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Hoots : What's a good home exercise for the lower back? It seems there are a ton of easy ab exercises, but very few for the lower back to keep the muscles balanced as your abs get stronger. What are simple home exercises for the - freshhoot.com

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What's a good home exercise for the lower back?
It seems there are a ton of easy ab exercises, but very few for the lower back to keep the muscles balanced as your abs get stronger. What are simple home exercises for the lower back?


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Supermans, crunches, bodyweight squats, and even planks all strengthen lower back muscles. I hope that helps.


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Try rolling over onto your stomach and doing a "superman". You can hold tension in the position, or do reps similar to doing "reverse situps".

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Also, you might think about doing slow squats or wall sits where you focus on contracting both your abs and lower back. Tense up so as to make the line between anus and belly-button as short as possible during this exercise - maybe you can replace your ab work at the same time!


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From yoga: spinal flexion and cat-cow. Very simple exercises and quite effective.

The Cat-Cow looks like this:

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Now that I'm thinking about this I realized I have a solution. But it is pretty makeshift, but it might work for someone.

I have a stable stool that I can raise to 25". If I hook my legs under a counter or very heavy table (it needs to be very steady), and place my hips on the stool I can do back raises with a makeshift Roman Chair. Kind of like this.

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The disadvantages are:

It's pretty uncomfortable on my hips, though my stool is padded, and on my ankles.
It's hard to find a good stable place to hook my legs. My table isn't heavy enough. I've found opening the door to low cupboards and hooking my legs under the counter works best, but these tend to only be available in cramped spaces. But my desk has enough junk in it to work, but is the most uncomfortable on my legs.
At 6' I can't get full range of motion, as my forehead hits the floor at about 45°.
I would guess most don't have a stool as stable as mine. It has a pretty low and wide three leg base.


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Whole body exercises like deadlifts and squats - with good form!

(Swimming is good, but it takes a while to see the effects.)


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The Bird Dog is a good exercise. Also a single-leg deadlift can be a great good exercise for strengthening the back if you have some dumbbells or suitable items to use as weight around.


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4 exercises I was given by an osteopath when I had fairly chronic muscular lower back pain were all leg related:

Lie on your back, hold each leg to the ceiling in turn and hold for 30 seconds
Pull a knee towards your face and hold for 30 seconds, for each leg
Stretch each leg against a chair seat,while standing up, as if doing a warm up for running. Hold for 30 seconds
Pull each knee as far as possible to the opposing shoulder and hold for 30 seconds

Another exercise involves using the elbow to massage the back, with a fair amount of pressure - obviously you'll need a partner/friend/willing house mate to do it though, and it hurts.


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I'd also recommend doing a high rep sets of Good Mornings with no weight for extra lower back work around the house. Good mornings hit both the lower back and glutes/hamstrings. Everything back in that region of your body is connected very tightly so good glutes/hamstrings are just as important to lower back strength and stability as your lower back muscles are.


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