Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1380: The 10 Best Resistance Band Exercises
Episode Date: September 14, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss the 10 most effective resistance band exercises. How good things stick. (1:45) Mind Pump Reminisces on the history of resistance bands, their introduction ...to them & MORE. (2:30) The versatility and unique value of resistance bands. (10:55) The Top 10 Best Resistance Band Exercises. (18:13) #1 – Band bodyweight hip thrusts. (18:56) #2 – Band squats. (21:24) #3 – Band stiff-legged deadlifts. (24:21) #4 – Band Pushups. (27:19) #5 – Straight arm pulldowns with bands. (29:09) #6 – Band pull-aparts. (31:18) #7 – Band upright rows. (33:35) #8 – Band hammer curls. (33:35) #9 – Band overhead tricep extensions. (37:48) #10 – Band wood chops. (41:13) Related Links/Products Mentioned MAPS Anywhere Program Rubberbanditz Resistance Band Set How to Continue Building Muscle While You're Stuck at Home – Mind Pump Blog How to Stay Fit When Gyms are Closed Due to Coronavirus (COVID-19) - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump TV - YouTube 6 Best Band Exercises (ULTIMATE FULL BODY WORKOUT) | Mind Pump Correcting Upper Cross Syndrome to Improve Posture & Health- Band Pull-Aparts 5 Exercises For HUGE Forearms & A STRONGER Grip (FREE Big Arms Guide) Build An Amazing Midsection with the Side Wood Chop Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. You know, when I first started in the fitness industry
back in the 90s, I thought resistance bands weren't that effective.
It wasn't something that I even considered.
Well, once I started reading studies coming out of the former Soviet Union
and powerlifting athletes and Olympic lifters,
started incorporating in my training in my clients and in myself.
I was totally sold.
These days, bands make their way into almost every one of my workouts and it's true for
my co-host as well.
Bands are now a serious training tool and you can do a full workout, train your entire
body with just resistance bands.
That's what we do in this episode.
We go over our 10 favorite resistance band exercises, each one of them covering a
different part of your body.
In fact, at the end of the episode, if you take notes, you got all the exercises, you can
literally just do three sets of every exercise, two fatigue, and have a phenomenal workout.
Now, if you want more planning, and you want a full-on workout with video demos, where
we're teaching you how to exercise that has different phases
that requires just bands as well.
You can check out our maps anywhere program.
It's actually one of our more popular workout programs.
You can find that at mapswhite.com.
Mapswhite.com, you can check out the maps anywhere program that utilizes bands, no weights,
no machines for amazing results. I love fitness history, fitness equipment history
when it comes in style, when it's at a style.
I love it.
Things tend to circle around.
The good things tend to circle back.
Well, not all things are.
The good things, the good things,
shake weights, not making it sway back.
Exactly.
But the good things stick. They may come in and add shake weight's not making it sway back. Exactly. But the good things stick, like they may come in
and add a favor, but they make it to stick.
Absolutely.
The bad stuff does circle, like for example,
like stim equipment.
Oh yeah.
I'll never go away.
I remember in the 90s, seeing articles,
it was in the 70s they were selling that.
Then in the 90s, and I saw it again,
do crunches at home while you're not doing anything.
And just the guys abs are flexing whatever.
But one piece of equipment is very interesting
that the history around it,
or in terms of, at least when I started,
I'm talking about resistance bands.
And they really didn't become,
in my experience, a big piece of exercise equipment.
There was a piece piece of exercise equipment.
There was a piece of home exercise equipment
called the Solo Flex.
You guys remember that?
Yeah.
You guys remember the Solo Flex?
Yeah, yeah.
And it had these thick rubber bands
that would go around the,
what did you access or whatever,
would you call that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I remember watching these commercials on TV
and it was like,
Solo Flex and it was a dude like,
we're not on it.
By both flex, right?
Yeah, yeah.
No, both flex. Oh, I was different.
Oh, did both flex, I thought both flex was the maker.
I know, that's what I thought.
I don't know maybe, but they were separate pieces of equipment.
But before that, it was a solo flex
and it was a resistance band equipment
and this was in the 90s, I remember seeing this
and that was the first time I'd ever seen
resistance band training.
And at that point, if you worked out and you were serious. Yeah resistance bands were a joke
That's what you thought like oh, that's dumb just lift weights resistance bands rubber bands like what are you gonna do with that?
That's so stupid doesn't doesn't do anything
Yeah, you only really saw them in like physical therapy clinics or you know
You saw people like old elderly people kind of like working with with bands and things and so that was the association for me at least
Yes, and then what happened for me this was my personal story. There it is. There's a soul flex that things been around for a long time
Look at that. Yeah, it's right next to the both side. Both sides. So they're different. They're different. So as a I remember this
quite
Clearly, right? So I'm managing gyms at the time I'm working
for 24-of-itness and they had grand open,
they had done a soft grand opening of a club here
in San Jose and didn't do so well or whatever.
At the time I was running another club in San Jose
and I had to re-grand open that one,
this is the one on Hillsdale.
And they said, hey, Sal, why don't you come over here,
let's do a re-grand opening,
let's see what we can do, you know, they liked the way I performed or whatever.
So I went there and they did a re-grand opening,
but the free weight or the machine area,
both of them were not fully ready yet.
