jennifermaria
Cathlete
Hi everyone!
I posted this in the Ask Cathe forum too, but someone suggested I posted it here as well...
All my life, my core has been my weakest area (it's also the body part where it seems most of my fat likes to concentrate, but that's another story
). I know how important it is to have a strong core in order to function well and prevent injury, yet I can't seem to build the kind of strength there that I'd like to, and I wonder if it's just a matter of me not training the right way.
I generally do core/ab work 2-3x a week: everything from planks to traditional crunches, to pilates from time to time (although I struggle with pilates; I don't feel as though I'm getting anything out of it unless I'm taking a class, with an instructor who can watch my form). These core workouts typically last 10 min (unless I'm doing something from Core Max or I'm taking a pilates class), so they're not super-long, but I've always heard that quality is more important than length of time or number of reps, right?
Anyway, I am still not to where I'd like to be in my core strength. I'm training with a run team with Team in Training right now, and we do planks and various core work once a week in our track workouts--and boy do I struggle with these!! Our coach keeps reminding us that if we're doing these exercises regularly, we should not be struggling so much, which only makes me more frustrated because I DO do them regularly and I'm still not where I should be .
My question is: what is the best approach I can take to core training to really accelerate my strength gains? Should I do these exercises more frequently than I do them (i.e. every day instead of only 2-3x a week)? Should I push myself harder with the difficulty of the exercises (I always attempt the advanced version of the exercises, but can't seem to do them with proper form, so I end up dropping down to the "easier" versions
)? Should I be doing them for longer periods of time (20-30 min vs. 5-10 min)? Should I focus more on stabilizing exercises such as planks and less on traditional abwork, or vice versa? And lastly, what IS a realistic timeframe for seeing/feeling noticeable strength gains? I dream of one day being able to do the advanced version of that stability ball pike, or being able to raise one leg during one of the plank moves--but I wonder whether it's realistic to expect that day to come within the next 3-6 months, or whether that's a matter of years perhaps, depending on how quickly I get strong...
I'm stumped! Please help
.
Jennifer
I posted this in the Ask Cathe forum too, but someone suggested I posted it here as well...
All my life, my core has been my weakest area (it's also the body part where it seems most of my fat likes to concentrate, but that's another story
I generally do core/ab work 2-3x a week: everything from planks to traditional crunches, to pilates from time to time (although I struggle with pilates; I don't feel as though I'm getting anything out of it unless I'm taking a class, with an instructor who can watch my form). These core workouts typically last 10 min (unless I'm doing something from Core Max or I'm taking a pilates class), so they're not super-long, but I've always heard that quality is more important than length of time or number of reps, right?
Anyway, I am still not to where I'd like to be in my core strength. I'm training with a run team with Team in Training right now, and we do planks and various core work once a week in our track workouts--and boy do I struggle with these!! Our coach keeps reminding us that if we're doing these exercises regularly, we should not be struggling so much, which only makes me more frustrated because I DO do them regularly and I'm still not where I should be .
My question is: what is the best approach I can take to core training to really accelerate my strength gains? Should I do these exercises more frequently than I do them (i.e. every day instead of only 2-3x a week)? Should I push myself harder with the difficulty of the exercises (I always attempt the advanced version of the exercises, but can't seem to do them with proper form, so I end up dropping down to the "easier" versions
I'm stumped! Please help
Jennifer