.
www.sdpersonalfitness.com
Scott
New Zealand rejects PowerPlate
The "Badwill" that comes with the Powerplate name.
In recent years PowerPlate N.Z. Ltds Product Manager discovered irregularities in the following Vibration Training products he was in charge of selling...
Engineering tests
University tests
Celebrity endorsements
Medical endorsements
Awards carried forward to dis-similar models
These irregularies had been caused by the outsourcing of the manufacturing of product to China where the units quickly succumbed to " quality fading ". This is a practice where the original product is cheapened to cut down overheads to such a point that the product becomes a parody of itself. The units are in essence built by the accountants rather than the engineers that designed the machines. Powerplate was so embarrased with this problem that they lied to the consumer for some time about its actual place of production.
As we have seen with other health products from China , this is never a safe practice for the consumer. PowerPlate was made aware of this problem straight away by its Product Manager whom they later tried to injunct to stop the release of this information with the excuse of "its just business " being given by senior management , the injunction failed.
The worst act....
The most disturbing act that stood out from all the rest to him though was the direct marketing to the disabled of these goods AFTER this quality problem was brought to PowerPlates attention, where no product recall or warning letters were sent to those who had purchased units. Please note these people were not purchasing the units for vanity reasons , they needed them to operate at full function for the good of their health .
He believed these groups where considered "soft targets" as they lacked the resources to question the function of the units so less likely to complain. They where also the group less likely to break the machines.
This behaviour was deemed so unacceptable by their former product manager that the education of the consumer and fitness industry in these matters become paramount. With him being so successfull in N.Z. that Powerplate N.Z. Ltd and its franchised studio system collapsed in 2007. Some choosing to go independant rather than continue carrying the name , the master franchise studio closed for good.
His aim is to create awareness of this situation gobally to polorize opinions , so it can never happen again. Believing the "backlash" against such practices will be so severe as to effect anyone marketing such a label.
So what can you do as a consumer ?
Vote with your wallet. Refuse to use or purchase products from this company and instead invest in more ethical and stable companies. Search the internet, you will find them.
Functional Training is becoming one of the most personalized forms of training. Also, very popular!
I only do bodyweight exercises because there isn't really a way to eliminate the use of stabalizing muscles. I love to train on gymnastic rings because they make almost all BW exercises more difficult.
This post includes a lot of points to the philosophy of parkour and gymnastics.
Do you mind if I link to this post from my blog?
Tofu Gymnast
I agree. Even though I have always been a fit person, I got into the best shape of my life by the age of 30 by taking up the sport of competitive powerlifting. And, I'm a 5'1, 114 lb. woman! I thank my trainer Ernie for introducing me to the sport. I toned muscles I never knew I had. I'm lean and not bulky. Same with the other women in my weight class in the sport. The sport consist of three events -- squat, deadlift, and bench press -- which are all functional lifts. Even though I've been lifting weights two to three times my body weight for almost four years now, I am injury free.
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