All we had was cardio and we had some free weights,
but not a lot and then the machine area was an open,
but they still wanted to do this kind of re-grand opening.
And so I get in there and I'm like,
oh man, okay, well, what are we gonna do?
How are we gonna get people in here working out?
And one of my trainers was like,
do you resistance bands?
Like me and my team will train all of our clients
with resistance bands.
And I remember at this point thinking like,
oh, that's kind of a, okay, that's kind of a solution,
but it's not really a good substitute or whatever,
but let's see what happens, let's do it.
And I'll never forget how surprised I was. solution, but it's not really a good substitute or whatever, but let's see what happens, let's do it.
And I'll never forget how surprised I was.
Trainers were doing all kinds of different exercises with the resistance bands.
I was keeping a close eye on how this was working for clients.
The clients were getting great results, and many of them, I would go and talk to them
afterwards, hey, how do you like your workouts?
Don't worry, our machine area will be open or whatever and they say things like
Actually like this workout better my body feels better
I'm it's different. I'm getting great results and all the trainers would tell me how
Phenomenal training their clients because we were forced right with just resistance bands after that
I saw a lot of my trainers using resistance bands in their normal workouts in combination with other pieces of equipment.
And it was right around that point, I started reading literature with strength athletes,
power lifters and Olympic lifters.
Yeah, the Westside Barbell community.
Yes.
What happened in 1990 or whatever, the Soviet Union kind of collapsed.
And a lot of there, I mean, they had dominated strength
sports in the Olympics for a long time. Those Eastern block countries were just so good
at Olympic lifting, and they had kept a lot of their training methodologies secret. It was
very competitive, right? Yeah, the Soviet Union, you had America, and they were constantly
vying for who was superior, whatever they were competing against each other with. And
a lot of these training modalities and ways that they got their athletes to be amazing,
we thought it was all about the drugs, was secret.
Well, when the iron curtain came down, some of their coaches came to the US, started
teaching our athletes.
And one of the things that they started to teach the athletes was how to use resistance
bands, powerlifting with the West Side Barbell Club started using bands. This is when I started to really take bands seriously and I saw the greatest
strength gains I've ever seen from implementing them on my training.
Yeah, I have a little bit of a story. So when I was in college, I mean, I've been introduced
to various strength programs through coaches. So, you know, through the sort of mandated
exercise workouts that they put up on the board. And, you know, through the sort of mandated exercise,
you know, workouts that they put up on the board.
And so it evolved like the further I got in each program
from high school to then, you know, one college
than transferring to another college was very different.
And so this was actually a very, you know,
well put together program that we all sort of individualized
based off of our own positions,
which was new to me. But one thing that was interesting was, as I was working out,
down the hall from our weight room was basically the athletic training room. So this is where
everybody rehabbed and did their thing. And so I used to go in there and just talk with the guys
that were rehabbing and we grabbed the bands just out of boredom, talking to them. And so I used to go in there and just talk with the guys that were rehabbing and we grabbed the bands just out of boredom
You know talking to them and so I kind of made a routine out of it with my arms training
Especially my shoulders were giving me issues
So I didn't want to like put too much impact on my shoulders for a while
And so I was just doing band training alone and it was it was very interesting to me how quickly
My my shoulders regained strength and I actually built a substantial amount
of muscle development in my arms, doing bicep curls,
doing triceps, I was like, wow,
there's something to these bands as well, it's interesting.
Oh, totally.
I wish I remember what certification it was
that I was going through when it really came together for me.
When I realized that it was different than free weights,
the way it was matching the strength,
your natural strength.
And that's when the light bulb really went off for me, right?
So we, and I don't think we will ever go back on,
free weights are king, right?
I think free weights are ultimately one of the best tools
that you can do to build and sculpt a physique,
whether it be for building muscle or burning body fat
or rehab, whatever, I think that free weights are our king.
But one of the things that's unique and great about bands that is different than weights
that you can't do with weights is match your natural strength curve.
So in other words, all like dumbbell, barbell exercises, when you get to the end of the
movement, right, it gets much easier with the weight.
It's always that when you are in the stretch position
when the resistance of the barbell or a dumbbell
are most challenging and difficult.
Right, so like the bottom of a squat
harder than the top of a squat,
even though it's the same weight.
Right, exactly.
But with bands, it's the complete opposite.
And then understanding the importance of novelty, right?
So if I can train myself in a novel way
that's different, unique, that stimulates the muscle
in a different way, that's always beneficial.
And that was when it really came together
because originally I too, like lumped them in the rehab
or like the older community, like that's the only people
I'd use it with, I didn't really start using it
with my advanced lifters until I understood this aspect of it,
and you went, oh shit.
If you all you train with is barbells and dumbbells
all the time, and you've never done band training,
how beneficial that is for even the advanced lifter.
Well, into, I mean, the options were slim.
Like, when those first are not like,
they had those tube versions of the rubber bands
that would snap on you and like,
would leave you
with just marks all of your body like that happened to me a few times or they just didn't
have enough resistance right?
Like if you wasn't enough.
Yeah, I mean you can't I mean you do a 15 or 20 pound you know tube a resistant band
it's like okay for squats most people can squat that kind of resistance.
