Unlock Your Hidden Power With Horse Stance

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2025

Комментарии • 918

  • @FitnessFAQs
    @FitnessFAQs  Год назад +83

    💪 Get Your FREE Calisthenics Workout: fitnessfaqs.com/homehero/

    • @higherresolution4490
      @higherresolution4490 Год назад +3

      This video could not come at a better time! After hearing that David Goggins was given a prescription by his MD of 50,000 hours of stretching, I realized I was in exactly the same position, maybe even worse because I'm older. This video for me is gold! I'm going to the gym right now to begin. This video is such a professional production--highly impressive.

    • @nonenone2907
      @nonenone2907 Год назад

      Toes straight forward (a mabo or kibadachi stance in TMA ) or toes out(a shikodachi stance in TMA)which is used or best?

    • @Teddynewz
      @Teddynewz 11 месяцев назад

      Like it 👍

    • @ihavereservations
      @ihavereservations Месяц назад

      You best believe I noticed them shoes from the first frame of the video! I've been wanting to buy some of these to use as house shoes/indoor trainers. And excellent job with the product placement, mate. That was hilarious!

  • @michaelfforte
    @michaelfforte Год назад +489

    I'm 71 and I practice these every day. Leg strength is SO important as you get older. And... this is one of the best stances to improve prostate health.

    • @CreativeUsernameEh
      @CreativeUsernameEh Год назад +12

      How would this improve prostate health.

    • @michaelfforte
      @michaelfforte Год назад +89

      @@CreativeUsernameEh This stance opens the pelvic floor, stretches and strengthens the muscles in the hips and groin which translates to better blood-flow to the whole pelvis - of which the prostate is a part. Improving and maintaining prostate health is a whole body effort that involves diet, exercise, hydration, less sitting, stress reduction and supplements. There is no magic pill or food. You need to work on the whole body. To work on the whole body you need to work on the individual parts - everything is connected. Make the horse stance part of a healthy prostate lifestyle.

    • @meinhendl
      @meinhendl Год назад +9

      73, started 3 month ago . if i only knew, how much and how long is good in our age ?

    • @michaelfforte
      @michaelfforte Год назад +27

      @@meinhendl Everyone is different. I start every exercise slowly and then over time increase. My general rule is never go more than 60% - the idea (for me) as I age is to conserve energy as I get older, not burn myself out.

    • @meinhendl
      @meinhendl Год назад +5

      @@michaelfforte you are right ! thank you !

  • @Kaushik6570
    @Kaushik6570 Год назад +334

    I always begin my day with the horse stance in the morning. I don't set a timer i just do as long as I can without dropping down. It's kind of like a meditation where you overcome the external distraction of your body.

    • @oscarchavezart
      @oscarchavezart Год назад +6

      I should try it out, to help make my mind more bulletproof.

    • @juancsmix
      @juancsmix Год назад +6

      I suppose you warmup before? When I wake up everything is stiff

    • @Kaushik6570
      @Kaushik6570 Год назад +5

      @@juancsmix Just some dynamic stretching, and moreover, i dont go too wide, just a little wider than hip width, toes out, and hold at 90 degree

    • @oscarchavezart
      @oscarchavezart Год назад +2

      @@juancsmix yup, same here. I am stiff also, warming up with jumping jacks helps. I do them lightly and then progress to normal speed.

    • @kyhxx
      @kyhxx Год назад

      . etc. thts ht af. öoka.isbliss*

  • @JRR737
    @JRR737 Год назад +239

    Just did my first horse stance:
    - Set 1 - 1 minute & 55 seconds.
    - Set 2 - 1 minute & 40 seconds.
    - Set 3 - 1 minute & 49 seconds.
    It really starts to hurt my hip socket.
    5 minutes feels far away...
    But I like having it as a goal to aim for.
    Love this channel, Daniel; thank you.

