Most fitness ball exercises are designed to reach your hard-to-target muscles, such as those on the lower back or your upper and lower abdominals, which ordinary aerobic exercise might fail to address.
If you combine fitness ball exercises with the proper diet and sleep routines, then you can lose weight easily without having to pay exorbitant gym joining fees. If you perform fitness ball exercises frequently, you can also increase your resistance and endurance, and even improve your balance.
Here are a few fitness ball exercises that you might want to engage in to start your routine.
1. Use the fitness ball to do push ups.
Place your toes or ankles on the ball, lay your hands upon the floor, and spread them so that they are at a greater distance than your shoulders are from each other.
Bend yourself down to the floor through your elbows, then bring yourself back up when your elbows reach a ninety-degree angle. If you have lower back pains, you may want to use your shins or knees to support you on the ball.
2. Use the fitness ball to do lunges.
Place the ball against a wall, then place one foot on it. Straighten this leg, and bend your other leg slightly. Push your body forward in a slow lunge toward the ball, but keep your back straight, and contract your abdominal muscles.
As you find your body bending forward, hold the position and count to ten. Bring yourself back to your original standing position, then shift to the other leg. Do this twelve to fifteen times, and breathe steadily.
3. Do fitness ball exercises with dumbbells.
Use an appropriate dumbbell weight and do not overstrain your arms with excessive weights. Hold one dumbbell in each hand, then lie down with your back on the ball. Keep your head straight and your feet on the floor, but with your knees bent. Raise the dumbbells up, then bring them down back to your chest.
Bring the dumbbells to the sides, then put them back upon your chest. Repeat this exercise twelve to fifteen times. You can also lie down on the ball, this time with your navel on the fitness ball’s apex. Stretch your arms by swinging the dumbbells outward and away from your body.
Conclusion
These are only a few fitness ball exercises that you can engage in. You can consult with your trainer or orthopedist on more exercises that you can add to your routine.
Just be sure to breathe steadily and avoid straining your back, and you can have your desired body and weight in no time.
Albert Lee
http://www.articlesbase.com/equipment-articles/fitness-ball-3-exercises-to-make-you-stronger-135653.html
3 Responses for "Fitness Ball - 3 Exercises to Make you Stronger"
I need a boxing fitness routine…?
Would anybody give me an effective fitness routine to build muscle, aerobic and anaerobic fitness…?
Im not overweight, but I want to build muscle (not to be huge - I would be doing weights - just to be cut) and get very fit. I also have no butt, so I would appreciate any specific butt exercises, and ab-work.
The only equipment I have is a heavy bag (and gloves, obviously), a chin-up bar, skipping rope and a (5kg I think) medicine ball.
I currently swim 5 times a week, so I have pretty strong shoulders and are fit, but my leg muscles are lacking, and I like the feeling of punching stuff!
Also, could you help me with specific technique for the punches?? I fear that I am currently doing it wrong because my fingers often hurt afterwards… Does that get better over time? Should I punch less hard?
I would really appreciate it if you would help me with this!
Cheers
training your legs without going to the gym is hard =/ I guess if you skip on your skipping rope more often your leg muscles would get better.
and about the punching maybe you don’t close your feast the right way, look at some sites in the web that have pictures for closing your feast right. the best way to know how to do it all right is to train with a team and a couch.
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I’m boxing.
You’d be surprised, but the main reason boxers have that body is because they don’t have a lot of body fat, which means they do lots of cardio (running, jumping rope, etc.). A proper boxer doesn’t incorporate weights or weight-based routines, but rather natural exercises such as pushups and situps (and even then, the only floor work absolutely mandatory is situps). A properly trained boxer will also spar as much as possible, as sparring prepares you like nothing else can. One of the most important things that are neglected by many is shadowboxing. Shadowboxing is how big, heavyweight guys like Floyd Patterson and Mike Tyson got their hands and combinations thrown quick as hell. Without the resistance of a bag or the impact of hitting an opponent to stop your punches and combination flurries, it’s shadowboxing with your combinations that puts you on the road to being as fast as you can be. How many boxers or fighters do you know who approach shadowboxing as a serious workout? None who want to be taken seriously.
Here’s my personal schedule I made (and never actually got around to doing for more than three days in a row) for myself based off of the routines of other professionals, as well as talking on the phone with Kevin Rooney from time to time. My advice is to take it and switch things around, lower or increase repetitions to your preference and mess around with it in order to make it work for you.
Monday-Friday
Morning (6:00 AM):
Stretch - 5 minutes
Jog 3-5 miles.
Eat breakfast.
Go back to bed.
Noon (12:00 PM):
Stretch - 5 minutes
Shadowboxing - 10 minutes
Sparring - 10 rounds
Slip Bag - 10 minutes
Speed Bag 10 minutes
Afternoon (6:00 PM):
Stretch - 5 minutes
Punch mitts and Body Protector - 10 minutes
Double-end bag - 10 minutes
Heavy Bag - 10 minutes
Floor work (in circuits of 5):
- 100 Sit-ups (20)
- 100 Crunches (20)
- 100 Oblique sit-ups (20)
- 100 Push-ups (20)
- 100 Dips (20)
Neck Work - 10 minutes
Jump Rope - 10 minutes
Medicine Ball to Stomach and Ribs - 5 minutes
Night: (9:00 PM):
Stretch - 5 minutes
Bike Ride - 30 minutes
Most importantly, eat right. None of it will work if you don’t eat right.
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