Well they got some now that are hundreds of pounds.
Yeah.
Like by themselves you could be a strong ass dude
and by themselves.
They've improved substantially over the years.
Yeah, like the ones that we had that we carry,
the rubber bandets, the quality on those,
they didn't have those back then.
Back then we were using tubes
and we would have to like compensate by adding 15 tubes
to give you the resistance that you need.
Now you have companies like rubber bandets.
Now they just layer it like, like really thick.
So it provides a lot of structure.
It doesn't snap.
Like a little bit might fray at the very worst,
but it doesn't snap.
But yeah, for me, you know, when I started using bands,
because there's a few things that bands
are actually superior to free weights over.
One of them is the angle of resistance,
I can change independent of gravity, right?
With free weights, you have to position and move your body
and get kind of, you have to get a little creative
because gravity only points in one direction.
With bands, let's say I'm doing a deadlift.
Let's say I'm doing a deadlift and, you know,
I'm lifting the weight off the floor with free weights.
I'm fighting gravity, gravity's pointing straight down,
but let's say I wanna work on my lockout.
I wanna work on the fact that I can push my hips forward
and pull back a little bit.
There's no way to really do that with free weights.
I mean, I could do lockouts with heavier weight
and that kind of stuff.
But I wanna create resistance that's pulling me forward.
So I have to pull back a little bit
to strengthen that lockout.
I can do that with bands.
I can attach bands to my barbell and put them in an angle
so that when I stand up up not only do I stand up
With the weight but I have to emphasize on the pulling back part of the deadlift with which can totally strengthen my lockout
I was stuck at a
525 pound deadlift for the longest time it wasn't until I started using bands that I got my deadlift to crack
600 pounds same thing with my squat same thing with my bench press.
And it was bands that really took trigger sessions
that you find in maps and a ball look to the next level.
And I had done trigger sessions with body weight
and free weights and you can do trigger sessions
with almost any resistance.
But bands were just superior.
They provided the right kind of intensity resistance.
They gave me a better pump, they caused less damage.
And of course, they're super versatile.
That's the other thing about bands that are amazing is that with a few pieces of equipment
that literally take up the space of a lunch box, you can work out and train your whole
body.
There's no other really piece of equipment.
Maybe suspension trainers can kind of do this, but there's really nothing else that can
do that and match the versatility of resistance bands because I can attach them, I'm one of the really piece of equipment. Maybe suspension trainers can kind of do this, but there's really nothing else that can do that
and match the versatility of resistance bands
because I can attach them,
I can do exercises where resistance is pointing down,
towards me, away from me.
Oh, and here's one more thing, explosive movements.
Bands are so good.
They're superior for explosive movements.
It really works with that, with the explosive movement. Erdemax, you guys heard of that. So yeah, athletes have found ways to use that type of variable
resistance that the bands provide, but explosively. And so it does, it allows, it allows you that
enough travel to get into the position, but then really emphasizes the part where you're,
you know, most powerful and most explosive.
So there's a lot of very valuable techniques
athletic-wise that you can use with the bands as well
in that direction.
Well, they're definitely blowing up right now, right?
I mean, we are at a time when,
I mean, it's still tough to get free weights right now.
I mean, they sold out everywhere, and they're expensive.
You know, it was just looking at it. Everybody has to get creative right now. Yeah, we they sold out everywhere. And they're expensive. You know, it was just looking at
everybody has to get creative right now. Yeah, we're getting ready to order a set, another whole setup,
PRX setup, like we have in the Tahoe House, we want to set up here in the studio because we had
the original one set up we have. And I forget how expensive like dumbbells and plates are, like
that's the most expensive part. Serious commitment of setting up at at home gym
is actually just the weight and getting it shipped to your house.
So with what's going on right now with COVID
and everybody being home and then everybody buying out
although the plates and dumbbells,
you've seen this rise and band exercises again,
which is kind of cool.
It's I mean, for the wrong reasons, right?
It's only because that it's convenient for people
the reality of it is it's getting this conversation
going, talking about all the benefits of it.
Right, bands can also be used to assist you in exercises.
This is one, this is one attribute of bands
that you don't find with other pieces of equipment.
For example, let's say you wanna practice pull ups.
Okay, pull ups are difficult for you
and you can't even do one,
but you want to get good at them.
Fantastic use.
Only with bands, can you do this where you take a band,
you put it over the bar and you loop it down
and you step into the band so that it lifts
some of your body weight.
Now you can practice actually doing pull ups
rather than doing a lap pull down or some other variation
of a pull up, you're actually doing pull ups
with help from the band.
And you can change out the bands based off of the amount of help it gives you.
I actually think I've used a band for that more than if I could pick like the single thing
that I've used a band more is for assisting pull-ups.
This is how I got my son.
It's fantastic.
Yeah, get better at pull-ups.
Pull-ups are hard.
I don't care.
Male, female doesn't matter.
I mean, pull-ups are challenging for most people, especially to do multiple reps.
And so a lot of people just avoid them
because it's like, I don't wanna do an exercise
that can only do one or two.
So they completely avoid it.
But just by adding a little bit of assistance with the bands,
I mean, they now can get five or 10
and so they feel like they get an actual workout.