    • @NofirstnameNolastname
      @NofirstnameNolastname Год назад +7

      This is me almost to the second. I started with wallsits till I reached 3 sets of 5 minutesm then switched to horsestance snd you notice that it didn't actually help that much lol.
      5 minutes indeed feels far away

    • @JRR737
      @JRR737 Год назад

      @@NofirstnameNolastname Thanks for letting me know & cresting some solidarity. I really appreciate that.
      Haha, your "noticing the walls sits didn't help much" got me. 🤣

    • @cheesyjesus7887
      @cheesyjesus7887 Год назад +8

      Wow! I started with 30 seconds I like just made it to 1m5s. Insane bro good job

    • @JRR737
      @JRR737 Год назад +1

      @@cheesyjesus7887 Thanks so much. I appreciate the encouragement.
      It's b/c I've done a lot of other leg exercises (air squats, wall sits, bring sally up leg challenge, etc.) for the past year or so.
      I'm excited to add horse stance to the mix, now.

    • @panosxatz9
      @panosxatz9 Год назад +1

      Nice work..how much time did you rest?

  • @michaelbrautigan7697
    @michaelbrautigan7697 Год назад +32

    I’ve been doing the horse stance for the last 3 months or so. I can now touch my toes and I’m 64 years old. It’s an amazing exercise for the body and the mind. I have so much more flexibility without injury and I’m SO much stronger! Amazing thanks!

  • @effortlesssuccess2585
    @effortlesssuccess2585 Год назад +39

    Isometric exercises are under rated. They are challenging and transform your body fast. I also like how strong you become mentally with how long you hold each position.

    • @ahmedosman9699
      @ahmedosman9699 Год назад +3

      Exactly , a recent research showed that isometric excersises can lower hypertension (specifically planks and wall sits)

    • @valerieserrano1245
      @valerieserrano1245 11 месяцев назад +1

      I use to be able to do 13 minute planks! I struggle with 2 minutes now!

  • @srkuleo
    @srkuleo Год назад +495

    After following you for more than 2 years, this is by far your best video productionwise! Awesome lecture as always, Daniel!

    • @mikkeljespersen8108
      @mikkeljespersen8108 Год назад +18

      I couldn't agree more.
      There's also a ton of humor in this one 👌

    • @Mikemuzeau
      @Mikemuzeau Год назад +2

      Great video

    • @namjotsingh
      @namjotsingh Год назад +1

      Right. This one is informational as well as entertaining.

    • @richivity
      @richivity Год назад

      Cheers I’ll try that bro. My knees hurt so I’ll take it in stages.

    • @Triathlonjuggler
      @Triathlonjuggler Год назад +3

      I agree, been following him for around 13 years. Great videos, indeed.

  •  Год назад +171

    There are some differences between this horse stance that Daniel is demonstrating and a Kung Fu horse stance. Main differences are 1) Feet MUST be parallel while maintaining knees rotated outwards; 2) Pelvis must NOT be tilted. Quite the contrary. Tuck your bum inwards as much as you can; 3) Back must be completely upright; 4) Thighs should be as close to parallel to the floor as possible, BUT if the stability of the stance is compromised, a slight arch between the legs is ideal.
    The exercise Daniel is showing is very beneficial for leg strength and mobility, no doubt about it. It's not "wrong" or anything. But an actual proper Mah Bu has many other details to look out for, as it is much more than a mere leg strengthening/stretching exercise.

    • @alexlok7790
      @alexlok7790 Год назад +36

      Agree, was looking for somebody to say this. Foot parallel, bum tucked, chest up, head up, stomach in, and go as low as you can, but not passing parallel and without compromising stability. That’s the traditional wushu method.

    •  Год назад +6

      @@alexlok7790 100%

    • @sarmilanu4792
      @sarmilanu4792 Год назад +6

      Interesting read. May I ask were you come across this knowledge? Are you a Monk?

    •  Год назад +13

      @@sarmilanu4792 Not a monk, no. Kung Fu student.

    • @Ermude10
      @Ermude10 Год назад +5

      Was looking for this comment! I'm interested in what you mean by "It's much more than a strengthening/stretching exercise" though. I don't see this variation as only that either.

  • @Cl4rendon
    @Cl4rendon Год назад +5

    I came across the Horse Stance recently and now integrated it in my morning routine - I am 58 and work out physically 4x a week - The stance i also integrated in my warm up phase - I noticed a rise in testosterone levels next to more stability and leg strength and as we know, testosterone is beneficial for burning fat and building muscle in males. Last but not least, the mental benefits this brings along - overcoming the burning sensation in the thighs through focussing on breath has meditative qualities - I think the Horse Stance is a perfect exercise for body & mind.

