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Fitness

Build a Resilient Spine: Lock Down Core Stability

Movement stimulus with core training ensures that your midsection fires under load.

Written by Matthew Ibrahim Last updated on Apr 28, 2022

Everything starts at the core. Your abs, obliques, and lower back muscles have to be working during all forms of movement in order to transfer energy and create forces.

This means your midsection needs to be functioning properly with sound technique and mechanics during exercise. Sure, you want to lift heavy weights and train hard, but possessing the ability to move well with good form should be your first priority.

lift heavy weights and train hard, but possessing the ability to move well with good form should be your first priority.

Establishing spinal stiffness and core stability is the first step you need to take before getting to this point. Once you’ve mastered those areas, your next mission will be to add movement to your stable foundation, otherwise known as your core.

Energy is transferred through your core when lifting heavy. Ensure that your midsection is rock solid with these core-stabalizing exercises.

Sensory Input for Optimal Movement Output

These exercises will challenge the core by moving one arm or leg. This provides an increased stimulus for the spine and surrounding musculature to help stabilize. It’s kind of like that annoying kid who sits next to you in class and just wouldn’t shut up while you were trying to pay attention. Annoying? Yes. Effective? Highly.

When you challenge the core by moving one arm or one leg, you’re asking your muscles to fire at a higher rate to keep you in a stable position. This won’t be easy, but it will have a direct carryover into your bigger lifts and exercises when the stabilization demand is needed.

You’ll also use tools such as manual perturbations and resistance bands to get the job done. No need for fancy or gimmicky training tools here – keep it simple. What you’re looking for is sensory input to provide proper movement output.

That’s why using neuromuscular feedback and reactive neuromuscular training techniques are so important. Not only can they be used as corrective ways to groove a good pattern, but they can also be used to provide that sensory feedback the body needs to correct itself.

It Starts With Breathing

No, I’m not going to advise you to spend sixty minutes on breathing. Not only is that a time dump, it’s not what we came here to do, which is train and move weight.

Most people miss the boat big time with respect to proper breathing patterns. My approach is super simple, per usual. Take the things you’re already doing in your training, and simply add basic breathing patterns to those.

As a bonus, proper breathing during training allows you to feel more tension and stability in your mid-section with 360 degrees of expansion. This will make the weight and resistance will seem much easier to move. You can thank me later.

These four exercises will help you build stability during movement:

  1. RKC plank with alternating 1-arm reach
  2. Side plank with breathing
  3. Bird-dog reactive neuromuscular training with band
  4. In-line half-kneeling chop

RKC Plank With Alternating 1-Arm Reach

The spine was designed to stabilize in response to stimuli. Have you ever slipped off a street curb and lost your balance, only to catch yourself by landing properly? You were able to regain balance because your spine and the surrounding musculature were resilient enough to adjust in time. That’s called “stability.”

By providing a challenge to the system, you will be able to force your spine to do its job: stabilize. It’s important to maintain proper positioning to ensure you don’t succumb to a faulty lumbar hyperextension pattern.

What we’re looking for in this exercise is for you to uphold the same core and spine position you’d see in an RKC plank (four points of contact), but with one caveat: when you reach one arm forward, you’ll only be working with three points of contact.

Do This:

  1. Extend your right arm out in front. Pause. Return your right arm back to the starting position.
  2. Repeat for the left arm.
  3. That equals 1 rep per side.
  4. Complete 8 reps per side for 1 set.
  5. Perform 3 sets.

Side Plank With Breathing

Dr. Charlie Weingroff says, “breathing is the keyhole to the nervous system.” Think about it for a second: when was the last time you monitored your breathing patterns for the primary purpose of seeing how efficient your movement was?

Faulty breathing patterns have a negative impact on movement patterns because they cause you to resort to high-tension compensatory strategies. Examples of these can be seen during what we would call “stressful” breathing through an increased tone in the upper traps and neck muscles. You can also see this during “rib flare” where the athlete is very top-heavy during their breathing without accessing their lower abdominals.

Own your breathing to own your movement. Check out this video here of the 90/90 Wall Breathing Drill to see what I mean.

Once you’ve mastered that, it’s now time to work that breathing component into the Side Plank exercise. When the position is locked in, place all of your focus on the breathing only. This will reinforce proper positioning throughout the duration of each set.

Do This:

  1. Starting on your left side, inhale through your nose, while filling up your belly.
  2. Exhale through your mouth, while attempting to put out a candle three feet in front of you.
  3. Continue for 30 seconds. That’s 1 set on your left side.
  4. Repeat for 1 set on your right side.
  5. Perform a total of 3 sets per side.

