I damaged my back doing leg raises in my late teens without guidance or supervision. I was arching my back, back and forth with every leg motion, just grinding. I didn't know that you were supposed to tilt your hips or use your core muscles to glue your back to the floor. It was pre-Internet, don't judge me. It was painful but at that age you abuse your body's ability to take damage and pass the consequences to your older self. And now I'm paying the debts of my actions with interests. So thank you for explaining how to do these right so others won't injure themselves.
@@moh6410I've seen comments on other videos about this exercise advising hands beneath your glutes as a method to avoiding such back problems that are created by this exercise. I'm getting mixed messages now. It's hindering your gains. You'll screw your lower back. These people are a pain
I just realised that I've been wasting time through the years on this excersise, either on my own or in a gym class. All that time is gone. On the bright side, I'm so grateful I can make use of that time in the future. Thank you dude.
Exactly what I realized. Matt is an amazing encyclopedia of knowledge. Watching his videos is the equivalent to having your own personal world class trainer. Matt is the best in the business no question!
Yes, i found that without hands under your lower back it started to get tougher. It means i worked my abs more effective than usual. Thanks for the tips
Thanks a million! I was actually doing this mistake for so many years and it hurt my lower back just like you said. Now I know where my hands should be!
For many years, I did leg raises and flutter kicks with my hands under my butt. And it always made my lower back a little sore. But recently, I saw a video from Redefining Strength, and she said basically the same thing you did. So I tried it. No back pain! 👍
I'd say that the most common problem i see people doing with all isometric exercises for the transverse abdominis is to hyperextend their spine, which in lying leg raises results in the low back not being in contact with the floor.
Same (but 8 months later lol). I'm starting Hybrid Calisthenics's routine and having trouble with leg raises but this is helpful, particularly the two starter variations
this guy does not get hundreds of thousands viewers for his talk, but some of his talk make a lot of sense, gives lot of valuable insight, warning, mechanism that are not often discussed in traditional demo. many thanks to this guy. another one i like is MoveU. similarly, lot of peculiar, hidden, but very important mechanism discussed. these people don't just teach you how to go thru the look of the motion.
Thank you so much! I’ve stopped doing this kind of exercises because it was painful and I thought it’s just not for me. I’m starting doing it again in a right way now!
Thank you so much for explaining this! It's so easy to understand now and makes sense! I also appreciate the quick work up to regular leg raises you went over. I am just starting out and have chronic pain so the modified examples are very helpful.
I just had a very intense abdominal workout... Thank you really trying to lose weight and build muscle that whole thing about arching back takes intensity away helped a lot.. I made sure back wasn't arched and it really targetted my abdominals alot better.... Thank you
I was wondering if i should put my hands like that or not because i want to start doing leg raises but thanks to you i know understand that it's reduces the impact of the exercise.This video came in the right time
Hey Matt, I know you didn't make the end analysis by paralysis just because of me, but it seemed like you were talking directly to me lol. You are right that you have to figure out what works for you. You can get a blueprint and then adjust as necessary for your own goals and needs. I definitely tend to over analyze things. Your program does not have to be perfect. Start somewhere and adjust as necessary. Thank you for all you do. You are really helping so many people including myself. I appreciate it immensely. God bless
Could I ask, whenever I do these kind of ab exercises I don’t find my lower back to hurt but my neck.. it feels like I’m straining it somehow. How do I relieve the stress to my neck?
That' natural as the front of your neck is part of your flxion chain. You can work on keeping your head on the floor, but also your neck will grow stronger over time too. Maybe put a pillow under your head too
I’ve been doing leg ups for a couple years now and I use my hands under my hips to make it easier on my body. My stomach is now washboard flat, so I don’t see why you have to make it harder for yourself!!
I've been doing Leg Raises for 2 weeks and glad i discovered doing it because it targets my lower belly muscles which is hard to get rid of and tone. So glad I've been doing it right and hands at my sides and not my butt. I noticed when you did it with your butt I really didn't feel that burn feeling you know. so I stopped that and went with the hands on the sides. Now I only do straight leg raises and not the bent knee versions. 4x12 a day along with my other workout routine.