It's a little more tricky with dips,
but it's also if you have the setup of the bar for this,
very helpful as well.
Yeah, I had, when I used to have my personal training studio, we had a cable machine similar to a
free motion, or the free motion as two arms, except this one. I can't remember the name of it. It was
DaVinci, I think, was a company, and I had pulleys all the way up and down on the sides and it came out,
and you could go in the middle and do exercise with both sides, and it was very,
on the sides and it came out and you could go in the middle and do exercise with both sides and it was very,
lots and lots of variety.
At the time, I was training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu,
looking to compete and also at that time,
I had a couple clients that also were competing
in those kinds of tournaments.
And so I wanted to incorporate explosive movements
into our lifts because, I mean,
if you get really good at a movement,
you've got good control. At that that point if you want to get faster
At the you know that particular type of movement then you can train explosively
So we were obviously advanced and so I wanted to make it explosive here's the problem with explosive
Movements with cables the weight stack flops all over the place. You can't it. It's good
The cable's gonna you're gonna get slack in the cable. It's gonna come crashing down cable comes off the pulley
Yeah, not good clunky it's good, the cable's gonna, you're gonna get slack and the cable, it's gonna come crashing down, cable comes off the pulley. Not good.
So what I used to do is I would take the weight stack,
attach bands to the weight stack and anchor them down.
Now I could swing and twist and move quickly
and the weight stack wouldn't flop all over the place
and then the type of resistance that bands provides
where with an explosive movement, think about it this way,
right Adam talked about this earlier.
With the band, the further you stretch it out,
the more difficult it gets,
or the more resistance it provides, right?
When you're doing an explosive movement,
you're most explosive or most fast as you're generating speed.
So what I mean by that is imagine you're jumping,
you're fastest after you start the jump,
not when you start the jump, right? After you start the jump, not when you start the jump, right?
After you start the jump, you're generating speed,
and then you're at your fastest,
and then you finally jump.
Well, with the resistance band,
the resistance is lowest at the bottom,
highest at the top, matches perfectly
with what you're trying to train
when you're doing explosive movement.
So bands are just, they provide some unique value
that other forms of exercise equipment don't.
I mean, if you had told me this
when I first started the training, I would have laughed.
Now I place bands near the top of exercise equipment
and I 100%, not only can you do a full workout
with resistance bands, you could do a full and super effective.
I mean, our maps anywhere program utilizes bands
and that program by itself is one of our more effective workout programs.
Just in general strength, muscle gain, fat loss, and metabolism boosting.
So, if you don't, so what I want to do is I want it to, you know,
let's go through what we think are like our top 10 band exercises and put together
kind of a generic routine for somebody who maybe doesn't have our maps anywhere program
or doesn't have one of our programs,
but has a set of bands or has access to get a set of bands
for very reasonably priced, right?
So you can get a set of bands for under $100
and let's build a routine based off of exercises
that we find are most valuable
and then also targets the entire.
Right, and if you get bands, make sure they're good quality and they have attachments
that allow you to put them in doorways and stuff like that so you can change angles
when you're using the bands. I guess let's start with the lower body.
We'll start with the legs for exercises. I really, really like bands on bodyweight hip thrust.
Two ways I like to use them,
either as a way to strengthen abduction.
So abduction means your knees come apart.
I love it for that.
Yeah, so what you do is you put the bands around your legs
so that you have to push your knees apart
to maintain good positioning
and then do your hip thrust there.
And what it does is it activates the muscles
on the sides of your butt, the side glutes, or the side butt, while you're activating the glutes. And this makes
the hip thrust in my experience correctional and more effective, especially when you're
working the glutes and the hamps.
You have to talk about why that's so important though, right? So I think if we, because
we always talk about squat as king and it's such a great exercise, one of
the most common issues that you see when somebody squats is the knees tend to cave in.
And a lot of that is because that glute me, that side butt that Sal's referring to, is
just turned off for most people.
Most people do not incorporate or engage it.
And so it's underdeveloped.
Yeah, it's very underdeveloped and then then they go to do a squat. And so
that the knee collapses in. So I love this exercise. It's already a great exercise for the glutes
anyways. But then you it's your force to engage that glute meat and train that which is going to
have a tremendous carryover when you go over to do body weight or barbell squats or band squats.
And so I love this exercise, whether no matter what your goals are, I think
everybody should incorporate.
Well, it's easier to implement. I think the other version is a little bit more tricky,
where I've seen people use it across their lap, like basically replacing a barbell hip thrust.
But I mean, that's going to take a good setup for that, where you kind of anchor it down
with dumbbells, or you have like there's actually machines they've built to do this,
but I mean, to be able to push
and get that kind of resistance
is definitely beneficial as well.
Yeah, no, and if you're gonna do this type of hip thrust,
the idea is to squeeze and connect when you're doing this.
So this isn't a heavy, you know, exercise.
What you're trying to do is you're trying to
push your knees apart just to activate
the sides of the glutes. Then you come up and you squeeze the glutes as hard as you can,
focus on the squeeze, then come down with control and then repeat. And the reason why I'm doing that
first is because we're priming and turning on the glutes and the side glutes before we get to the
next exercise with the bands, which would be band squats.
Now band squats, you get some pretty strong bands
and you go slow and controlled.