Bird-Dog Reactive Neuromuscular Training (RNT) With Band

Reactive neuromuscular training, or RNT, is a fancy way of saying that we’re going to feed your body into a bad position, and in the process allow the nervous system to work with your body to move into a good position. It’s another way of feeding the negative to produce a positive.

RNT allows us to re-educate proper patterns in the body. It can be used as a guide in a safe situation to teach the body where it needs to be for optimal positioning. The Bird-Dog exercise is a great start, but adding the resistance band helps athletes actually “feel” it much more, which ultimately decreases the level of difficulty for the exercise.

Do This:

  1. Loop band around right hand and left foot.
  2. Extend right arm and left leg simultaneously.
  3. Bring both limbs back to the starting position. That’s 1 rep.
  4. Complete 8 reps in that fashion.
  5. Switch sides and repeat for 8 reps. That’s 1 set.
  6. Perform a total of 3 sets per side.

In-Line Half-Kneeling Chop

Holding a rock-solid position with your core engaged is not easy. Adding upper extremity movement while still maintaining this locked-in position is an even greater challenge.

The In-Line Half-Kneeling Chop exercise gives the athlete constant feedback in terms of proper positioning, core activation, and spinal stability. It’s impossible to complete this drill the right way without good form.

Being able to maintain the narrow in-line position is your first order of business. Remember: own this position and keep it owned for the entire duration of each set. The next step is to add in your upper extremity chop pattern. Take your time with this one, and be sure to constantly check in on core and glute activation.

Do This:

  1. With your right knee up (closest to the pulley) and your left knee down (furthest from the pulley), chop the rope attachment down toward your left pocket.
  2. Complete 8 reps on that side.
  3. Switch sides and repeat. That’s 1 set.
  4. Perform 3 sets per side.

Stoke the Fire

Once you’ve locked down stability in your core, it’s time to add movement. Basically, you’re trying to piss off your core by adding another stimulus to it. Not only is this a surefire way to build a stronger core, it’s also a quick route to a more resilient lower back and spine.

More Ways to Keep Your Back Healthy:

  • Build a Resilient Spine: Start Here
  • Build A Resilient Spine: Challenge Your System
  • Build a Resilient Spine: Create Power for Sport Performance

Headline photo courtesy of CrossFit, Inc.

Photo collage courtesy of Matthew Ibrahim.

About Matthew Ibrahim

Matthew Ibrahim is a strength and conditioning coach, sports performance massage therapist, and a physical therapy rehabilitation coach at Boston Physical Therapy & Wellness in Medford, MA. He also is a proud member of the Clinical Athlete network team as a sports medicine provider for athletes, helping to bridge the gap between rehabilitation and performance. He graduated from the University of Massachusetts Boston with a Bachelor of Science in Exercise and Health Sciences in 2013, and went on to become a Liscensed Massage Therapist through the Cortiva Institute of Massage Therapy in 2016.

Since 2009, Matthew has spent countless hours working in a variety of strength and conditioning, sports performance, and outpatient physical therapy settings. This experience was highlighted during his strength and conditioning internship at the world-renowned Mike Boyle Strength & Conditioning facility in Woburn, MA and also throughout his physical therapy outpatient rehabilitation internship at Bay State Physical Therapy in Arlington, MA. In addition to the general fitness population, Matthew has worked with a host of clients ranging from high performance professional athletes in the NFL, NHL, and NBA, to competitive powerlifters and collegiate athletes in NCAA Division I, II, and III sports.

This real-world experience opened his eyes for the need to bridge the ever-growing gap between rehabilitation and performance, and in 2014 he founded Movement Resilience to do just that. The mission of Movement Resilience is to help people build resilient movement and resilient strength so they can continue doing what they love more: move.

He is a frequent guest lecturer, speaker, and workshop presenter on human movement and performance, totaling more than 25 professional speaking engagements to date. He has written for a variety of influential platforms in the fitness and rehabilitation communities, including Clinical Athlete, Juggernaut Training Systems, ReebokONE, Sports Rehab Expert, STACK, and The PTDC, among others.

Through working with athletes, clients and patients, Matthew focuses on a movement-based approach. He holds certifications from the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), the National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM), and USA Weightlifting (USAW). Some of the methodoloiges and principles Matthew is formally trained in include FMS, SFMA, PRI, and StrongFirst.

In his free time, Matthew focuses on powerlifting, kettlebell training, reading, writing, and spending time with his family. Recently, he competed at the 2016 RPS Vermont and NH State Championships in the open class as a raw powerlifter with numbers of a 360 squat, 280 bench press, and 435 deadlift for a 1,075 total.

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