Balance training

For the Average Person:
Let’s make this clear: balance training is for everyone. The list of benefits is long, but here are just a few:
  • Teaches your body to use the core for stabilization
  • Improves neuromuscular coordination by getting the brain to talk to the muscles
  • Burns more calories. Adding balance to any exercise makes the body work harder.
  • Creates muscular balance in the body
With all of that in mind, you can start incorporating simple balance training into your life today. A few ways to do this at home include:
  • Standing on one foot while you brush your teeth. Change feet halfway through.
  • If you drop your keys or wallet, reach over to pick them up on one leg with the other leg lifting straight into the air behind you. Keep abs tight!
  • Sit on a stability ball at work, school, or while watching TV.
In terms of good exercises for balance training, one of the best tools to own is a BOSU (“Both Sides Up"). A Bosu is basically a half ball with a flat platform. The name is derived from the fact that you can exercise on both the ball side or the flat side. A Bosu provides an unstable surface on which to practice squats, lunges, jumps, planks and hundreds of other exercises. Try these exercises on for size and, if you don’t have access to a Bosu, you can easily modify by folding a mat in half and standing on it or rolling up a towel. Any kind of unstable surface will suffice. And if your balance is struggling, don’t use any extra equipment. Just practice these on the floor.

Standing Tree Pose

This pose is great on the floor, a folded mat or the Bosu. It will strengthen your ankles, improve your balance and engage your core.
  1. Stand with feet together, spine tall and arms outstretched. If you are on the Bosu, either the ball side or the flat side will be a good challenge. Try them both.
  2. Slowly lift your left foot up to the side of your calf and balance on the right foot only.
  3. Slowly lift arms overhead to make the branches of the tree.  Hold 30 seconds and switch legs.

Single Leg Deadlift

With or without dumbbells, this pose not only strengthens your hamstrings and glutes but it challenges your balance and forces you to pull your abs in tightly!
  1. Stand on either the ball side of the Bosu or on the floor (as pictured) with feet close together putting most of your weight onto your right foot.
  2. Stare at a focal point on the floor in front of you and slowly lower your straight, long spine downward while you reach hands toward the floor.
  3. Stop when your back is parallel to the floor. Keep your right knee soft.
  4. Squeeze hamstrings, glutes and abs as you slowly raise back up and return back foot to the floor. Switch sides. Try for 8 each side.

Dead Bug

This is one of the best core exercises around. This will challenge the transverse abdominus and teach your core to stabilize better than any other move around!
  1. Sit down just in front of the bullseye center of the Bosu, placing feet wide and stable on the floor.
  2. Slowly lower back until you are laying on the Bosu with the low back on or slightly in front of the bullseye. You will adjust this in a moment.
  3. Pull abdominals in very tightly and reach arms out wide.
  4. Slowly lift one leg at a time, keeping them wide so that your arms and legs now resemble a “dead bug." If you absolutely cannot hold for even a few seconds, push your body back a few inches so that more of your low back and glutes are on the Bosu.

Squats on Bosu

Adding the unstable surface of a Bosu to your basic squat will train your body to “grip” all the right muscles at the right time.
  1. Stand on the ball side of the Bosu with feet hip-width apart.
  2. Sit back into squat position with weight sinking into heels.
  3. Squeeze glutes tightly as your press back up to standing position. Try 8-10 reps.

Balancing Reverse Lunges

Lunges are naturally a balance activity because you are ending up on one leg at a time. Standing on a Bosu or a folded up mat will make them even more of a challenge.
  1. Stand on the top of the ball side of the Bosu with feet close together.
  2. Bending the right knee, slowly stretch the left leg behind you onto the floor until both knees are bent.
  3. Press straight up through your right leg as you return the left foot to the top of the Bosu. Switch legs. Try for 8-10 per leg.

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