  • @dragosavo
    @dragosavo Год назад +27

    One of the funniest memories I have of teaching karate is the collective suffering of my students in a horse stance. For some reason I never found it hard but I could sit in it peacefully while they were shaking and quivering and hanging on for dear life. They knew I loved their suffering. ( in the kindest way of course 🙂)

  • @johnmichaelrecio4778
    @johnmichaelrecio4778 Год назад +57

    I started horsetance 5 weeks ago. In the beginning i could only do 1 minute of horsestance per day and the mental pressure it gives is just scary but in hindsight is a blessing because now, i can last for 3 minutes thanks to the mental conditioning it gives. Just know that to those who are starting horstance or deciding to, i urge you to follow this video, effiecient training is key, start small then gradually build your way up. If you do, i'm sure you'll surpass my current record in no time.

  • @yavuzyurur7129
    @yavuzyurur7129 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @sarmilanu4792
    @sarmilanu4792 Год назад +57

    I started doing them 2 years ago but then stopped, recently I restarted doing them and build them up to like 50 seconds at max. Consistency is what I'm lacking. It's a great exercise and you reminded and motivated me to hang on to this exercise!

    • @cpm4317
      @cpm4317 Год назад

      Consistency & progression is my big challenge (besides recovering from injury that sets progression down to a previous level...)

    • @kentower
      @kentower 4 месяца назад

      Hey mate, I’m a sounddesigner from Germany here. Please add a swish sound at 3:37 approx for dramatic effect. Ok bye.

    • @kentower
      @kentower 4 месяца назад

      Also I noticed you have your feet turned outward much, I learned it with the feet pointing forward. It does put more strain on the knees, is that why you are doing it this way?

  • @patricku9
    @patricku9 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @ajju1199
    @ajju1199 Год назад +8

    16 year old been doing it for 1.5 months regularly on morning. now able to hold it for 2.5 minutes daily
    but taking a rest day this week due to deadlifting a tree stump maybe 150 kg 3 reps one time 2 separate reps another time. None of my mates were able to do what I did so it surely works! Brazza

  • @maxivy
    @maxivy Год назад +1

    This guy made a video 8 years ago about this, and he looks even younger and fitter today. Insane on so many fronts. Well done.

  • @austenlawson5993
    @austenlawson5993 Год назад +5

    Daaaaaamn Daniel. These videos keep getting better. Not too short. Not too long. Very informative. No irrelevant information to fluff video length. Keep doing what you’re doing.

  • @kungfuguitarboarder
    @kungfuguitarboarder Год назад +8

    A personal inside from over ten years of martial arts: in martial arts it is important to keep the inside of your feet as parallel as possible to have maximum stability, it is like screwing yourself with your feet into the ground. 2nd: in some martial art school it is or was required to be able to hold the horse stance for at least 20min to start training. 3rd: a variation in martial arts is to hold the horse stance as long as possible and than rotating your one leg until it is straight and you twist your body sideways while keeping the other leg exactly like in a horse stance and if you can't hold this position you switch back, hold as long the horse stance as you can and afterwards switch to the other side & afterwards back to the horse stance again.

  • @andresg.a
    @andresg.a Год назад +4

    My mate Daniel with another great video. I remember doing boxing in high school I used to do the "wall sits". one set of 7 minutes was my top, you feel like the wall is crumbling but in fact is you. lol. Now doing this for the first time I was able to do 3 sets for a total of 1 minutes 48 seconds. It really humbles you. Thanks FitnessFAQs.

  • @mathguy829
    @mathguy829 Год назад +2

    Just started doing the horse stance recently...what a BEAST of an excercise. My legs would shake like a tuning fork. I'm currently at 75 seconds. I've already seen changes in my cycling. My goal is 180 seconds. Stay tuned!
    Love your channel by the way. Keep up the great work. Two thumbs up.

  • @빛과어둠-q8s
    @빛과어둠-q8s Год назад +26

    As someone who used to practice Wushu and then Taichi in the past, I now incorporate Horse stance into my personal training routine whenever there is a leg/lower body day. I never recorded my Horse stance time, but each time I do it, I hold it for 64 slow and deep breaths (approximately 5 minutes). I do it for 3 sets, and from set 2 onwards, I incorporate basic Taichi hand movements while remaining in the Horse stance.
    After that, I go to do some other strength training before doing deep stretching. Stretching after a long training is really beneficial since your body is already warmed up, you can relax your muscles while slowly ease into the stretch, which doesn't feel as painful as stretching cold muscles, and it reduces the chances of injury too.

