When it comes to movement - these are the BIG 3! Whether you are following SHIFT or loading up with big weight in Program B or C, the way to perform these movements safely and properly will remain the same. Making sure you take the time to practice these and throw them into your daily warm ups. It will pay off big time in the long run. The proper execution of these movements will ensure safety, as well as allow you to progress and build strength in a balanced way across your entire body.
Air Squat
At the very basic level - a squat is raising and lowering your center of mass (your body) and is one of the MOST basic human movements. Have you ever seen a toddler just chill in the bottom of a squat? If you get a chance, notice what that looks like. You’ll notice the heels are down, their butt is lower than their knees, their knees are out and angled the same as their feet, and their chest is up. A child looks comfortable in this position because it’s the way our body is designed to move. In many parts of the world, this position is still a very common way that people perform many of their daily activities.
You might not find it so easy for you.
We sit all day in chairs, in our cars, on the airplane, or on the couch. Sitting all day, for years, weakens our backside (posterior chain - hamstrings, glutes, erectors) and tightens our hips. Wearing high heels and many other types of shoes alters our ankle flexibility. That super flexible toddler we once were, is gone.
The best way to get it back: SQUAT! Doing this movement, both passively in warm ups or just hanging out in the bottom position for 1-3 min a day can greatly improve our ability to get into it. Doing this movement well in workouts with or without weight will rebuild the motor patterns needed to be strong in this movement.
HOW TO: AIR SQUAT
HOW TO: BARBELL FRONT SQUAT
HOW TO: BARBELL BACK SQUAT
HOW TO: DUMBBELL SQUAT
MOVEMENT BREAKDOWN
MOVEMENT PROGRESSION
FEET SHOULDER WIDTH APART
HEELS DOWN
BELLY TIGHT
CHEST UP
REACH BUTT BACK AND DOWN
DRIVE KNEES OUT
KEEP HEELS DOWN
KEEP BELLY TIGHT
KEEP CHEST LIFTED
BUTT LOWER THAN KNEES AT BOTTOM
HEELS DOWN
KNEES OUT
CHEST UP
BELLY TIGHT
NO ROUNDING OF THE LOWER OR UPPER BACK
NO SHIFTING FORWARD OR LIFTING OF THE HEELS
NO CAVING KNEES
NO PLOPPING OR RELAXING (UNLESS HOLDING UNWEIGHTED SQUAT FOR MOBILITY PURPOSES)
We say HEELS a lot. But do we need you falling backward because you are SO far back on your heels? NO! Really you will have your WHOLE FOOT on the floor. Toes spread and helping with stability. We say heels so much because it is MOST common for people to want to shift forward. This puts more stress on the knees and turns this into a mostly quad (front of leg) movement. We want the balance, strength, and stability of the backside (glutes and hamstrings) to take most of the work. So stay back!!
Plopping when you try to go low? It is VERY common for people to be weak once they break parallel. Why? Because - chairs. The muscles haven’t had to be strong in that position, and the neuro-muscular system hasn’t been asked to recruit muscle in that position for most of your adult life - or pretty much since you started going to school. So a lot of times people feel that they just kind of collapse. This is the EXACT reason we are going to work on it!
That plop might also be from hip, knee, or ankle tightness and once you get to parallel you find your knees roll in, you shift onto your toes, your back rounds, and your chest drops. This is VERY normal and when done with no weight and not fast - IS NOT DANGEROUS. It just needs to be worked on.
Press
Taking an object from your chest or shoulder level to over your head is pretty universal. That suitcase you store at the top of your closet? It’s that!
Often when people have learned to press in the gym, it is usually lacking just a BIT of range of motion. Typically what we see in the gym is a press that ends slightly out front, or not quite locked out. We are going to fix that! And not to make the movement “harder” but to make sure you are developing ALL of the muscles of the shoulders and upper back - both to protect the joints - but also because we know you want those nice looking shoulders from ALL angles!
You will first want to practice what we call the Strict Press or Shoulder Press and then this movement will transfer over to when we get the legs involved in something like a Push Press or even a Thruster.
