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Just because you’re having fun in the sun, doesn’t mean you aren’t also making progress toward your fitness goals.

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Stand strong and organized- tension helps build strength, provided we stay engaged in the process.

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There are a few universal rules that everyone should follow no matter what your goal.

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We live in a world filled with noise. I’m not talking about the gentle sounds of nature, of trickling water and rustling trees, but of anthropogenic noise. The kind that makes you cover your eyes and wince. The kind made by oversized machines and far too many people squeezed into one place, clamoring for attention. […]

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The couple holding hands seemed more youthful than their years suggest. Perhaps there’s something about basking in the glow of mutual affection that can turn back the hands of time. I pondered the bonds that must have kept them together for so long. Raising children, the ups and downs of long marriage, and a lifetime […]

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At first glance, it may seem like our reliance on technology increases our productivity. While this is true in some ways, such as increased ability to communicate around the globe, staying “plugged in” all the time may actually hamper productivity in the long run. Technology is highly useful to us if we use it when […]

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“Keep Portland Weird!” This is the motto and slogan by which many Portlanders live and that they embrace with a fiery passion. From the yearly World Naked Bike Ride ride to the unicyle bagpipe playing Darth Vader, from Beerfest to Blues Festival, Portland has it all. While I’m neither born nor raised in this great […]

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It often seems like everyone is looking for the quick fix or the magic pill for instant results. As coaches, it’s our duty to educate our clients and steer them away from this kind of instant-gratification mentality, focusing instead on the importance of safe and effective movements that will help them reach their goals.

There’s no lack of interesting and different (some might even say “crazy”) exercises on social media and YouTube. Yet, many are not necessary, other than for occasional novelty or variety, or for entertainment value — and some are downright unsafe for some people trying them at home. For many of these exercises that break from the basics, the return on investment is often not worth it, if the return a person is looking for is something other than the experience of something new and different.

“The basics” stand up to the test of time as some of the most effective movements for building strength and mobility.

Although it’s great to play with movements that break up monotony and add a little extra challenge once in a while, I always come back to the basic movement patterns involved in most physical activities in our daily lives.

Four basic movement patterns always present in my training programs include pulling, pushing, squatting, and hingeing. These movements are important and effective, and I always have them in my proverbial toolbox, along with many progressions and regressions to make them suitable for all fitness levels.

Push and Pull

Pulling and pushing are two movements that target every major muscle group in the upper body, and including both in your training programs promotes muscular balance and addresses asymmetries that can lead to injury. Examples of exercises that train these movements include the bench press (horizontal pushing), the overhead or shoulder press (vertical pushing), the bent-over row (horizontal pulling), and the pull-up (vertical pulling).

Most of the muscles used in pulling movements make up the posterior chain, or “the backside” of your body. Neglecting these prime movers can negatively affect posture and result in back pain. While most people think strictly of upper body exercises when thinking of pushing and pulling movements, there are many that also train the lower body, like a sled pull or sled push; and the deadlift is a combination of a pull and a hinge.

Squat and Hinge

Squatting and hinging are two movement patterns that target the major muscles of the lower body and are necessary for many functions of everyday life. The hip hinge is extremely crucial for maintaining a strong posterior chain. Poor hip hinge technique leads to compensation in the lumbar and thoracic spine. This movement must be mastered slowly and in a controlled manner using exercises like the deadlift, before moving on to more ballistic exercises like the kettlebell swing.

A great coach will have a strong understanding of how to use progressions and regressions for these basic movements to meet each client where they are and work with them to get them where they want to be, safely and effectively.

In this article you will learn some of my favorite progressions and regressions for the pull, push, squat, and hinge, and see some examples of how to modify these basic movements to meet a client’s level and address their goals.

