Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - 12 Great Weightlifting Cues for Better Form & Performance
Episode Date: July 16, 2021I got a lot of great feedback on my previous podcast about weightlifting cues. In that episode, I covered my favorite cues for the squat, deadlift, and bench press. So, I thought I would do another ep...isode covering the best cues for the front squat, overhead press, pull-up, chin-up, and the barbell row, which are some of my favorite exercises besides the “big three.” So, if you want to learn what weightlifting cues are, as well as my favorite cues for better form and performing better in the gym, listen to this episode! Timestamps: 2:19 - What is a cue? 8:17 - Front squat cues 11:24 - Overhead press cues 15:34 - Pull up and chin up cues 18:55 - barbell row and dumbbell row cues Mentioned on the Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
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Hello, hello, and welcome to Muscle for Life. I am your host, Mike Matthews. Thank you for
joining me today to learn about weightlifting cues. Now, I know I recorded an episode on
weightlifting cues several months ago, and it did well. I got a lot of good feedback
on it. And so I thought I would do another one because in that original episode, I only talked about three
exercises. I talked about the squat, the deadlift, and the bench press. And in this episode, I'm
going to share effective cues for the front squat, for the overhead press, for the pull-up and chin-up,
and for the barbell row. Several of my other favorite exercises. Also, if you like what I'm
doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my health and fitness books, including
the number one bestselling weightlifting books for men and women in the world, Bigger Leaner
Stronger and Thinner Leaner Stronger, as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The
Shredded Chef. Now, these books have sold well over 1 million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever.
And you can find them on all major online retailers like Audible, Amazon, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play, as well as in select Barnes & Noble stores.
And I should also mention that you can get any of the audiobooks
100% free when you sign up for an Audible account. And this is a great way to make those pockets of
downtime like commuting, meal prepping, and cleaning more interesting, entertaining,
and productive. And so if you want to take Audible up on this offer, and if you want to get one of my audio books for free, just go to www.buylegion.com and sign up for your account. and strategies that work for anyone and everyone, regardless of age or circumstances,
please do consider picking up one of my best-selling books, Bigger Leaner Stronger for
Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women, and The Shredded Chef for my favorite fitness-friendly
recipes. All right, let's start with a quick definition of terms. What is a cue? Well, it's really just
the dictionary definition. It's something that prompts you to do something. And in terms of
weightlifting or really any athletic activity, a cue is a simple idea that helps you do the
movement pattern correctly. For example, I shared this cue in the first episode that I
recorded for the deadlift, and that is to imagine you are squeezing oranges or tennis balls in your
armpits, and that's going to help you engage your lats, and it's going to help you get your
shoulders and your torso in the right position for the pull. Now, cues that you use for weightlifting
or any physical activity really can be categorized in two ways. They can be internal or external cues. Internal cues direct
your attention toward what you're doing with your body. So maybe something like push through your
heels when you're squatting, you've probably heard that one, or brace your core when you are
overhead pressing. External cues, on the other hand, they direct your attention toward how your movements are impacting something in your environment. So maybe like push the floor
away from you when you're deadlifting or squatting. That's a good one. Or break the bar in half when
you're bench pressing. And that may seem pedantic. It may seem like I am splitting hairs unnecessarily, but research shows that external cues are
far superior to internal ones when you want to learn new skills faster.
For example, studies show that external cues help you produce more force.
They help you perform more reps.
They help you learn proper technique faster.
They can improve balance.
They can increase your time to failure and
decrease your perceived effort. So how hard a set feels can go down with the right external cues,
and they can also increase agility. And all that is why studies have found that using an external
focus, so using external cues, is superior to internal focus or internal cues.
And that's been shown in a number of activities. It's been shown in weightlifting, of course,
but also football, basketball, soccer, golf, figure skating, dart throwing. Yes, there is
research on external cues and dart throwing. Now, if you want to make external cues as effective
as possible, you want to do a few things. One, you want to make these cues short. They need to
be simple, six words or less. They have to be easy to remember and they have to be easy to
repeat in your head as you are performing an exercise and especially as it starts to get hard, right? You want to start
cues with a verb. They need to be active statements, drive, crush, explode, something that
directly relates to what you want to happen, how you want to move. What you should avoid is starting
with a modifier like quickly push or a noun like the bar should be under your eyes. Again,
you want to start with an active verb that colorfully describes what you're trying to do.