@@oscarin13 I currently been doing this for about 16 days now. I might start resting on the weekends and doing it Monday through Friday. I started this on July 16th 2023 4x15 Dumbbell Curls 4x20 Bodyweight Squats 4x10 Pushups 4x12 Leg Raises (I can go to 4x24 now though) 4x20 Dumbbell Glute Bridges 4x10 Dumbbell Side Bends
You're right it is regressive, because the abs are not contracting hard enough. So the hands are doing the job the abs are supposed to be doing. Which is fine, but it tends to become a crutch and inhibits the process.
I just started incorporating these into my routine, and I totally do the hands under the hips thing, so this technique tutorial could not have come at a better time. Thank you!
I've heard you can risk damaging your lower vertebrae or something regional to the lower back, so that's why when I did it like this, plus I'm lanky with a prominent tailbone. Anything that involves my torso on the floor like this damages my tailbone extensively if I do it too often. My anatomy is frustrating.
Just to be clear. I have lower back issues. So I should just keep my legs raised in the air and keep there for about 30 seconds and then graduate to raising them up and down. Someone might advise me on that. Thanks.
OH MY GOD…. The army made me do this and no wonder my back hurts and my abs strength suck. Thank you for the clarification. Imma start from ground zero again with lying knee raises
And what if one has a herniated disk ? Putting my hands to support my pelvis is the only way for me to perform leg raises without having serious back pain for weeks on end. A physiotherapist advised me to do it with my hands supporting my pelvis . Am I still wasting my time?
Whether you're injured or not, hands are a tool to be used for transitioning to an exercise, not used to progress through. When your abs are strong enough, your back will never move. As long as you're completely and fully engaging your abs when your exercise and you notice that your getting stronger, slowly incorporate not having them, phase them out if you will =) Your body will tell you when and if you're ready. If you still have pain, then you know you've gone too far. Discomfort is what you're looking for and not a 10 out of 10 for discomfort either, unless of course you're strong enough for it. Keep in mind, muscles are what protect our joints, so once they get strong enough, joint problems, including herniated disks will feel so much better(sometimes feel as if they disappear, but always remember it's there just so you never mess it up again because it can play tricks on your head not feeling pain you felt before) once you build them up. Even talk to your PT and run by them what you want to do and see what they say. I bet they'll say (if you're outside the acute phase that is), it's all on you how far you think you can go, as long as you take it easy in steps.
so my back keeps going out bc my hips are 10" larger than my waist (im female.). i have excess lower belly and hip fat that im trying to get rid of, but at the same time my main focus are my lower and middle back muscles. i need to strengthen them, and i have a question: how long total should i hold my legs in that first position 1:54, before its generally ok and effective enough, to start doing the second position 2:04. im just asking generally with someone who has not exercised previously before, and is doing this bed ridden/trying not to be!
15 seconds or so is a good place to start for that hold. The goal is to build up a sense of confidence in the position so the exercise doesn't feel like a struggle.
My sacrum is very prominent and I tend to roll on it when I'm doing core exercises and it gets painful after some time.... I thought it was due to weak abs and improper pelvis position but I'm not sure now... can you help??
I had another question, should we lift our head up like you did in the video while doing the exercise or not lifting up? (seems to be activating more abs when lifting the head up)
No I put hand there because im skinny and my tail bone rubbing against the floor hurts like hell, lower back never hurts and I still feel abs just as much without cause tail bone pain,
@@helloimlois it’s been 4 months since I made this comment, ever since I started working out hammis and flutes more pain went away guess I just need meet around tail bone, and to answer you maybe you have week or small glutes probably bigger than mine pause…… but still not enough to Cushing you, more weight you have on top means more force on tail bone, so get them glutes big dawg
What a fucking genius. No1 ever told me this shit and i thought i was deformed 😂 did this for 5 mins and im already seeing a huge difference in my abs engaging and really no more lower back pain
I started doing this so that my ass wouldn’t slowly drag me across the floor every time my legs went down. I guess I’ll have to find something to hold on to instead 😅
Hay I have been doing leg raises for a while in my ab workout and I find that my tailbone is hurting and not my lower back, do you have any insight as to why?
