Stacey D:
I'll share with you 2 exercises I have been doing at PT recently that combine the single leg squat with balance control. Both are excellent for working the outer glute muscles, the quads and the entire hip area. Strengthening these areas will help prevent knee injuries. Since they also require balance, they work on your stabilization also, so it's a total win-win.
The first time I did these, I was falling all over the place, but after a couple of sessions, I could do all sets of each without putting my foot down once. So, they are not easy, but you can do them, and they work! When you can finally do them and never put your foot down, it's such a sense of achievement.
1. Single leg squat with oblique twist:
Start holding a pair of 5 pound dumbells, one in each hand. (Work up to 8 pounds and beyond as you get stronger.) Stand on one leg. (I find it easier to bend the non-working leg at the knee and keep it there, hanging behind me. If it rests near the ground, the temptation to put it down is strong!) Squat on standing leg, say the left leg. When down in the squat, make a small twist of the torso to the left side: the oblique twist. Straighten up to centre while still in squat, then stand up, keeping balance all the while. Do 15 reps on same leg, without touching hanging leg to the ground. Repeat with right side. Work up to 3 sets of 15.
Tell me how your hip and glute feel in the morning!
2. Single leg squat with stability ball/weighted ball:
Take a ruler, tape measure, yard stick of some kind and place it on the floor, vertically, in front of you (like the needle of a compass pointing North). Stand just at the end of it, so behind it, holding stability ball over your head, with both arms at full extension. Lift right leg, bent at knee, as before. As you squat down on left leg, gradually bring your arms down to left side of the ruler/tape, and touch the ball gently to the ground, or close enough. Still, on one leg, lift ball back up over your head as you rise up out of the squat. Still on left leg only, squat down to touch ball gently to the floor on the right side of the ruler/tape, then stand back up out of the squat, raising the ball back over your head. This is one rep. Do ten on left leg. Switch legs. Do second set on each leg.
Don't try and rush this exercise. I often do it facing a mirror, or the window at night where I am back-lit, so I can watch myself and measure carefully how to lower the ball without the ball crossing in front of my face and sending me off balance while I am lowering into the squat. Once you try it, you'll see what I mean here. So, give it a go and find the pace of lowering the ball that works best for you. I say, slow and controlled.
This second exercise is tougher, but more rewarding when you balance really well. It really burns out that glute/hip area, better than any exercise I have ever done on any of Cathe's DVDs, and if you go down far enough in the squat, you really work those quads too. What you find when you start out is that your feet will hurt a lot doing this exercise because the foot is constantly moving in the shoe, trying to get a grip on the ground, to aid in balance. Just work out the kinks at the end of each set before starting on the other side.
At home, I do this exercise not with the stability ball, because my ceilings are not high enough to hold the ball overhead with arms extended, but with a medicine ball. What I have found is that with the weighted ball I can go down deeper in the squat and get the quads involved more.
It's a great exercise. It hurts good, but I love it! Please do write me a post and let me know how you do with these exercises, OK? Single leg squats are not the same as static lunges (though often called that, mistakenly, in my opinion) and they are not that hard to do. They give great results.
Clare