And my third tip for better external cues is to only focus on one thing at a time, one cue at a
time. If you try to combine two or three or more cues, it's going to dilute your focus and
it's going to mess up your movement patterns. Now, internal cues are not entirely useless.
External cues are better, but internal cues can be helpful if you have already mastered
proper technique for an exercise or any other athletic movement. And research shows that at
that point, the right internal cues can help you fine-tune other aspects of your technique and help
you get even a little bit better at what you're doing. But make sure that you focus on those
external cues first. For most people, it's probably the first 6 to 12 months of learning a new
exercise or learning a new
movement pattern. If you are one of those people, you are going to get a lot more from external cues
than internal cues. But if you are a veteran weightlifter and you know that your form on
exercises is pretty damn good, and that means you have videoed yourself and you have scrutinized the
video and you know that you know what you're
doing. And especially when you get deeper into sets, because that's normally how it progresses.
When you're brand new, your form is a bit wonky from rep one to the final rep of every set,
right? But then as you get a bit better, the first half of each set is looking pretty good.
But then as it starts to get harder, your knees start to cave in a little
bit when you're squatting, your lower back starts to round a little bit when you're deadlifting,
your elbows start to flare a little bit when you're bench pressing. And then finally, as you
get even better at the exercises, you're able to maintain really good form throughout the entirety
of every set. And you want to focus on external cues until you reach that point.
But once you get there, you'll find that you don't need the external cues anymore. You naturally just
stop paying attention to them. And again, if you go on camera at least once every couple of weeks,
which I would recommend doing at least on the big exercises, and do it from a couple of angles,
and without thinking about those external cues,
if your form is just really grooved in, then you can get a little bit more performance usually out
of incorporating some internal cues. For example, when you are good at squatting, you can boost your
performance a little bit by simply thinking explode. That is the idea right when you're at the
bottom of the squat, when you're in the hole and you have to move through that sticking point as
you come up, the hardest stretch of the exercise. Okay, so that's it for the preamble on weight
lifting cues. Let's get to the cues themselves. And let's start with the front squat. First cue,
touch the ceiling with your elbows.
And this can help prevent your elbows dropping.
Because if your elbows start to point down at the floor throughout any point of the rep,
the bar is going to start sliding down your shoulders.
Your torso is going to start tipping forward.
And you are going to have to waste energy to get yourself back into the proper position.
And if you're deeper into a set and the weight is particularly heavy, you may not be able to. You may have to
end the set there. So again, the cue is touching the ceiling with your elbows or touching your
elbows to the ceiling if that communicates better to you or is clearer to you. And you'll find it
particularly helpful when you're standing up because that's
often when the elbows want to dip. Okay, let's move on to the second cue, which is grip the floor.
And this can help you prevent tipping forward or feeling like you may fall forward. It can also
help your stability and help your balance so you don't feel unsteady throughout the exercise,
so you don't feel unsteady throughout the exercise, throughout each set and during each rep of each set. And the idea here is to try to grip the floor with your big toe, your pinky toe
and your heel, like you are an eagle grabbing your prey. And what you will probably notice
if you do that is it helps you ensure that the bar moves straight up and down, which is what
you want. You don't want it moving toward or away from you at all, moves straight up and down, which is what you want. You don't want
it moving toward or away from you at all, just straight up and down. And it will also help keep
the bar over your center of gravity. And that of course is going to help you feel more stable. And
that's going to help you lift heavier weights and get more reps with your working weights and
progress that much faster. Okay. the third cue here is to look
at the ceiling. Now, why is that important? Because if you look down mid-rep, especially as you are
just beginning to stand up, your elbows are almost certainly going to drop down. And again,
as they point toward the floor, instead of staying straight out in front of you, the bar is going to
start to slip and your torso is going to start to tip and you're going to have to adjust.
And it's awkward and you may not be able to.
You may have to end the set there.
So generally speaking, wherever your eyes are looking, your body is going to follow.
And if you remember to look at the ceiling, it just reminds you to gaze upward.
You don't have to literally look at the ceiling, of course.
And that's going to help keep your elbows high.
And that's going to keep the bar in its proper position. And that means better
posture, better efficiency in your movement, more strength and more comfort. So again,
don't look directly up at the ceiling, but just tilt your head back a little bit. So you can see
some part of the ceiling when you're looking upward. If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely
check out my health and fitness books, including the number one best-selling weightlifting books
for men and women in the world, Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner Stronger, as well as
the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef. Okay, let's move on and talk about the next
exercise. I have three cues for the overhead press. And I should probably say an overhead
press because these cues will help for any type of overhead pressing, whether it's seated or
standing or barbell or dumbbell. So let's start here with this first cue, and that is to push your head through the window.