I have an extreme hollow back. If I wouldn’t put my hands, or, better , a towel under my bottom, I would feel pain in my lower back for days. Imagine a spoon. My back is like a spoon upside down. What do you advice in this special case?
I would start with lying down on the floor with the knees bent and the feet flat on the floor. Then practice using the abs to "press" the low back into the floor for reps. Over time, progress by doing this with your legs straighter and straighter until you can do it with your legs straight out.
I damaged my back doing leg raises in my late teens without guidance or supervision. I was arching my back, back and forth with every leg motion, just grinding. I didn't know that you were supposed to tilt your hips or use your core muscles to glue your back to the floor. It was pre-Internet, don't judge me. It was painful but at that age you abuse your body's ability to take damage and pass the consequences to your older self. And now I'm paying the debts of my actions with interests. So thank you for explaining how to do these right so others won't injure themselves.
damaged your back ? what happen to your back ?
@@moh6410I've seen comments on other videos about this exercise advising hands beneath your glutes as a method to avoiding such back problems that are created by this exercise. I'm getting mixed messages now. It's hindering your gains. You'll screw your lower back. These people are a pain
SOFT 🔈
xd luckily i found this video
2 minutes and 53 seconds of pure information... Decided to Google my problem during workout and instantly found my answer... Great video👍🏼
2.43 for me
My leg raises have never felt this effective. I could actually FEEL my entire core engaged doing it this way. Thank you!
I just realised that I've been wasting time through the years on this excersise, either on my own or in a gym class. All that time is gone.
On the bright side, I'm so grateful I can make use of that time in the future.
Thank you dude.
Exactly what I realized. Matt is an amazing encyclopedia of knowledge. Watching his videos is the equivalent to having your own personal world class trainer. Matt is the best in the business no question!
Super appreciate the props Mr. Planksy!
As long as you did the exercise without pain and with progressive overload you worked out some muscle atleast!😅
Yes, i found that without hands under your lower back it started to get tougher. It means i worked my abs more effective than usual. Thanks for the tips
Did you keep your shoulders and head on the floor?
If it's okay to raise your head
I just noticed myself doing this a couple of days ago and noticed correcting my hand position improved the exercise. Thanks for explaining why.
Thanks a million! I was actually doing this mistake for so many years and it hurt my lower back just like you said. Now I know where my hands should be!
wow dude i was having alot of bonetail pain down there and i didn't know why thanks dude you saved a big portion of my back
So glad to hear, anything that can reduce the pain in the body during training is a very good thing indeed
2 mins of straight to the point/answer video. Thank you! 👍
Still dont say how to breathe...
For many years, I did leg raises and flutter kicks with my hands under my butt. And it always made my lower back a little sore.
But recently, I saw a video from Redefining Strength, and she said basically the same thing you did. So I tried it. No back pain! 👍
ruclips.net/video/aogVA4Ipzys/видео.html
Check this
I'd say that the most common problem i see people doing with all isometric exercises for the transverse abdominis is to hyperextend their spine, which in lying leg raises results in the low back not being in contact with the floor.
Can you talk about how to understand our own nervous system and how to maintain a healthy one
Incredible Timing, this is exactly what I needed! Thanks a ton!
Modern society be like
@@setho1231 you've got a point, the sedentary lifestyle wrecks our bodies.
Same (but 8 months later lol). I'm starting Hybrid Calisthenics's routine and having trouble with leg raises but this is helpful, particularly the two starter variations
this guy does not get hundreds of thousands viewers for his talk, but some of his talk make a lot of sense, gives lot of valuable insight, warning, mechanism that are not often discussed in traditional demo. many thanks to this guy. another one i like is MoveU. similarly, lot of peculiar, hidden, but very important mechanism discussed. these people don't just teach you how to go thru the look of the motion.