    • @AnonYmous-yu6hv
      @AnonYmous-yu6hv Год назад

      Stretching after workout has no benefit whatsoever, studies show

    • @shlingle
      @shlingle Год назад

      i would argue stretching has a mental benefit. the bodily stress and tension created by workout is released, and that release has a tangible and pleasant effect on the nervous system @@AnonYmous-yu6hv

    • @smack9516
      @smack9516 Год назад

      @@AnonYmous-yu6hvdepends on what type of flexibility you’re doing🙄 Static stretching…no. Active isolated stretching…of course. SCIENCE SHOWS😁

    • @jonasd.4423
      @jonasd.4423 11 месяцев назад

      How many times per week do you practice the horse stance?

  • @catalincioponea
    @catalincioponea Год назад +28

    This exercise combines strength, flexibility and mental torture perfectly.

  • @fauxvier8519
    @fauxvier8519 Год назад +4

    The editing in this one feels somewhat diffrent and more charming

  • @ista_j
    @ista_j Год назад +2

    As someone who is a little bit more active, not much, I could do 2 mins. Which surprised myself. Thanks bro. Finna do them everyday.

  • @abender06
    @abender06 Год назад +7

    This is such a great exercise. It stretches really important muscles, strengthens your lower body and has a calming, centering effect.

  • @kuramobay2445
    @kuramobay2445 Год назад +2

    Two crucial things: controlled and rhythmic breathing, secondly if you have long legs then your thighs don't need to be parallel to the floor.

  • @angelgomez-tg4zm
    @angelgomez-tg4zm 11 месяцев назад

    When i was little my dad took me to this guy he knew to train me on how to defend myself because of some stuff happening at school, he trained me for for a few months on how to punch and kick and exercise in general, he had me do this stand every session from what I remember being 30 minutes but it was probably more like a couple mins at a time and i thought it was such BS because he always went on about how good the stance is for my legs. Ive always had a strong lower body and had good flexibility and i now realize the horse stance might have been a contribution 😅 shout out Mr Brown!

  • @tomontv
    @tomontv Год назад +7

    Man, your production quality has gone through the roof!! Loved this video! I just tried Horse Stance for the first time - not very wide yet, but far wider than I'd usually squat, and I managed to hold for 30 seconds - definitely gonna keep working on this! Thanks!

  • @paraworth
    @paraworth Год назад +19

    Awesome to see you putting this out there Fitness FAQ ‘s. I began my journey with HS 18 months ago. By las Christmas I was 4.45 seconds. My goal was 5 mins. I was feeling amazing. I’d got over some serious lower back and hip pain after years of trying so many things. Unfortunately I had a massive accident. Falling 30 meters through trees I shattered my talas brake my T9 60% compression and dislocated my right shoulder. Six months later with no surgeries I’m doing rings dips again 8 reps perfect form. Chin ups 10 reps. Horse stance 3.30 mins. I consider the horse stance one of my greatest assets for it’s ability to strength my whole body and help bring back the mental clarity I need to work through a great deal of pain. My flexibility has returned which is pretty amazing. My goal is to be back doing Bulgarian ring dips and finally make it to a five minute horse stance and begin to add weight. I’m 61. The Shaolin monks certain know what they are doing. Including other isomeric holds like frog pose crab pose and planking has been a game changer. Thanks Fittness FAQ’s

  • @Gordy-9
    @Gordy-9 Год назад +9

    This is an excellent move. I would recommend it in everyone's routine if possible. K boges talked about the horse stance in depth as well awhile back. More perspectives are always welcome. Love your stuff

  • @keshavhanma
    @keshavhanma Год назад +4

    Today i just searched how to do horse stance the correct way in the morning, but now you just posted a video, grateful 😊

  • @rfelici63
    @rfelici63 Год назад +4

    Started single set, 4-5Xwk. Started at 1min. Added 10 secs per week. Am up to 3 mins. Goal is for 5 mins but feeling stale I love your suggestions to widen stance, add wt and the 2minX3 sets. Did first one tonight. Male age 60. Most grateful for you sharing.

