Sit on a foam roller with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor. Lean torso back and place right hand on floor, shifting weight into right hip and crossing right ankle over left thigh. Place your left hand on your left thigh. Use your supporting foot and hand to roll from the bottom of the glutes to the pelvic bone. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Lie facedown with the inside of your left thigh resting on the foam roller. Keeping your core tight, move the roller back forth along the inner thigh, stopping a few inches before you reach the knee. If you find an area of increased discomfort, hold and rotate the hip to work that area. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Switch sides and repeat. Start in a forearm plank position with quads (tops of thighs) resting on the foam roller. Starting at the top of the quads, move the roller up and down your thighs, making sure to stop about 2 inches before the hip and knee joints. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Straddle the foam roller as shown, so that your back knee is on the floor and the front leg is extended with heel on the floor. Keeping both knees slightly bent, press your front heel into the floor and your hips back, feeling a stretch in the back of the front leg. Hold for about 10 breaths or 45 seconds. Repeat on the opposite side. Kneel on the floor with both hands on the foam roller. Straighten one leg out to the side, then press hips toward the heel of the bent leg to feel a stretch in the inner thigh of the extended leg. Try to maintain a flat torso (no rounding of the spine.) Hold for about 10 breaths or 45 seconds. Repeat on the opposite side. Start in a runner’s lunge with your hands on the foam roller (the roller should be flat on the floor). Lower your hips to the floor, keeping the front knee bent at a 45-degree angle and straightening the back leg behind you. Try to maintain a flat torso (no rounding of the spine). Hold for 10 breaths or 45 seconds, then repeat on the opposite side. Get into a half-kneeling position, with your front knee bent at 90 degrees and positioned directly over your ankle; your back knee should be directly under your back hip. Place the foam roller vertical and just inside the front leg, placing your hand on it for support. Hold here for 10 breaths or 45 seconds, then repeat on the opposite side. Tip: It's important to make this an “active” stretch to get the full benefit. To do so, tuck the hips forward, squeeze the glutes, and think about pulling the heel of the front leg and the knee of the back leg toward one another to deepen the stretch. Original article and pictures take http://www.prevention.com/fitness/strength-training/best-exercises-to-ease-and-prevent-hip-pain/inner-thigh-roller site
суббота, 22 июля 2017 г.
10 Moves To Ease Tight Hips
10 Moves To Ease Tight Hips
Sit on a foam roller with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor. Lean torso back and place right hand on floor, shifting weight into right hip and crossing right ankle over left thigh. Place your left hand on your left thigh. Use your supporting foot and hand to roll from the bottom of the glutes to the pelvic bone. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Lie facedown with the inside of your left thigh resting on the foam roller. Keeping your core tight, move the roller back forth along the inner thigh, stopping a few inches before you reach the knee. If you find an area of increased discomfort, hold and rotate the hip to work that area. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Switch sides and repeat. Start in a forearm plank position with quads (tops of thighs) resting on the foam roller. Starting at the top of the quads, move the roller up and down your thighs, making sure to stop about 2 inches before the hip and knee joints. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Straddle the foam roller as shown, so that your back knee is on the floor and the front leg is extended with heel on the floor. Keeping both knees slightly bent, press your front heel into the floor and your hips back, feeling a stretch in the back of the front leg. Hold for about 10 breaths or 45 seconds. Repeat on the opposite side. Kneel on the floor with both hands on the foam roller. Straighten one leg out to the side, then press hips toward the heel of the bent leg to feel a stretch in the inner thigh of the extended leg. Try to maintain a flat torso (no rounding of the spine.) Hold for about 10 breaths or 45 seconds. Repeat on the opposite side. Start in a runner’s lunge with your hands on the foam roller (the roller should be flat on the floor). Lower your hips to the floor, keeping the front knee bent at a 45-degree angle and straightening the back leg behind you. Try to maintain a flat torso (no rounding of the spine). Hold for 10 breaths or 45 seconds, then repeat on the opposite side. Get into a half-kneeling position, with your front knee bent at 90 degrees and positioned directly over your ankle; your back knee should be directly under your back hip. Place the foam roller vertical and just inside the front leg, placing your hand on it for support. Hold here for 10 breaths or 45 seconds, then repeat on the opposite side. Tip: It's important to make this an “active” stretch to get the full benefit. To do so, tuck the hips forward, squeeze the glutes, and think about pulling the heel of the front leg and the knee of the back leg toward one another to deepen the stretch. Original article and pictures take http://www.prevention.com/fitness/strength-training/best-exercises-to-ease-and-prevent-hip-pain/inner-thigh-roller site
Sit on a foam roller with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor. Lean torso back and place right hand on floor, shifting weight into right hip and crossing right ankle over left thigh. Place your left hand on your left thigh. Use your supporting foot and hand to roll from the bottom of the glutes to the pelvic bone. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Lie facedown with the inside of your left thigh resting on the foam roller. Keeping your core tight, move the roller back forth along the inner thigh, stopping a few inches before you reach the knee. If you find an area of increased discomfort, hold and rotate the hip to work that area. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Switch sides and repeat. Start in a forearm plank position with quads (tops of thighs) resting on the foam roller. Starting at the top of the quads, move the roller up and down your thighs, making sure to stop about 2 inches before the hip and knee joints. Continue rolling back and forth for 30 to 60 seconds. Straddle the foam roller as shown, so that your back knee is on the floor and the front leg is extended with heel on the floor. Keeping both knees slightly bent, press your front heel into the floor and your hips back, feeling a stretch in the back of the front leg. Hold for about 10 breaths or 45 seconds. Repeat on the opposite side. Kneel on the floor with both hands on the foam roller. Straighten one leg out to the side, then press hips toward the heel of the bent leg to feel a stretch in the inner thigh of the extended leg. Try to maintain a flat torso (no rounding of the spine.) Hold for about 10 breaths or 45 seconds. Repeat on the opposite side. Start in a runner’s lunge with your hands on the foam roller (the roller should be flat on the floor). Lower your hips to the floor, keeping the front knee bent at a 45-degree angle and straightening the back leg behind you. Try to maintain a flat torso (no rounding of the spine). Hold for 10 breaths or 45 seconds, then repeat on the opposite side. Get into a half-kneeling position, with your front knee bent at 90 degrees and positioned directly over your ankle; your back knee should be directly under your back hip. Place the foam roller vertical and just inside the front leg, placing your hand on it for support. Hold here for 10 breaths or 45 seconds, then repeat on the opposite side. Tip: It's important to make this an “active” stretch to get the full benefit. To do so, tuck the hips forward, squeeze the glutes, and think about pulling the heel of the front leg and the knee of the back leg toward one another to deepen the stretch. Original article and pictures take http://www.prevention.com/fitness/strength-training/best-exercises-to-ease-and-prevent-hip-pain/inner-thigh-roller site
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