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Five common exercises you should never do.

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    Five common exercises you should never do.

    Any fitment gurus want to give their two cents on this ?




    Posterior (Behind-the-Neck) Pull Downs: This exercise rotates your shoulders into a position that strains your rotator cuffs, paving the way for inflammation. "I've also seen guys pull the bar down so fast that they crack their spinous processes [little nubs on top of the vertebrae]," says Pearson.



    Safe Alternative: Anterior (Front) Pull Downs: Not only is pulling the bar to your chest easier on your shoulders, but "it flexes the lats through a greater range of motion, accelerating muscle growth," says Pearson.
    Behind-the-Neck Shoulder Presses: Just as posterior pull downs strain your shoulders on the way down, this exercise hurts them on the way up. Pearson says it also puts too much stress on the acromioclavicular joints (those little knobs on the tops of your shoulders), which can lead to an overuse injury commonly referred to as weight lifter's shoulder.



    Safe Alternative: Alternating Shoulder Presses: Sit on a Swiss ball and hold a pair of dumbbells overhead with your arms straight and palms facing each other. Next, bend your left elbow and lower your left arm, moving your elbow out to the side, until your upper arm is parallel with the floor. Press it back up and repeat with your right arm.
    Straight Bar Curls: If you let your arms hang loosely by your sides, you'll notice that your palms face inward. The problem with straight bar curls is that they lock your arms into an unnatural palms-up position. "In so doing, you're stressing your elbow joints, and that can lead to tendinitis," says Pearson.



    Safe Alternative: E-Z Bar Curls: The bar is angled to put your elbows in a more natural neutral position.
    Leg Extensions: The four parts of your quadriceps are designed to work together as one, but a recent study in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise found that leg extensions activate the sections slightly independently of one another. Even a five-millisecond difference can cause uneven compression between the kneecap and thighbone, inflaming the tendon that connects the kneecap to the shinbone (a painful injury known as jumper's knee).



    Safe Alternative: Squats: To squat safely, place the bar across your shoulders (not your neck) and keep your back straight, bending slightly at the hips through the squatting motion. Proper form is crucial with this exercise.
    Sit-ups: Not only are sit-ups bad for your neck, but they're also one of the least-effective abdominal exercises you can do, according to a recent study at San Diego State University.



    Safe Alternative: Bicycle Crunches: That same study found the bicycle maneuver works the abs and obliques 250 percent better than traditional crunches or sit-ups. Lie on your back with your feet up in the air, then bend your knees at a 90-degree angle. With your hands behind your ears, pump your legs back and forth while moving your armpits (not your elbows) toward the opposite knees.
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    #2
    I try not to do anything behind the neck so that might be good advise.

    But the one thing is see a lot of people doing that I never understood was holding something like a #35 plate in front of them and just their upper body back and forth. I figure that would just wear down the pads that are between your vertabraes in your lower back.
    sigpic

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      #3
      The behind the neck lat. pulldown and military press and exercises I try to avoid, especially the military press. If you are young you might be fine, but I am only 23 and from lifting professionally for a few years, I will never do them again. The ez-bar curl is correct as I have heard it from numerous sources. Although a straight bar curl will pack on more mass, the ez will really hit the biceps, keeping a slight inward rotation keeps stress off the wrists. As far as the leg extension, I have never heard this, as it it a staple in any leg workout, but squats should be your number one priority, make sure you keep you lower back set correctly. I am a fan of regular situps supersetted with lying lower leg raises and db oblique crunches. Bicycle crunches are fine, but I am looking for strength in the mid-section more than cutness. That's my opinion, take it as you will.

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        #4
        The straight bar curls are obvious and I've been told by numerous sources to never do it. That's why they created the E-Z Bar.

        As for the leg extensions, I can vouch for what this says. I have been a track athlete for 6 years now (I'm in College now) and until I hit college I never did any kind of weight lifting. When I began to lift, including the leg extension, I got "jumpers knee." It got so bad that my tendon began to tear away from the bone. After over a year, I still have pains from this and never do leg extensions.

        :(^SOLD^:(

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          #5
          Been doing leg extensions now for about 9 years with no felt pain nor physical damage. It must really depend on the circumstances, for example, correct positioning, the person of course, and many others.

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            #6
            Originally posted by Adam1990325iC View Post
            Been doing leg extensions now for about 9 years with no felt pain nor physical damage. It must really depend on the circumstances, for example, correct positioning, the person of course, and many others.
            Squating really is the best leg exercise out there. I bike a lot so I work out my legs over the summer, and I stick to squating.

            97 Cosmos M3

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              #7
              Having both a bad shoulder (rotator cuff) and a bad knee (large piece of femur missing, and no miniscus) I can vouch for these statements. Since my knee injury I haven't been able to do leg extensions, period. And I slowly just figured out that pulling or pushing a bar behind my neck made my shoulder pop. Don't do that anymore either.

              Squats will do wonders for your entire lower body, and I swear by them. But it is very important when you do squats that you do them properly. You will hurt your back if you don't.

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