  • @namjotsingh
    @namjotsingh Год назад +4

    Definitely one of your best videos in terms of editing and recording.

  • @georgechow1925
    @georgechow1925 Год назад +1

    That was the 'punishment' we got when we were in grade school. Little did I know, my "bad behavior" in grade school helped me with flexibility for life!

  • @snowflakeblanket2924
    @snowflakeblanket2924 Год назад +18

    Having gotten into calisthenics again after long time (8+ years) due to depression and neglect of my own body after getting back into it for the past 4 months I've managed to gain major strength and control over my body (I weigh 100-105kg at 1.80cm) I can do a weighted horse stance (+21kg) for at least 60 seconds for 3 sets after just trying once today actually feels quite good to do.

  • @GaryMSanchez
    @GaryMSanchez 11 месяцев назад

    1st 1:17.77
    2nd 1:53.29
    3rd 2:01.48
    Thank you for inspiring me to action. I’ll post again when i get to 5 minutes

  • @ohheyhowyoudoin9635
    @ohheyhowyoudoin9635 Год назад +3

    Please do more strength stretching and mobility, Daniel. Thanks.

  • @Kormac80
    @Kormac80 Год назад

    Started doing this a few months ago and am very pleased at benefits. 63yr old lifelong gym and fitness guy.

  • @shafalikapoor6066
    @shafalikapoor6066 Год назад +4

    Thank you Daniel, I have been a dancer in my young days when this was mandatory for most of the dance moves, I didn’t know it was so therapeutic, it raises spirituality for sure!

  • @nickg9639
    @nickg9639 Год назад +1

    my karate teacher used to make us do these.
    feel the burn like nothing else!

    • @leevickers5747
      @leevickers5747 Год назад

      even worse when you do more than one set these burn like hell i dont even do the horse stance I just do these in normal squat position

  • @me0101001000
    @me0101001000 Год назад +7

    There's a branch of martial arts that I train alongside MMA called XMA (extreme martial arts), which mostly involves stunt work. A lot of the things we do derive from Chinese Wushu. It's not really good in a fight, but to put it concisely, it looks awesome.
    One of the first forms you learn in wushu is called wu bu quan, or the five stance form. The horse stance is the first among the stances, the others being the bow stance, drop stance, sitting stance, and empty stance. It's a form I think everyone in calisthenics should learn. I don't necessarily think all calisthenics athletes should rigorously do XMA, let alone wushu, but all martial artists MUST train in advanced calisthenics.

  • @johntay3831
    @johntay3831 10 месяцев назад

    Perfect demo. The anterior pelvic tilt is spot on. Many kungfu practitioners make this mistake of posteriorly tilting the pelvis. It shuts off the glutes, Psoas/core muscles.

    • @zauranxx7895
      @zauranxx7895 4 месяца назад

      Well....a real horse stance you do not want anterior pelvic tilt this guys demonstrated a sumo stance the whole time. In a real horse stance you want perfectly straight posture and your core will be worked.

  • @fitnytech
    @fitnytech Год назад +3

    Motivation is what gets you started. Habit is what kept you going.

  • @alexlamas6324
    @alexlamas6324 3 месяца назад

    I'm a Kung Fu teacher and this is the first, most important and foundation of all Chinese martial arts. In the old days they would make new students do only horse stance for a year before they were allowed to take lessons. Okay, a very bad business practice but that was before Kung fu was a business. A 2 to 5 minute horse stance is the foundation to basic health and our grandmaster says it's the No. 1 reason why he's so fit and healthy at 86 years of age. I believe him. I do about 3 minutes a day.

  • @MrFredd38
    @MrFredd38 Год назад +319

    Is it cheating if my belly is holding the stick?

  • @dungalunga2116
    @dungalunga2116 Год назад

    I’ve held horse stance since I watched this video 3 months ago. I can’t get back out of it. It’s changed my life forever.

    • @zauranxx7895
      @zauranxx7895 4 месяца назад

      I hope since kts been 9 months you've learned this isn't a horse stance but a sumo stance right?