You can make these feel very, very difficult.
Literally you put the band around your feet
and over your shoulders and just have some control
and squat down slow, come up slow,
squeeze the whole time.
What's what happens?
I also like doing it in this order, right?
So you start off by priming that glute meat.
And so you're already getting some glute activation
before you go into the squat, which is again,
another common problem, right?
There's the caving of the knees is one thing,
and then also people just feeling it in their glutes
when they do squats.
So many people feel it in their quads.
By us doing first the hip thrust
before we go into this banded squat exercise,
I've primed the glutes really well.
So that now when I go into this squat exercise,
I really feel it in my butt.
I like the order that you've laid this out too.
Yeah, we know what I like about banded squats too,
is it's a safer way to challenge your squat depth.
So part of it's because the resistance is light
at the bottom and the harder at the top.
And so what you do is when you do these,
if you have issues with squat depth
or issues with control or mobility,
this is a great exercise to work on that.
So what I like to do with this is when I have the bands,
and I'll usually hold them up with my hands
near my shoulders, or some people can even hook them
over the shoulders.
By the way, don't lift your feet up when you do this
because you'll get the band right to the crotch.
So make sure you take the bands down before you step off.
But once you're in position, go down slow,
stay tight the whole time.
In other words, don't relax at the bottom.
Stay tight, keep the chest up high.
And when you get to the bottom, start testing the depth.
Go a little bit lower than you normally do,
but try to stay connected.
You're less likely to hurt yourself
with this type of a squat challenging your depth
than you would with say a barbell or dumbbell.
I like to also add a little bit of power
and an exposivity with that move,
just in terms of being able to get the depth,
but now like the resistance isn't quite as demanding
at the bottom with the rubber bands,
so now I can really drive up with acceleration in speed,
and so that's kind of a safer way to work too
on activating that fast twitch muscle fiber.
And I'll add to that, I would love to do
like a isometric hold at the bottom,
and then go to an experience.
So you want to really really wanna progress this exercise
without a lot of resistance.
You can get a great workout by simply taking the,
it doesn't even have to be a very hard band.
People think, oh, I could squat 200 pounds,
this little wimpy band, take that band,
just around like sourcing it,
or they're holding it or over your shoulders,
go down into your deep squat, hold
that for a nice, symmetric hold for like five seconds, and then do what Justin's saying,
come out of it explosively, and I don't care how light of a band you have, you'll get a
phenomenal workout.
It's way better than jump squats.
Yeah, no, the idea is to make it feel harder.
That's the idea when you're doing this exercise.
The next one is a band stiff leg, a deadlift.
Now there are some band exercises, and there's a few of them in here that we're going to go through
that actually sometimes prefer to the free weight or machine version of these.
This is one of them. I love band stiff-legged deadlifts.
I like using a very heavy band for this.
The reason being, at the very top, when you do a stiff like a deadlift with free weights,
it's easy, the top of a stiff like a deadlift is easy.
The bottom is hard, with bands, it's the reverse.
When you come up, it's hard to resist,
so really squeeze your glutes
and really activate your hamstrings.
And you can go pretty hard on these.
And I love, again, this is an exercise I still do.
If I'm gonna do a stiff like a deadlift,
there's a 50% chance I'm gonna do it with a heavy band.
Well, at night too, I think people,
I haven't really found a lot of value at a deadlifting
with the rubber band because, I mean,
you can adjust your resistance by grabbing the band
a bit lower, so you're not necessarily limited
by you having handles at the top of it,
and there's too much
length involved. So shorten the length, grab it a bit lower and drive up and it
creates a whole new demand. And again this is very similar what I would do with
this as a squat. I would get them in that stretch position to where their hips
are hinged back and they're bent over and I would hold an isometric hold. I do a hold in that position.
So you have a little bit of attention from the band.
You're in that stretch position.
I'm teaching my client at that point.
Can you feel it in your hamstrings?
Can you feel in your glutes?
Hold that for a few seconds.
Now think about those muscles.
Squeeze the butt and throw the hips forward.
That will take that exercise again without having a ton of resistance and make it a phenomenal
move. Now here's something else you could do with this
because it's a band, you can attach the other end
to change the angle of pull.
So we're talking about the band being around your feet.
You can put the band in front of you.
So if you have an attachment like the rubber band,
it's for example, has this door attachment.
I can put it in the door, put it low,
or put it at the bottom.
And now when I'm doing the stiff leg a deadlift, the resistance is pulling away for
me. So now, when I come up at the top, I have to maintain that squeeze at the very top.
Here's another thing you can do if you want to get real creative. Let's say you have two
bands. If you have two bands, you can put one band around your waist, attach it behind
you, one band around your feet. Now you're at the bottom, it's hard and at the top, you have to push it.
Impicizing, yeah, that hip thrust.
This is what I mean by getting creative with bands.
You can change the angles of pole and make the exercise feel different just by doing that.
And if you're a lifter who's used to deadlifting 400 plus pounds, throw that on one leg and
do exactly what you just want.
One leg, yeah.
You want to challenge this shit out of that exercise
and you think that because you can deadlift
a ton of weight with a barbell,
try doing that with a single leg deadlift.
That's how I like to do it.
I like to go one leg it and attach it
kind of away from me.