HOW TO: BARBELL STRICT PRESS
HOW TO: DUMBBELL STRICT PRESS
MOVEMENT BREAKDOWN
MOVEMENT PROGRESSION
FEET UNDER HIPS
HEELS DOWN
STANDING TALL
BUTT SQUEEZED
BELLY TIGHT
OBJECT(S) AT SHOULDER HEIGHT
ELBOWS IN FRONT
OBJECT RESTING ON THE SHELF YOUR SHOULDERS HAVE CREATED
PRESS STRAIGHT-UP
KEEP BELLY TIGHT
STRAIGHT BAR PATH
FINISH LOCKED OUT OVERHEAD
WEIGHT OVER THE MIDDLE OF YOUR BODY
BICEPS BY THE EARS
BELLY TIGHT
PRESSING UP
LOWER WITH ELBOWS IN FRONT
NO LEANING BACK AT ANY POINT! BELLY TIGHT!
NO PRESSING OUT AND AROUND THE FACE
NO OVEREXTENSION OF BELLY AT THE TOP
Deadlift
Deadlifting is just a fancy term for picking something up. No one bats an eye when you pick up your backpack, your child, or your shoes. But deadlifting?! That sounds serious!
Learning how to safely and effectively pick something up off of the ground couldn’t be more important. We all know that one guy (maybe that one guy is you) who threw his back out helping someone move. Or maybe the mom who hurts every time she goes to pick up her child. Unfortunately, the solution most people find for this? Avoiding it completely. That approach only leads to more weakness and tightness. Weakness and tightness leads to a greater risk for injury - and the cycle is not great.
In Street Parking we deadlift dumbbells, kettlebells, medicine balls, sandbags, and barbells. We pick them up. We turn that deadlift into a clean, a snatch, or a ball over the shoulder. We train how to pick up an object off the ground correctly and safely and gain strength, flexibility, and efficiency while doing it!
Oh, and did we mention this is a great way to build the backside? READ: hamstrings and booty.
HOW TO: BARBELL DEADLIFT
HOW TO: DUMBBELL DEADLIFT
MOVEMENT BREAKDOWN
MOvement PROGRESSION
HEELS DOWN
OBJECT CLOSE TO THE BODY
HINGE AT HIPS
KNEES BENT
GRIP OUTSIDE LEGS (OBJECT DEPENDENT)
HIPS HIGHER THAN KNEES
CHEST/SHOULDERS OVER OBJECT
ARMS STRAIGHT
SHOULDERS BACK
BELLY TIGHT
GAZE IN FRONT (NOT UP - ROUGHLY 6 FEET IN FRONT OF YOU)
DRIVE HEELS INTO THE GROUND
LIFT CHEST
PULL OBJECT INTO BODY
PRESS KNEES BACK
KEEP BELLY TIGHT
STAND FULLY
SQUEEZE CHEEKS
ARMS STRAIGHT
SHOULDERS BACK
TO LOWER:
REACH BUTT BACK
KEEP HEELS DOWN
PULL OBJECT INTO BODY
KEEP BELLY TIGHT
KEEP CHEST UP
SOFTEN KNEES
LOWER UNDER CONTROL TO THE GROUND
NO SHIFTING FORWARD
NO SHOOTING UP OF THE HIPS OFF OF THE FLOOR
NO GOING AROUND THE KNEES
NO OVEREXTENSION OF THE BACK
NO ROUNDING OF THE BACK IN SET UP - AS YOU MOVE - OR WHEN LOWERING
TIPS:
The closer the object is to your body - the easier it is to control, the lighter it will feel, and the easier it will be to keep safe and strong positions! Pull it into your body throughout!
You are basically playing tug of war with the weight you are lifting. You want to really stay back in those heels, the same way you would if there was a person on the other side of a rope. Dig in!
The more straight the path of the object is, the closer it will stay to your body, the easier it will be to lift.
BOTH rounding of the back or overextension is not as safe of strong and keeping a nice neutral back. Disclaimer: We all lift things we a round back every day. You drop a spoon on the ground - you're not going to set up like it’s a heavy deadlift. Just remember the heavier the object is or the more reps/more speed you are doing - the more risk of injury there is. We also all know that other guy who has thrown out his back picking up his socks.