  • @Wendywonder123
    @Wendywonder123 8 месяцев назад +23

    Horse: I look nothing like this 😑

  • @ahmedalfi8487
    @ahmedalfi8487 Год назад +1

    very good ... thank you for the fantstic info

  • @robb6170
    @robb6170 Год назад +7

    Thank you for the content you create for us! This stance is great; I practiced fencing for many years and this stance was the only thing our instructor would allow if we needed to "rest" during our training if we got tired. I learned to find it comfortable after a while...

  • @adriaanmorosan
    @adriaanmorosan Год назад +2

    Horse Stance is so effective because going wide puts your whole hip area in an unstable position (vulnerable) so to speak..
    So if you wanna get better at squats and do crazy weights, consider wide stance squats, it will transfer over to regular squats..

  • @sriramwriting
    @sriramwriting Год назад +3

    Started adding dead hang and deep squat isometrics to my regular drills. Horse stance iso sounds great...reminds me of kalari. Will def add. Great video!

  • @paulthesquid3595
    @paulthesquid3595 Год назад +2

    I am 69 i started doing horse stance squats sitting on my bed a few years ago and have progressed to these now with a 10kg kettle bell with my back against a wall there.

  • @deluxenz
    @deluxenz Год назад +14

    As someone who’s been practicing this stance since 1999 in traditional Chinese Kung Fu, it’s an essential skill. However your technique isn’t quite there. The feet should be parallel. This locks the stance correctly. Feet out makes it weak and pressure to either side of the leg will easily collapse the stance.

    • @tinirop
      @tinirop Год назад +1

      Thank you.

    • @Sohum009
      @Sohum009 Год назад +1

      Well said

    • @geniefromtheeast1292
      @geniefromtheeast1292 8 месяцев назад

      Preach sifu

    • @justpassingthrough3410
      @justpassingthrough3410 8 месяцев назад +1

      Different teachers teach different ways. Feet out is necessary for some with knee problems but they can still exteriorly rotate the hip and push out knees.

    • @QdaChosenOne23
      @QdaChosenOne23 2 месяца назад

      8:30 How do you feel about vibration platforms?

  • @Oi-mj6dv
    @Oi-mj6dv Год назад

    Weighted stretches is THE way. Cossack squats, uni lateral RDLs and horse squats, pullovers etc, are legendary

  • @zgs12212012
    @zgs12212012 Год назад +13

    5 minutes is as long as I have done this. Working on more at 54.

    • @pmf026
      @pmf026 Год назад +2

      Try Wall Sit, it's similar;)

    • @zgs12212012
      @zgs12212012 Год назад

      @@pmf026 I really enjoy Wall Sits. Thanks for the reminder!

  • @Javier99999
    @Javier99999 Год назад +1

    I just started horse stancing 2 weeks ago. I love how I can do it at anytime during the day when I have 5 free minutes. Allows me to get in 3,4 times a day

  • @Grersh
    @Grersh Год назад +3

    Was tha kung fu shoes comment (3:00) sarcasm? I assume so but would like clarification 😅

  • @winstonmiller9649
    @winstonmiller9649 8 месяцев назад

    Bravo!! 👏👏👏😊
    I'm really impressed by the amount of messages about doing H.S. I was only able to do it for around 60 seconds each session, but your vid and comments have motivated me to try again, especially JRR737.
    Thank you all.😊❤😊😊

  • @BigUriel
    @BigUriel Год назад +5

    I had stage 3 colon cancer and weighed 110lbs, started doing 100 horse stances every morning along with 100 push ups, 100 situps and a 10K run and now cancer free, I'm 9x Mr. Olympia, can jump a mile and destroy alien spaceships with one punch. This shit works 👍

  • @lovalaugh
    @lovalaugh 8 месяцев назад +3

    I just did my first horse stance set
    First set: three months four days and seven hours
    Second set: three months six days and 15 hours
    Third set: three months 8 days and four hours

  • @TheMisanthroPunk
    @TheMisanthroPunk Год назад +1

    I recommend stoppin your heavy sumo deadlifts at this range when descending.

  • @Mani_Matter
    @Mani_Matter Год назад +4

    i can hold it 24/7

  • @marsimusaonit4503
    @marsimusaonit4503 Год назад +1

    😄Awsome charisma innovations) I like it. Thanks!