That's how I do that particular variation.
Now the next exercise this would be
for the chest shoulders triceps.
Also, a lot of core is the banded pushups.
Now pushups are an excellent, almost full body exercise.
A lot of people don't realize this,
but pushups incorporate a lot of,
I mean, you're doing a plank.
It's not just a chest exercise.
No, you're doing a plank with this as well as,
you know, you're doing kind of a bench press with your body.
But if you put the bands around your shoulders
and then around your hands,
now you have additional resistance for your upper body. But if you put the bands around your shoulders and then around your hands, now you
have additional resistance for your upper body. It pulls your body down. So now you're
making your pushups a low rep exercise if you want. The squeeze at the top is excellent
again because the band the further it stretches out, the harder it gets. This version of pushups
is my favorite version of pushups. By the way, if push-ups are already hard for you
to do off of your feet, try this
because there's some value in just using the bands.
It's not just making it more difficult.
Again, it has to do,
some of it has to do with the strength curve.
Try this, do them off your knees and then use the bands.
So if you're like, you know what,
off my feet is hard enough, I'll just stick to that.
Go on your knees, put the bands around your shoulders
around your hands.
It's a different exercise when you use bands. It's a totally, totally
different. Yeah, no, I really enjoy it. It provides a whole new type of resistance that
you got to fight on the way up. And also like really emphasizes like that, that locked
out sort of locking a plank position. So like it really like highlights more intensity
around the core,
being able to stabilize and keep your hips
and everything intact.
You can also do these elevated.
So let's say you have a low bench or table,
you can put the band around,
you do push-ups off the table with a heavy band,
get the benefits of both the push-up
and the strength curve that the band provides
for an awesome exercise.
Again, you can get real creative with a lot of these exercises
by changing the angles.
Next exercise, this is one of the ones I prefer to use bands
with usually over cables.
This is the one I used to do with clients all the time.
This is a straight arm pull down with bands.
I love bands on this because the bands, they're harder at the
squeeze part of the rep, which is the most important part of a straight arm pull
down. When you're doing a straight arm pull down, you're squeezing the
lats and you're also simultaneously trying to bring the shoulders back. We
don't want to keep the shoulders full to win. Squeeze the lats and bring the
shoulders back because bands are more challenging as you stretch them out. It's
that bottom position, that squeeze part where the bands
are going to be the most difficult.
And that's exactly the part of that lift that you want
to focus on the mouth.
Start light with this one.
This one is very deceiving on how challenging it can be,
because to hold your body in the proper posture,
to really work this properly, and with the bands adding resistance as you come
in can get challenging. If you, you may feel like, oh, I can do a lot more because as you
start to pull down, you feel like it's hardly any resistance whatsoever. But because the
lockout portion this exercise is so important and how you do it is so important. I would
prefer somebody do a isometric hold at the bottom with a lighter
band than to go heavier just because they think they can.
The natural tendency for your body is going to be to make it easier. So you're going to have
to fight compensations that just inevitably your body is going to want to kind of hurl forward
and you're going to want to adjust to make it a bit easier. You're going to bend your elbows
slightly. Things are just gonna happen.
So that most of this exercise is to fight all those urges.
And so going lighter does, you know,
it make a lot more sense.
No, if you do this right,
this is a great posture exercise.
If you do this wrong, it's a terrible posture exercise.
It's one of those things.
So at the bottom of the wrap,
when you pull the bands down to your waist,
what you don't wanna do is you don't want the shoulders
to be forward, you want the shoulders pulled back,
the chest out, brace your core, and then squeeze
at the bottom.
Now it's gonna encourage good posture
rather than encouraging bad posture.
The next exercise, speaking of posture,
one of my favorite posture exercise,
and this is a staple.
I still do this like almost every day.
I do this exercise in, I'd say half of my shoulder workouts,
I do band pull apart.
This is the second most utilized exercise.
So the first one for me would be to assist clients
with the pull ups, I would say I've used that more
as a trainer than any other movement.
Number two would be the band pull apart.
I used to recommend this just for a little shoulder health.
Well, yeah, not even just in a routine. In fact, it was, if I had, because almost every client,
it's a rare. I'm in fact, I can count on one hand. How many times I didn't have somebody.
I didn't need to address, you know, forward, shoulder and forward head, right? It's so common,
so common in all of us. So something that I started to practice towards the back half
of my career as a trainer is,
I would get just the easiest band that most band kits have.
And I would give it to a client and say,
listen, I want every hour while you're sitting at your desk
on the computer to just get up and do three sets
of 15 band pull-aparts.
Then go ahead and go back to your work and do it
to help counter what they are doing all day long, because all day long, most of us are sitting or we're on
computers and we have this forward posture.
This is a great way to counter that.
Yeah, how do we address inevitable pains and things that are going to occur in your
shoulders is to be able to make sure that everything is tracking properly.
This is one of those things that back you know, back to cells analogy of like a sliding glass door.
And like, your patterns every day
are kind of taking you out of the track just very slightly.
