What Is Functional Resistance Training
Today the buzz word in the gym is functional training. It has many meanings to many practitioners in the health and fitness industry. My understanding and implementation of functional training has come from a variety of sources including my own training and teaching in martial arts and numerous sports, combined with studying many of the leading experts in the field including Gary Gray (known as the father of function), Paul Chek (who is also known as the man who brought those big Swiss/stability balls to our gyms) and the National Academy of Sports Medicine to name but a few.
Here is a definition of functional training from the National Academy of Sports Medicine:
All functional movement patterns
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Confused?
Let s break this definition down, as I believe it is important to know what is at the heart of functional training as it is not just a case of doing exercises on balls or on one leg, for the sake of it.
Since most of us drive I will use driving as an analogy for functional movement.
There are muscles that are the brakes, while others are the accelerators, and both are supported by the clutch that helps dictate how fast or slow we will go. The core muscles often take on
...and water was turned off or polluted for three to four weeks. If you are requiring some type of medicine to stay alive then you might end up dying. If however you used alternative medicines and alternative health practices to ...
The kinetic chain is merely the link between all the parts if one of the links is broken (e.g. the battery), then you are in trouble and
...colon, increased blood pressure, ulcers, headaches, etc. There are different types of stress such as mental, emotional and physical. Emotional stress seems to take the greatest toll on everyone. All stress is not bad; in fact, life would not be ...
Three planes of motion is the steering wheel. We can drive backwards and forwards (sagital plane), swerve side to side (frontal plane) and make those circles round the roundabout (transverse plane).
To help you differentiate better, below is a list of terms Gary Gray has designed that describes whether our efforts are functional or non-functional. (2)
Non-Functional - Functional
Isolated - Integrated
Rigid - Flexible
Limited - Unlimited
Artificial - Physiological
Fake - Real
Link action - Chain reaction
Gravity confused - Gravity user
Lab-like - Life-like
Mechanical - Biomechanical
Deceptive - Proprioceptive
1 dimensional - Multi-dimensional
Here are two
...craft. This feel, this Tai Jutsu would also extend to any physical skill. Farming, pottery, construction would all have their Tai Jutsu. This feel has been captured by many cultures in their dance and their Budo - or martial ways. ...
Isolated vs. Integrated
The body only knows movements as it relates to function.
Isolation training gets results in terms of increasing muscle mass and strength because it allows you to fatigue individual muscles, but this often comes at the expense of physical freedom. Have you seen how some body builders walk around stiff and rigid this is often the result of a lot of isolated exercises based on training individual muscle groups like a bicep curl. Athletes on the other hand may use isolated training, but will then use integrated training to achieve more effective movement patterns.
Real vs. Fake
Let s look at that machine in the gym that
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A helpful way to see functional exercises in action is through what Paul Chek describes as Primal Patterns . Chek calls them Primal as they were the functional movement patterns we used to survive as early man. (3)
Including:
Push Pull Twist Lunge Squat Bend
Now to specific functional vs. non functional exercises:
Non-Functional - Functional
Bench press - Push up
Lat pull down - Pull
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Seated triceps extension - Dip
Leg extension - Lunge
Leg press - Squat
Non-functional exercises have characteristics including being performed seated, on machines, involving single muscles in isolation, and not requiring the core muscles to stabilise. You should notice that one of the characteristics of functional exercises is that they involve using your body weight as a resistance. This ability is called relative strength. For example how many chin ups, push ups, squats, lunges, dips you can perform is an indication of your relative strength.
Summary on the benefits of functional training:
Everyday life gains integrated training
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...kinds of birth defects, particularly cleft lip and cleft palate (abnormalities of the mouth that need to be corrected by surgery). Pregnancy complications o Placental problems - including placenta previa (low-lying placenta that covers part or all of the opening ...
Craig Burton
References
(1) PES online manual, Optimum performance training for the performance enhancement specialist, National Academy of Sports Medicine, 2001
(2) Functional video Digest series, Gray, G., available at functionaldesignsystems.com
(3) Chek, P., How to Eat, Move and Be Healthy, Chek Institute, 2004
About the Author:
Article by Craig Burton. Craig is a prominent European based holistic health and fitness coach with more than 15 years experience. Craig is a Sports Science graduate of Edith Cowan University and has postgraduate accreditations in nutrition, massage, athletic training, and corrective exercise therapy. He is the author of “The 21 Day Roadmap to Health”
...medicine because many people are concerned about the side effects of modern medicine practices. Alternative health care is usually not covered under insurance policies. Practices like acupuncture and aromatherapy are example of alternative health care that some insurance policies are ...
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