  • @mopycbaby811
    @mopycbaby811 Год назад +4

    After a cold shower I get my body temp back up with a horse stance. 10 minutes has been my longest. The key is visualize your butt as a seat. Squeezing the glutes gives my legs burning sensation a bit of a relief. Also the breathing helps extend the stance.

    • @GavinSaintClair
      @GavinSaintClair Год назад

      As a kung fu practitioner my longest is either 15 mins or 25 mins. I can’t remember now 😂

    • @tofuguru941
      @tofuguru941 Год назад

      I'd sure hope breathing helps extend the stance... Otherwise you're really good at holding your breath for 10+ minutes! 😂

    • @mopycbaby811
      @mopycbaby811 Год назад

      @@tofuguru941 😂 I should have been more specific. Deep breaths in and out throughout the 10 minutes.

    • @GavinSaintClair
      @GavinSaintClair Год назад

      @@tofuguru941 yes, breathing and trying to relax your mind and muscles. This is designed to be done relaxed not with tension.

  • @lugalzagissi
    @lugalzagissi Год назад +1

    Guys, make sure you warm up before the deep horse stance. I once got my hip hurt by neglecting a warm up before doing this exercise, and it took me several months to recover. Just spend 1 minute doing hip rotations and or any other hip joint warm-up.

  • @WilliamsRujano
    @WilliamsRujano Год назад +4

    Hello Daniel!
    Could you put the videos with subtitles available?
    for those of us who do not speak English we can activate the translation function.
    Thank you so much!

  • @MasterChi__
    @MasterChi__ 6 месяцев назад

    Omg your integrating the spiritual side👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼
    Finally someone who understands🥳

  • @LinkEX
    @LinkEX Год назад +4

    Another bonus: This gives a rush of adrenaline without the need to do any fast movements.
    So any of you that struggle with fatigue and brain fog in the afternoon:
    Do a set and you'll be surprised how effective it is in pushing you out of a rut.

  • @noiseworks
    @noiseworks Год назад +1

    he's right, proceed with caution around anyone wearing Feiyue

  • @kunxv15
    @kunxv15 Год назад +4

    isnt this the sumo stance? horse stance have feet pointing forwards

  • @thunderstrike1987
    @thunderstrike1987 Год назад

    Best way to put it out. I couldn't agree more with the fact that this low wide squat is by far the most challenging there is

  • @JeremiahVonWolfsblood
    @JeremiahVonWolfsblood 8 месяцев назад +1

    Ive been training legs for a little while, I cant pump out 3x8 pistol squats, I can touch my toes and can deep squat easily and now i'm trying horse stance I shake like crazy after only like 20 seconds

  • @MyUtubefreak
    @MyUtubefreak Год назад +1

    I held it for 2 minutes in a recent test at age 76. I don't practice it, but do regular weight training in the gym.

  • @elvisyik2827
    @elvisyik2827 6 месяцев назад

    Fantastic, you did it beautifully. I am doing daily and slowly. Hope I can achived the Horse power eventually.❤❤❤from Malaysia.

  • @KarateTaco
    @KarateTaco Год назад +1

    Little piece of advice, I see you point your feet outwards during mabu. In my martial arts (Shotokan karate and Choy Lee Fut kungfu) we learn to point our knees outwards and the toes forwards. Doing so you get the gains in the upper legs, but you also greatly increase the yield in the lower legs. Nice video, keep it up!

  • @khushpanthaky
    @khushpanthaky Год назад +2

    I did my first 3 sets of 60-second horse stances this morning!
    I'm glad I found your channel, brother!

  • @rabidredratZ1
    @rabidredratZ1 Год назад +2

    Trained this for Kung Fu many years ago and kept it up along with the other stances - Bow, Cat, Crane & Cross, after a decent stretch out you can get to keep your flexibility gains, watch your foot position should be at 90 degrees to the stance not at 45 degrees gets more tension in the ankles. Forget about trying to chase times, just wear socks on a slippy floor and your legs will be burning real quick.

  • @tionblack
    @tionblack Год назад

    Bruv thanks from Turkiye you explained it so well especially the footwork to place your feet helped me tremedously,keep up the good job brother thank you.

  • @teatowel11
    @teatowel11 Год назад +1

    Love it, glad its gaining popularity again.