Thank you so much! I’ve stopped doing this kind of exercises because it was painful and I thought it’s just not for me. I’m starting doing it again in a right way now!
Kept this in mind during yesterday's workout, makes a real difference. Thank you
Great to hear, if it feels different then it's working, or at least creating a new stimulus which is much the same thing.
No matter how many tutorials I watch I can't engage my lower abs my belly judt pokes out and I can't keep it down when I do leg raises
Thank you so much for explaining this! It's so easy to understand now and makes sense! I also appreciate the quick work up to regular leg raises you went over. I am just starting out and have chronic pain so the modified examples are very helpful.
I just had a very intense abdominal workout... Thank you really trying to lose weight and build muscle that whole thing about arching back takes intensity away helped a lot.. I made sure back wasn't arched and it really targetted my abdominals alot better.... Thank you
I was wondering if i should put my hands like that or not because i want to start doing leg raises but thanks to you i know understand that it's reduces the impact of the exercise.This video came in the right time
Hey Matt, I know you didn't make the end analysis by paralysis just because of me, but it seemed like you were talking directly to me lol. You are right that you have to figure out what works for you. You can get a blueprint and then adjust as necessary for your own goals and needs. I definitely tend to over analyze things. Your program does not have to be perfect. Start somewhere and adjust as necessary. Thank you for all you do. You are really helping so many people including myself. I appreciate it immensely. God bless
Gonna apply this to hanging leg raise too
Locks into place,, good point.-Ernie Moore Jr.
Oh this clarified so many things for me. I’ll start with bent knee raises instead. Thank you!
Could I ask, whenever I do these kind of ab exercises I don’t find my lower back to hurt but my neck.. it feels like I’m straining it somehow. How do I relieve the stress to my neck?
That' natural as the front of your neck is part of your flxion chain. You can work on keeping your head on the floor, but also your neck will grow stronger over time too. Maybe put a pillow under your head too
Interesting. I had the same doubt. This helps a lot. Thanks!
ruclips.net/video/aogVA4Ipzys/видео.html
Check this
Keep your head flat on the ground. I had the same neck issues when raising my head off the ground doing these.
Is it fine if i use a pillow to cushion my tailbone it hurts so much i cant even raise my legs trying to do leg raises
Ty very much I'm going try it soon
This was incredibly helpful! Thank you so much for the information.
Great video. I’ve noticed some discomfort in my lower back, and I’m going to adjust my technique based on your advice.
this helped me a lot! thank you!
I’ve been doing leg ups for a couple years now and I use my hands under my hips to make it easier on my body. My stomach is now washboard flat, so I don’t see why you have to make it harder for yourself!!
Absolutely beautiful you just saved me so much pain
I've been doing Leg Raises for 2 weeks and glad i discovered doing it because it targets my lower belly muscles which is hard to get rid of and tone. So glad I've been doing it right and hands at my sides and not my butt. I noticed when you did it with your butt I really didn't feel that burn feeling you know. so I stopped that and went with the hands on the sides. Now I only do straight leg raises and not the bent knee versions. 4x12 a day along with my other workout routine.
what's ur avg workout routine??
@@oscarin13
I currently been doing this for about 16 days now. I might start resting on the weekends and doing it Monday through Friday. I started this on July 16th 2023
4x15 Dumbbell Curls
4x20 Bodyweight Squats
4x10 Pushups
4x12 Leg Raises (I can go to 4x24 now though)
4x20 Dumbbell Glute Bridges
4x10 Dumbbell Side Bends
Hmmm well I have a flat butt and I feel my tail bone scratching the floor and it hurts. What can I do?
I was just thinking about doing these with the hands, guess I will not
Excellent tutorial. Thank you for clarifying.
Great explanation, thanks a lot! I would never have guessed that makes so much difference…
Hands under your butt is a regression exercise for those who can not keep their low back flat to the floor or those with bad backs.