Please be sure to watch the video below for a walk-through of some of these variations, and then review the notes below the video:

Pull: Regressions and Progressions

  • Pull-Up: Start with hollow hold on the ground, then move on to hollow hang, flexed-arm hang, weighted hang. Progressions to pull-ups can include performing more repetitions at bodyweight, or adding weight to the exercise.
  • Row: Start with bent-over row with light weight or resistance band in supported, staggered, or athletic stance with a slight hinge at the hips, then move to high-incline inverted row (using barbell on a rack, a Smith machine bar, suspension straps, or rings). Progressions include: bent-over row with heavier weight in a hinge stance, inverted row at a deeper incline, inverted row with body parallel with the floor, inverted row with feet elevated (decline).
  • Rope Pulls: Dragging on the ground or pulling from overhead, looped over a pull-up bar.

Push: Regressions and Progressions

  • Push-Up: Start with incline push-up against a wall, move down to a countertop or desk height, then down to a bench or box, or adjust a barbell on a rack at different heights to work from a higher (easier) position to lower positions as strength increases. Planks on a bench or on the floor are also a good regression to build push-up strength. To progress push-ups, increase repetitions or sets, or advance to one-arm or one-arm/one-leg push-ups.
  • Bench Press: Start with light weight either with an unloaded barbell or dumbbells, and progress by increasing the weight or by performing unilateral bench press with a dumbbell. Adjusting the incline (incline, flat, or decline) can also be used to regress or progress a bench press.
  • Floor Press: This is another way to train a push, similar to a bench press but performed on the floor. Start unilaterally, with one light kettlebell or dumbbell, and progress to a heavier load or to double kettlebells or dumbbells.
  • Turkish Get-Up: performed with a Kettlebell or Dumbbell
  • Overhead Pressing: Start with a rack hold or a rack carry/walk, move to overhead hold or overhead carry/walk, then seated military press (bilateral). Progress further by performing unilateral overhead press, push press, or jerk.

Squat: Regressions and Progressions

  • Squat: Start with bodyweight squat, and progress in this order: goblet squat, rack squat (one side), double kettlebell/dumbbell front squat, barbell front or back squats. The squat can also be progressed to an overhead squat if there is adequate shoulder mobility.
  • Lunge: Start with bodyweight and progress to loaded. Work from split stance, to reverse lunge to forward lunge, to walking lunge. Progress further by performing the lunge in an elevated split stance or rear-foot elevated (Bulgarian).
  • Pistol Squat: Start by using assistance such as holding on to suspension straps or by performing the movement within comfortable range of motion from a raised surface. Progress to using light counterweight from the floor without assistance, and finally to bodyweight and heavier load.

Hinge: Regressions and Progressions

  • Deadlift: Start with bodyweight hip hinge to pattern the movement, and progress to light kettlebell deadlift, then to a deadlift with an unloaded barbell. Progress to conventional and sumo barbell deadlift, and to suitcase deadlift with dumbbells or kettlebells.
  • Good Mornings: start with bodyweight, and progress by increasing the weight.
  • Single-Leg Deadlift: start unweighted and progress by increasing the weight first with dumbbells or kettlebells, then with a barbell
  • Kettlebell Swing: Start with two-handed start/stop or dead stop swing (Step 3 in this article), and progress to a standard hardstyle swing. Progress further by increasing the weight for the standard swing, performing single-hand swings, or swinging two bells.

While the movements above are a good starting point, I recommend (particularly if you are a new trainer) that you make a full list of movement patterns along with the exercises that fit each pattern and all their progressions and regressions. Over time, as you practice and make the appropriate adjustments in context with your clients, you will master the art of regressing and progressing exercises to meet your clients where they are.

Using Regressions and Progressions in Semi-Private and Group Training

Understanding how to regress and progress an exercise will be incredibly beneficial if you instruct semi-private or group sessions where you’re working with people of varying fitness levels at once. You will be able to quickly assess each person and demonstrate the required adjustment appropriate for their level. Without this understanding, your clients could feel intimidated and may lose motivation and self-confidence.