  • @doc86-irl
    @doc86-irl Год назад +1

    Before my third Dan a few years ago 30min was my best

  • @ParaFoxxen
    @ParaFoxxen Год назад +2

    Was the standard pain endurance back in the days for me (20 years ago, now 39yo) when I trained Gong Fu. Remember the monk here in Sweden had no problem sit in Ma Bo for 35 mins straight.

  • @cosmobiologist
    @cosmobiologist 11 месяцев назад

    Heck yeah! Trained horse stance so much while training in the martial arts when I was younger, but honestly haven't trained it enough lately. Going to add in some regular training again. Thanks for the video!

  • @hgrsi8822
    @hgrsi8822 Год назад +1

    To be fair this is a actually Sumo Stance.
    Horse stance is higher up and narrower, with feet pointing more forward.

  • @robertelek7503
    @robertelek7503 Год назад +1

    One of the best Channel about Calisthenics on RUclips and I think always will be,because your content quality is get better with every video.😁(and already the quality is on another level 🔥)

  • @GavinSaintClair
    @GavinSaintClair Год назад +1

    As a shaolin kung fu practitioner ‘horse stance’ is amazing. We also use ‘horse stance’ to relax, so instead of seeing it as a strengthening exercise, we can think of it as a way to try and relax our muscles during it… BREATHE

    • @FalseProphetFallacy
      @FalseProphetFallacy Год назад

      Does it build leg muscle?

    • @GavinSaintClair
      @GavinSaintClair Год назад

      @@FalseProphetFallacy it changed my legs from an athletic runners build to thick like tree trunks! It builds mitochondria and can build a real solid isometric base. Kung fu is the future of UFC and a lot of athletic endeavours. You heard it here first

  • @JerWodke2012
    @JerWodke2012 Год назад +1

    I haven't watched your videos in a while and the overall production quality has skyrocketed. Good work!

  • @hellfrozen3678
    @hellfrozen3678 Год назад

    isometrics are game changer I literally turned my leg and abs day into an isometric day,training isometric leg exercises and core exercises

  • @bengiebeler4683
    @bengiebeler4683 Год назад +1

    Banger of a video. The production quality has improved so much since you started putting out videos.

  • @dramastudiobordeaux8058
    @dramastudiobordeaux8058 Год назад

    I studied Shaolin KungFu in College, We started every session with the Horse Stance. 5 Minutes is my limit - do against the wall with a colleague standing on your lap....fun times
    Best exercise ever. Its more mental than physical. See how long you can sit with the pain. the key is your breath and focus. Its all about your focus. Nothing to do with the physical limitations you have.

  • @DisperseControl
    @DisperseControl Год назад

    I used to do Chinese martial arts and this was indeed foundational. Definitely great for mental toughness and building lower body power

  • @PaddyNinja
    @PaddyNinja Год назад

    I'm so glad I watched this. Thanks FitnessFAQs.

  • @prajwalm4403
    @prajwalm4403 Год назад +1

    Special mention to high production value and new presentation style

  • @fredericobarreto5921
    @fredericobarreto5921 Год назад

    MAte you're a legend! What an inspiration you are!!

  • @DuboisDel
    @DuboisDel Год назад +1

    Wow! Thank you, you've just got yourself a new subscriber👍🏽

  • @devilsingh1378
    @devilsingh1378 Год назад +1

    I personally hold the horse stand for 1 mins & I'll try to increase my hold numbers.💯👊

  • @GnomeNorthOfTheWall
    @GnomeNorthOfTheWall Год назад

    Thank you for this video! I've been doing this for years as a part of kungfu training, but my Chinese teachers have never been able to properly explain the details and haven't had the knowledge and imagination to come up with good structured progressions. Now I have all the parts of this exercise

  • @fpm8338
    @fpm8338 Год назад

    Good video! I’m going to start doing this every morning. Thanks!

  • @brisworld1204
    @brisworld1204 7 дней назад

    In the many years I spent back in the day of martial arts, practicing the horse stance, your feet faced directly in front with your knees spread and pushed out above your ankles giving total harder practice.

  • @sabasotkilava3493
    @sabasotkilava3493 Год назад +1

    I love this video❤

  • @braonis96
    @braonis96 Год назад

    I'm so glad to have access to content with this much quality and for free! Thank you very much, this was one of the best exercise tutorials I've ever seen :)