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A plastic molded device called the Manta Ray is an excellent tool for squatting. I use one regularly and highly recommend it. There is no pain from the bar when you use this device. A towel wrapped around the bar or a foam pad can also help ease the pain of the bar but be aware that these things can slip or roll. |
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3. Keep your elbows pointed
down
Hold your hands on the bar fairly close in to your shoulders and keep your elbows pointed down the entire time.
If
you hold the bar too wide, this
will force your shoulders to rotate
internally. Your elbows will start
to point towards the back which
will then cause the bar to rotate
forward as you come down. This,
in turn, will cause you to lean
over excessively, increasing the
pressure on the lower back.
Keeping your elbows pointed down
activates your external rotator
muscles, which will keep the bar
from rolling forward.
If you feel you are about to get stuck at the bottom of a squat, try this trick:
Normally, it is taught that you should never hold your breath during an exercise. However, there is a very good reason for doing so in the squat (be aware that I'm not advocating that you hold your breath through the entire exercise, just briefly at a certain point in the exercise).
Here's why: your abdominal core is much more stable when you hold your breath. You need as much stability as you can get at the bottom of a heavy squat. If you are inhaling or exhaling at this point, you compromise your core stability. Much of the stress that was being supported by the intra-abdominal pressure of your contracted core muscles is then transferred to the lower back.
By holding your breath just before you get to the bottom, during the direction change and as you start to come back up, you will have far greater core stability than if you breathe during that phase. This will result in greater power out of the bottom, allowing you to use more weight safely.
Be sure that you do not hold your breath too long!! This period of breath-holding shouldn't last more than a few seconds.
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So next time you're going to do a leg workout, give squats a try. They really are one of the most productive exercises in existence and should be a part of most routines.
The
squat rack isn't just for barbell
curls anymore!
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