So it's crucial to kind of implement these types of movements
and really think about incorporating that
in your everyday activity so that way,
you can now kind of pull things back
so it don't,
it doesn't slip away from you to the point where it becomes a problem you're gonna have an injury
as a result. Yeah, side effect of band pull apart is great looking shoulders. It does work the
rear delts. This is an area that people tend to neglect actually quite well. It helps you connect
to them in that back tall squeeze position. So I remember when I started doing these regularly,
and I started doing them regularly for shoulder health.
This was something I did just to improve my shoulder mobility.
I noticed that my shoulders just look rounder
from doing this exercise.
That takes us to the next one, band upright rows.
I really like band upright rows
because the resistance is easy at the bottom.
This is where people tend to script the most,
is at the bottom, and it does encourage proper form.
So with an upright rose,
can be a difficult exercise for some people.
With an upright row, you're pulling with your elbows
and not with your hands,
and I know that sounds weird because you're holding on
to the band or the barbell or whatever, with your hands.
But in order to do it properly,
you have to pull with your elbows.
And because of the way bands work,
it tends to encourage that.
So whenever I'm teaching an upright row to a client,
I go to bands before I go to.
No, this is what a great point.
So upright rows is like one of those exercises
that depending on the trainer you're talking to,
would argue if it's a good exercise or about this controversy.
And I can play either side, right?
So if I'm a trainer who is against upright rows,
part of the reason why they are
is because it promotes the forward shoulder.
It promotes being rounded forward,
and then if people have weights that are pulling them
in front of them, they do upright rows,
they just exaggerate a problem that they already have.
But to Salis Point, this is why bands are so awesome
because when you pull up and back with the bands,
it forces you to work against that, right?
If you're just pulling with gravity, with a barbell or dumbbells, it's a lot easier for
you to kind of cheat the rep, keep everything in front of you.
When you're pulling up and back and leading with the elbows with a band, you're actually
promoting better posture that way.
So it is a much better upright row in my opinion.
It is.
Focus on the squeeze at the top, come up nice and high, keep the elbows high, little
higher than the hands. And here's one where you can have fun with the top, come up nice and high, keep the elbows high, little higher than the hands.
And here's one where you can have fun with the attachment, right?
So one of them, the band is around your feet.
Another one, the band is slightly in front of you.
Would you?
That's the way I like to do it.
And it encourages exactly what we're talking about, what that nice tall posture, because
you can't, if it's attached in front of you, it's going to naturally make you want to pull
back.
So it's the row part of the upright row is getting emphasized, which makes it a correctional
exercise, not just a shoulder developing exercise.
The next one I love also, it's a band hammer curl.
This is one again, another one I like to do with bands, sometimes more than dumbbells
because when you're gripping with them, especially if you're not using the handle,
if you're grabbing just the band,
it forces you to squeeze the band.
And you clinch the band.
Yes, that's my favorite.
Yes, it forces you to squeeze the band
and hold it with a nice grip.
And what's great about a hammer curl is yes,
it does work the bicep,
and yes, it works the breakie allis,
which is a muscle underneath the bicep,
but it's also strengthening the risks in forms.
It's actually a phenomenal.
It's like a grip exercise.
It is a phenomenal risk
and grip strengthening exercise.
And there's an epidemic of weak risks
and weak grips and people who work out in gyms
and we try to compensate.
A lot of clapping risks out there.
We try to compensate by using clubs and wrist wraps and all
the stuff, but when I do these band hammer curls with my clients,
they notice less wrist pain, and then they're more stable
when they're doing their other exercises.
And part of it is you're gripping the band itself.
So when you're doing the curl, it's not like the dumbbells
resting on top of your hand.
You have to keep a tight grip in order to do a hammer curl
properly, which makes a hammer curl properly,
which makes the hammer curl more effective.
And this is why, I know there's gonna be somebody,
especially if it's a trainer,
why didn't you just do regular
supinated bicep curls here that's better for your biceps?
And that's the case.
That's the argument is that most people
will benefit from this more than that.
Most people know how to do a bicep curl,
most people do bicep curls,
but not a lot of people address risk and hand strength, which is something that we see a problem with most people.
It's the reason why that took the place of the traditional supinated bicep curl with the
band.
Yeah, but don't feel bad.
You can definitely do a supinated curl with a band.
In fact, if you do a supinated curl where the band is coming out of the pinky side of
your hand and then you curl and supinate. You actually provide resistance to the supinating part of the curl, which is very unique.
There's really nothing else that does that where because your bicep doesn't just curl
your arm, it also twists your hand.
If it's coming out your pinky, that's where the band's going.
And I twist.
I'm also not only doing resistance on the way up, I'm also resisting the supinating part.
So I'm glad you said that Adam.
Supinating curls are also a bit special with bands,
a little bit unique.
Next exercise, this one's great, overhead trisip extension.
Overhead trisip extension, here's the thing with it.
Love that exercise, whether you do it with dumbbells,
barbells, cables or bands, but bands again,
because they provide the most resistance
as they're most stretched out,
it gives you a unique squeeze at the top.
Normally you don't get that squeeze with the tricep extension
on this, you have to emphasize it yourself.
Yeah.
But with the band, it's so hard at the very top
that you're forced to emphasize that squeeze part.
I've also found that it helps promote better range of motion
in my clients.
So I used to love it.
They're more likely to go all the way down.
Yeah, like how often did you get,
and then this is common, especially with meathead guys, right?