And this helps you avoid the mistake of pushing the bar or the dumbbells too far in front of your
body. And the reason that is a problem is it feels awkward because now the weight is no longer over
your center of gravity. And now you have to waste energy to bring the weight back over your center
of gravity, which you are going
to do instinctively. So to execute this cue properly, let's talk about the barbell first,
because it is most useful with barbell pressing, but it is useful with dumbbell pressing as well.
So what you want to do is as soon as the bar is over your forehead, you want to push your head
under it between your arms. That's the window that you're
pushing your head through. And by doing that, it will help keep the bar over your center of gravity.
So it's going to feel stable and you are going to feel strong in that position, but it will also
help you maintain tightness in your shoulders and your upper back. And that's important for
performing optimally on this exercise. It'll help align your body. So your
hands, shoulders, hips, and feet, if you're standing or all stacked on top of each other,
which again, maximizes performance, you will be able to lift the most weight that way.
And you will be able to get the most reps with your working weight that way. Now, if you're
pressing dumbbells, of course, you can keep your head in this proper position
throughout each rep because you don't have a bar that gets in the way. When you have a bar,
of course, you have to move your head a little bit back. You have to tilt it a little bit back
to allow it to clear, and then you can put your head into the optimal position. When you are
pressing dumbbells, you just want to remember to keep your head in the window. So you don't have to push it through the window like you do with the barbell,
but you have to keep your head in the window.
Okay, the next cue is to throw the bar or the dumbbells into the ceiling.
And this can help if you tend to fail reps somewhere between eye level and the top of
your forehead or if you struggle a lot toward the end of your sets during
that difficult portion of the rep. And the reason why that particular range of the exercise is
really hard, it's just a couple of inches, is that's just an inherently weakened position
because your elbows are not stacked over your shoulders, your wrists aren't stacked over your
elbows. So a good way to work through that sticking point
is to just create a lot of momentum as you start each rep.
So if you're pressing a bar off of your shoulders,
explode that bar upward, throw it into the ceiling.
Same thing goes with dumbbells.
Of course, the bar is not resting on your shoulders
or your upper chest,
but as you start each rep of dumbbell pressing,
you want to throw those dumbbells into the ceiling.
And that will encourage you to move quickly and forcefully
and build up that momentum that will help take the weight up to the top.
The next cue is to squeeze your glutes.
Simple, but if you relax your lower body when you're overhead pressing, you are going
to have a harder time of it. You're going to have to waste energy trying to maintain your posture
throughout each rep. And of course, that is most applicable to standing pressing, but this cue does
help with seated pressing as well. And when you're standing, if you squeeze your glutes, it just
helps bring your body into alignment. Like I mentioned earlier, you want your hips over your feet, your shoulders over your hips,
your hands over your shoulders, and that improves your stability and it improves your performance,
how much weight you can lift and how much you can do with your working weights.
And if you're wondering why this is an internal and not external cue, it's simply because it's
a good one. It does work well, but if you wanted to an internal and not external cue, it's simply because it's a good one.
It does work well, but if you wanted to turn it into an external cue, you could imagine you're
trying to pinch a credit card or some other small object of your choice between your butt cheeks.
Okay, let's move on to our next exercises. And they are the pull-up and the chin-up,
which are two of the best upper body exercises you can do
for gaining muscle and strength, and particularly for your pulling muscles, of course, your biceps
and your back. So the first cue is to smash your chest into the bar. And where this can be
particularly helpful is at the top. And that is where the hardest part of each rep is. That's the sticking point of the chin-up and the pull-up
is when you are getting toward the top of the rep and you're trying to get your chin over the bar.
And a good way to get around that difficulty is similar to what I shared with the overhead
pressing. Just imagine pulling yourself up with enough force to smash your chest in the bar,
explode upward, attack each rep. And that may sound dangerous, but you are not going to actually
smash your chest into the bar. You may not even touch your chest to the bar. Another cue that
helps here is to slam your elbows into the floor. You can try both of those and see which one works best
for you or just appeals most to you. Another cue here is to stay tight. Simple, but this is useful
because as you get deeper into a set and the exercise starts to get hard, you tend to swing
your legs and use momentum, and that just reduces the effectiveness of the exercise. What you can do instead then is
brace your core, arch your back, squeeze your glutes, stay tight, keep everything tight while
you're doing your pull-ups and your chin-ups and that will help prevent you from swinging. It's
going to help you not use momentum to make your reps easier. It's going to force your back and
your arms to continue doing most of the work and it's also going to reduce how much energy you waste keeping your body from swinging.