You're right it is regressive, because the abs are not contracting hard enough. So the hands are doing the job the abs are supposed to be doing. Which is fine, but it tends to become a crutch and inhibits the process.
Thank you for this video. Very insightful and educational. I never knew this.
So no cusion for my lower back to rest on?
There's a short called "Train your damn hip flexors" - by Squat University which shows a perfect illustration of why to brace your core.
I just started incorporating these into my routine, and I totally do the hands under the hips thing, so this technique tutorial could not have come at a better time. Thank you!
Thanks bro... This is what ive been searching for
Glad I could help :)
Thanks u so much! Had been struggling so much with this!😅
How do you not arch the back?
Great advice Matt! Another tool for a transition period, but never to be relied on!
I've heard you can risk damaging your lower vertebrae or something regional to the lower back, so that's why when I did it like this, plus I'm lanky with a prominent tailbone. Anything that involves my torso on the floor like this damages my tailbone extensively if I do it too often. My anatomy is frustrating.
Thank you for this 🎉
Thank you, I've always had problem with this exercise.
Thx man cuz I wondering why it was so easy I started doing this and been really working thx
You're welcome Jonathan, happy training!
Makes sense, been doing it wrong for so long
thank you sir i learned a lot from this
1:52
I think i had wrong posture because my lower back hurts so much when i stand up. Thanks for the vid
...one lil problem tho...I just can't get my lower back to stay against the ground...I just can't 💀and its annoying
Yeah this just made it worse for me. Now I straight up can't do it. No wonder I repeatedly give up on exercising.
It'd cuz ur abs aren't strong enough, practice dairy
My lower back automatically goes against the floor when I do this 🤔🤔
I didn't know to keep my head up 😕
Pure great information!
You made your point at 1:52, definitely subscribing....👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾 awesome video... well detailed....😁😁
Welcome and thank you for checking out my videos.
Feel free to ask questions or make video requests on the RDP instagram @red.delta.project.
@@RedDeltaProject heck yea!!!! 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
Oh my gosh 😂 used to be able to do 30 now I can do 10 and I burrrns 😭😂
Thank you so much, I started not knowing if I was doing it properly aand thought I would ruin my back, turns out I was and won't.
Feel the burn🤙 🔥
Glad I could help!
I'm glad to see that I never done it incorrectly...👌🏼💯✔
Useful tips ! 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽
Thanks man, I was doing them correctly for a while then I don’t what I did differently but it felt harder on my back and not my abs
Just to be clear. I have lower back issues. So I should just keep my legs raised in the air and keep there for about 30 seconds and then graduate to raising them up and down. Someone might advise me on that. Thanks.
Should shoulder blades touch the ground ?
They don't have to, but it's okay if they do.
I'm guilty of doing this. Good to know. Thanks a lot.
thank you💪❤️
I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS!! THANK YOU SO MUCH!! 💪💪❤️❤️‼️
Glad you like them, and thank you so much for watchin!
brilliant ! tks a lot !
Great advice. Thanks Matt!
OH MY GOD…. The army made me do this and no wonder my back hurts and my abs strength suck. Thank you for the clarification. Imma start from ground zero again with lying knee raises
And what if one has a herniated disk ? Putting my hands to support my pelvis is the only way for me to perform leg raises without having serious back pain for weeks on end. A physiotherapist advised me to do it with my hands supporting my pelvis . Am I still wasting my time?
Whether you're injured or not, hands are a tool to be used for transitioning to an exercise, not used to progress through. When your abs are strong enough, your back will never move. As long as you're completely and fully engaging your abs when your exercise and you notice that your getting stronger, slowly incorporate not having them, phase them out if you will =) Your body will tell you when and if you're ready. If you still have pain, then you know you've gone too far. Discomfort is what you're looking for and not a 10 out of 10 for discomfort either, unless of course you're strong enough for it.
Keep in mind, muscles are what protect our joints, so once they get strong enough, joint problems, including herniated disks will feel so much better(sometimes feel as if they disappear, but always remember it's there just so you never mess it up again because it can play tricks on your head not feeling pain you felt before) once you build them up.