When they do overhead tricep extension, and they, you know, they get this heavy dumbbell
and it's like this little tiny, little pumping short and range emotion where they don't even
break 90 degrees where, you know, that's part of the benefits of the overhead tricep
extension is the stretched position that you put the tricep in.
That's what makes it unique and so great.
And a position that not a lot of people train, I like the band for that reason because
it helps promote that extra stretch for clients too.
Now do you guys do this with both feet or do you do like a split stance in terms of
like how you're going to set them up with stepping on top of the band?
So both work great. Here's the only thing I'll say about split stance.
Do not take your foot off the band
until you bring the band to.
Yeah, well not on both cases.
So you're gonna notice too
that the band might slip back
and if your heel raises at all,
that's like a propensity that you have.
It's gonna come up and it's gonna be disastrous.
So you just really have to make sure
that your posture in a upright standing position
is accounted for.
And also you're gonna put yourself
in a vulnerable position in your lower back.
So I actually like this.
So, you know, with at least with our bands, right?
So rubber band, it comes with this anchor point
that you can anchor anywhere in a door.
So you can put it at the bottom, the side, the top.
Much better option.
I actually like this is for you at home people.
I like to anchor it at the bottom
and then situate like your dinner table chair. Yes. So pull a chair, sit down, anchor at the
bottom and get in a chair so you're supported and then grab it behind you and then portions of the rep or your form.
Like we've talked about on the show how an incline barbell press naturally gets clients
to want to pin their shoulders back and down, which is harder to do on a flat bench.
When you do a flat bench, you have to like really emphasize on incline, it's just because
of the incline and naturally puts you in that position.
The overhead tricep extension, you're 100% right, Adam, I almost
never had to tell a client to go lower. For whatever reason, I think it's because the
resistance band is pulling easier at the way. People feel more comfortable going all the way
down and they get a full-orange emotion. And here's the thing with an overhead tricep extension.
Because of the way the tricep attaches at the scapula, one of the heads. The long head of the tricep, the big meaty part of the tricep,
is most activated with overhead exercises.
And it's most activated when it's stretched
in overhead exercises.
So this type of an overhead tricep extension with a band,
it really does the best part of the overhead tricep extension,
which is emphasizing the stretch of the long head.
But then again, because it's a band, you're going to squeeze naturally at the top.
It's people are less likely to do short reps with bands.
It's pretty interesting.
Now, this last exercise is not just a great band exercise.
It's one of my top five favorite core exercises.
One of my staples.
And it's one of my top ways of doing a core exercise.
I prefer doing wood shops with bands over cables any day of the week.
And it's because they're smooth, they're harder at the full twist,
and they allow me to do them a little bit more explosively,
which is I feel is so much more functional.
Yeah, way less clunky than even a cable,
which is something else I use a lot for these rotational type core exercises.
But yeah, it's fantastic for that because you're just holding it in place too.
Isometrically, like you're going to notice like it's pulling you so you have to stabilize
your body.
It just forces that anti-rotation, which a lot of people don't even consider as a factor.
But that's something that you need to start with a solid base that you can anchor down.
Can you anchor down your body properly?
This is going to really expose that and then go through a range of motion in the twist.
Well, I would make the case that this may be the most important exercise of all the ones
we cover.
Oh, yeah, I would agree.
There's a lot of different things that you can do.
We went through most of all the muscle groups that you to train the entire body here with bands, but when I think about the things that most my clients neglected and the things that
they needed the most, the great rotational and anti-rotational strength, is probably the most
neglected movement pattern in most routines. Even with good advanced trainers writing good
programs, we just fail to focus on this. And so it's an area that even if I wasn't
following a full band routine,
you would find me adding this in there.
So this is probably the third most used exercise
that I've used as a personal trainer
on a regular basis.
So even if I'm using barbells, dumbbells,
you would find me go over, grab a band for this one
and I've used this probably third most of all the movement.
Here's how I like to do it.
I like to do the twisting, the chopped part,
a little explosive.
I stop when I get to the part where I'm at the end,
and then I control the way back,
and then I do it again.
Nice low control.
Here's the other thing you want to do.
Brace your core, pull it in a little bit,
and squeeze your abs while you're doing this.
You're working the entire core in a very, very functional way.
This exercise really developed my obliques.
It gave me such nice tight, strong obliques through doing this exercise.
Athletes, this is a must.
And here's the thing, again, with the band, you can do these with a downward angle.
You can do them with an upward angle, or you can do them the traditional just completely
to the side.
Yeah, and I mean, you can also lock your hips in place, so you're just working on that
rotational aspect to it just completely in the trunk, or you can add rotation in the hips
with the movement, which also applies a little bit more specifically to movements out on
the field.
So, look, if you want to get good quality resistance bands, you can check ours out.
So long as they're in stock.
They tend to sell out very quickly,
but we sell the rubber band, it's brand of bands.
They're very high quality.
They don't snap.
They come with lots of varying degrees of resistance
and attachment so you can do all the exercises
that we talked about.
You can check them all out at maps, bands.com. That's M-A-P-S-B-A-N-D is in dog S.com.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
You can find Doug at Mind Pump Doug,
just in a Mind Pump just in me at Mind Pump Sal
and Adam, the handsome guy at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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