Here is an example using regression and progression options in a group setting for a beginner, an intermediate, and an advanced client:

Circuit:
Squat
Push
Pull

Finisher: 
Hinge

Participants have the following options based on their level of readiness and ability:

Beginner:
Bodyweight Squat
Plank or Elevated Push-Up
Ring Rows or Inverted Rows at a High Incline
Deadlift

Intermediate:
Goblet Squat
Push-Up
Flexed-Arm Hang
Two-Handed Kettlebell Swing

Advanced:
Double Kettlebell Front Squat
One-Arm Push-Up (at appropriate incline or on the floor depending on ability)
Pull-Up or Weighted-Pull-Up
Double Kettlebell Swing

Always strive to help your clients reach their goals safely and create positive environments with skills that challenge them but allow them to succeed and make progress.

This thought from physical therapist and developer of the Functional Movement System (FMS), Gray Cook, has long stayed with me: “Never put fitness on top of dysfunction.”

In my teaching, I strive to ingrain the idea of “Pattern, Practice, Perfect” prior to loading someone. Take time with your clients to develop and practice these foundational movement patterns. The better they become at the basics, the safer they will be as you advance them to new and more challenging progressions. By building a better foundation, they’ll not only build strength, they’ll also have a greater possibility of staying injury-free.

 

 


A message from GGS…

At Girls Gone Strong, we want you to feel confident knowing that what you’re doing to look good, feel good, and feel healthy and strong is not only based on tested, reliable, and safe information from trustworthy sources, but also that it is effective and efficient.

That’s why we developed our flagship training system, The Modern Woman’s Guide To Strength Training.

We’ve cut through all that noise and the BS with a sane, sustainable, and efficient approach that will help you achieve maximum results, whether you’re brand new to strength training, or a veteran in the weight room.
With four different 16-week programs—that’s 64 weeks of training—you get over a year’s worth of workouts, including progressions to ensure that you continue making progress. You’ll also get a training manual, exercise glossary, progress tracker, a bonus conditioning manual, plus a video library with over 70 high-definition videos breaking down each exercise, step by step.

We believe fitness should enhance your life instead of become your life. If you exercise in a way that you actually enjoy, staying fit and strong won’t ever feel like a drag. You’ll look forward to it for years to come.

If you want an entire training system that will help you look and feel your best, The Modern Woman’s Guide to Strength Training is for you!

Learn more here!

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Kind Bars are the snack bar that I always reach for when I really want a candy bar but don’t want the resulting sugar crash. Full of nuts and seeds held together with a sweet-sticky glue of brown rice syrup, these bars are sweet, crunchy, a little salty, and sometimes gilded in chocolate. They are totally crave-worthy in their own right!

But Kind Bars are kind of budget-busting when I’ve got five dinners, seven breakfasts, and seven lunches to shop for my family of four. So I set to work making these snack bars at home. Yes, there are some specialty ingredients that are an up-front investment, but there’s still a huge cost savings.

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A few weeks ago, I started noticing small roaches occasionally scuttling around my kitchen. This being an old apartment building in New York City, I wasn’t too shocked. I had dealt with mice and ants in my last apartment and once stepped on a dead rat in the middle of the street (a story for another time), so it only seemed natural that cockroaches would one day appear on my personal docket of NYC vermin to confront.

It wasn’t like I had a full-on infestation — or so I thought. I’d see maybe one German cockroach, which are smaller than some other, gnarlier cockroach types I’ve seen, crawling on my backsplash or in one of my kitchen cabinets once a week, but I knew I had to nip this problem in the bud. So one night, I decided to do a full apartment clean to dissuade the roaches from coming back. I set about cleaning my sink and counters with disinfectant and spraying Hot Shot Ant & Roach Killer (side note: I later found out this only kills bugs on contact and is not a repellent) onto the baseboards and the crevices where the kitchen cabinets meet the wall.

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