‘MOVEU and Fitness’: For Better Spinal Alignment, Try and ‘Whack Your Crack’

EG News

Iron Killer
Jacked Immortal
EG Freak
Mutated
Fully Loaded
EG Cash
105,646
Teaching people how to move and train safely or in other words, “Fix Yo S#!t,” is the driving desire behind Dr. Mike Wasilisin, the face and brains behind social media PT giants MoveU. Eliminating unnecessary injuries by sand the subsequent need for pills and insurance claims. Wherever a more appropriate and straightforward treatment is possible, the sports chiropractor believes in simpler diagnosis and rehab for all.

In his videos, Wasilisin provides fun and easy to understand tips for better posture and exercise techniques, and in this installment for Muscle & Fitness, the real-life doctor — who also plays an influencer on Instagram — provides a valuable demonstration on how to prevent deadlift disasters by improving your spinal alignment. By trying out his “head, back, crack” method, you will also get more from your deadlift because you’ll be more efficiently targeting the hamstrings and glutes.

lign-the-spine-when-performing-a-deadlift-exercise.webp
MoveU

MoveU Wants You to ‘Be One with Your Crack’​


“It’s called ‘head, back, crack’,” says the MoveU doctor, as he advises using a stick placed vertically over the persons spine for both illustrative and practical purposes. “You’re gonna have a stick, it’s going to push into your head, your back, and that crack. And now, you’re gonna hinge all the way down. All the way, keep hinging until you come to a stop.”

Once you begin bending toward 90 degrees, the stick will naturally distance itself from the posterior end. The lesson here is to be able to bend while keeping the stick touching all three points, as this is the optimum position for back alignment during a deadlift. “You need to learn to be one with the crack,” says Wasilisin. “Feel the crack, keep the crack, now come on all the way up.” The next step is to slowly return to a standing position, while still maintaining the position of the stick.

Those that are still working on their flexibility, and find bending toward 90 degrees to be difficult, can modify the downward movement by bending their knees. “Now that you’ve warmed up your spine, you’ve done 10 reps of this … watch yourself in the mirror, [behind] the deadlift bar,” says Wasilisin. “What you are going to do from now is hold that position, you’re simply going to straighten your knees, and extend your upper body, upright, maintaining those (visualized) points of contact, you’re in better spinal alignment, you’re preventing injury, you’re reducing pain, you’re gaining strength in the muscles that matter the most.”


Powerlifter-Attempting-Deadlift-Competition.webp
Workout Tips

4 Ways to Improve Your Deadlift


Use these tips to add slabs to your back by lifting more weight.

Read article

Continue reading...
 
I would rather be wacking her crack but this is interesting. Seems like may have seen something like this long agao but we all hope and strive to be aligned correctly when we lift.
 

Create an account or login to comment

You must be a member in order to leave a comment

Create account

Create an account on our community. It's easy!

Log in

Already have an account? Log in here.

Similar threads

“I’ve got a monster of a lower-back stretch for you,” says Dr. Mike Wasilisin, founder of MOVEU...
Replies
0
Views
37
The inverted row isn’t a complicated move but there are still plenty of room to make inverted row...
Replies
0
Views
41
The bench press. It’s one of the original rite of passage exercises that many lifters spend...
Replies
0
Views
40

Latest threads

Back
Top