If you loosen a lot of the muscles in your body that are not being actively trained by the exercise, it's actually harder to prevent swinging.
And then what usually happens when you start to swing is you waste energy overcompensating to try to stop the swing. It costs less energy to just
stay tight, core tight, back tight, glutes tight, and that will translate to better performance.
And this, by the way, is a good example of the weightlifting maxim or really just athletics
maxim. If you've heard it, tighter is lighter. There's a lot of truth in that.
Okay. My next cue for chin-ups and pull-ups is to do a
reverse shrug. And this can be particularly helpful if you struggle to actually feel your back and
your lats in particular working when you're doing chin-ups and pull-ups, if you feel it mostly in
your biceps, for example. And so what you want to do here is at the bottom of each rep, you want to
lower yourself so that your shoulders are rising up to your ears
and you're in a dead hang position. Then before you actually start the rep, you want to do a
reverse shrug. You want to pull your shoulder blades together and you want to pull them down
and then finish your rep. And it's going to look like a smooth motion when you do it correctly.
It may not look any different from how most people do pull-ups and chin-ups, but it is a little point of technique
that can make a big difference in activating the lats. Okay, the last exercises I want to help you
with are the barbell row and the dumbbell row, two of my favorite horizontal pulling exercises.
The chin-up and the pull-up, vertical pulling, and the barbell and dumbbell favorite horizontal pulling exercises, the chin-up and the pull-up vertical pulling,
and the barbell and dumbbell horizontal pulling. And a little programming tip is you want to be
doing both in your workouts. You don't want to be doing just one, at least not for extended
periods of time. I do a couple of pulling sessions per, well, not pulling sessions. I do a couple,
let's say rounds of pulling per week because I'm following my Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger program, which is a combination of some push-pull
legs and some whole body. It doesn't exactly conform to one split or another, but in a couple
of the upper body focused workouts, I'm doing some pushing as well as some pulling. And in one case,
it's vertical pulling. In another case, it's horizontal pulling. All right, let's get to the cues. So the first cue here is to slam your elbows into the
ceiling. And this is helpful for the same reason that the exploding upward sensation in the chin
up and the pull up and the overhead press is helpful because it helps you get to the top of the rep and a barbell row and a dumbbell row.
Those exercises are most difficult when you're at your weakest. And that's going to be toward the
end when the bar, the dumbbell are just a few inches from your torso and you can't change the
physics, but you can lift more explosively. You can generate as much force in the beginning of
each rep as possible,
and that can help you get through the sticking point. And so this cue here of slamming your
elbows into the ceiling, of course, if you're dumbbell rowing, it's probably one at a time.
So it'd be elbow. If you're barbell, it's elbows. That can help you get that weight moving
explosively, and it can help you engage your mid traps traps and that can help you lift a bit more weight
and get a bit more performance out of each set. Get another rep or two maybe with your working
weights. Okay, the next cue here is mostly applicable to the barbell row, but it can help
with the dumbbell row as well, depending on how you set up and just depending on your physiology and your biomechanics. And that is
to drive your feet into the floor. And that helps you pop the weight off the floor when you're
barbell rowing. And that's what you want to do. Just before you initiate the pull from the floor,
you want to remind yourself to drive your feet in the floor. And that helps you extend your legs a
little bit and explode up and build that momentum that you need to complete
each rep. And that's not improper form, by the way. You should have a little bit of leg extension at
the beginning of each barbell row rep, and that helps pop the bar off the ground. Again, that cue
is mostly relevant to the barbell row. Let's move on now to the next one, which is to push your chest into the floor. And this is not to make the exercise easier.
It actually makes the exercise a little bit harder because it forces you to use proper
form.
It helps you prevent the mistake of whipping your upper body upward to help move the weight.
So you want to do is as you start to pull the barbell or the
dumbbell toward your torso, you want to imagine that you're pushing your chest toward the floor.
So you don't want to be leaning backward, or at least not more than maybe an inch or so. You want
to use your lats. You want to use your back muscles. You want to use your biceps to lift
the weight. You don't want to use momentum. All right.
Well, that's it for this episode.
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