Even talk to your PT and run by them what you want to do and see what they say. I bet they'll say (if you're outside the acute phase that is), it's all on you how far you think you can go, as long as you take it easy in steps.
so my back keeps going out bc my hips are 10" larger than my waist (im female.). i have excess lower belly and hip fat that im trying to get rid of, but at the same time my main focus are my lower and middle back muscles. i need to strengthen them, and i have a question: how long total should i hold my legs in that first position 1:54, before its generally ok and effective enough, to start doing the second position 2:04. im just asking generally with someone who has not exercised previously before, and is doing this bed ridden/trying not to be!
15 seconds or so is a good place to start for that hold. The goal is to build up a sense of confidence in the position so the exercise doesn't feel like a struggle.
What are the results
Thank you for this video! I knew I did something wrong, but I didn't know what 😂
great tips
My sacrum is very prominent and I tend to roll on it when I'm doing core exercises and it gets painful after some time....
I thought it was due to weak abs and improper pelvis position but I'm not sure now... can you help??
yes me too when am done doing core exercises i roll off to my side to ease the pain in my back.
This! Have you found a solution?
I had another question, should we lift our head up like you did in the video while doing the exercise or not lifting up? (seems to be activating more abs when lifting the head up)
Ok corrected I'm a beginner and I too felt it
Nice tips
Thanks for helping me my friend
No problem
No I put hand there because im skinny and my tail bone rubbing against the floor hurts like hell, lower back never hurts and I still feel abs just as much without cause tail bone pain,
I have this and have plenty of weight to lose. In fact it hurt less when I was fitter!
@@helloimlois it’s been 4 months since I made this comment, ever since I started working out hammis and flutes more pain went away guess I just need meet around tail bone,
and to answer you maybe you have week or small glutes probably bigger than mine pause…… but still not enough to Cushing you, more weight you have on top means more force on tail bone, so get them glutes big dawg
Bro I m skinny too and my back can't be straight to ground, what's the solution
Thanx. For a quick minute I thought you were going to state that leg raises don't do @nything @ll for the Bliques😂
Time to practice
What a fucking genius. No1 ever told me this shit and i thought i was deformed 😂 did this for 5 mins and im already seeing a huge difference in my abs engaging and really no more lower back pain
Guilty as charged 🙋🏾♂️ from tomorrow no more 💯
Hey, Matt! I noticed that the entire time u had ur head up. Is it better to keep our head up or keep it flat on the floor?
Thank you very much!
Omg I've been doing it with my hands under my hips the entire time lol. Thank you .
It’s not necessarily a bad thing, I wouldn’t certainly say it’s wrong, just more of a regression and using the hands to help the abs do their job
I have no pain in my back,but a burning sensation is that okay?
Any advice for a beginner 60+ with diastasis recti?
Thanks!
Welcome!
I started doing this so that my ass wouldn’t slowly drag me across the floor every time my legs went down. I guess I’ll have to find something to hold on to instead 😅
This too, not sure why that happens for us and not them
Hay I have been doing leg raises for a while in my ab workout and I find that my tailbone is hurting and not my lower back, do you have any insight as to why?
Wow, thank you
I have an extreme hollow back. If I wouldn’t put my hands, or, better , a towel under my bottom, I would feel pain in my lower back for days. Imagine a spoon. My back is like a spoon upside down. What do you advice in this special case?
I would start with lying down on the floor with the knees bent and the feet flat on the floor. Then practice using the abs to "press" the low back into the floor for reps. Over time, progress by doing this with your legs straighter and straighter until you can do it with your legs straight out.
@@RedDeltaProject Many thanks ! I will try this exercise! 🙏
OK fab. So now I can't do it at all. Great help. Love exercising. 🫠
My waist starts to go up when i tend to put down my legs .That's my main problem .Help me! My back doesn't hurts tho
So I have to curve my lower back in towards me so it is flat against the mat?
Sir pls guide me,when i do this exercise there is a sound in my hip flexion and becomes severe when i do it constantly