What's up, guys? Jeff Cavaliere, ATHLEANX.com. No, I didn't kill Jessie for not working out
in the gym. You all remember Jessie. I've actually got Jessie here to help you
out with a common โ very common problem โ that's probably caused by a lot of the
sitting that we do. No matter whether it's due to driving, or
working, or just basically being inactive for a good portion of the day. That's called anterior pelvic tilt. Now, what are we talking about? Jessie, let's demonstrate what that is real
quick. Bend your knees up. The internal pelvic tilt is where you actually
have your pelvis tilting forward, this way. So, the anterior pelvic tilt โ go ahead
and tilt it โ is like that. So it's creating this really exaggerated arch
in Jessie's back. I'll have him sit up in a second to show it. Versus a posterior tilt that tucks it down
and in. The posterior pelvic tilt is caused by the
stretching of your abs and your glutes. So what is really causing your anterior tilt,
and what is it doing? Come on and get up on your knees, Jessie. So, the idea here is what? This is the anterior pelvic tilt. You get this exaggerate arch here and it's
caused by an imbalance of a bunch of different muscles, and some weaknesses in other muscles. There's a lot of ways to attack it, but there's
really only one right way to attack it. Most of all, it is a dominance and a shortening
of the hip flexor here on the front side of Jessie. What it does is, it's pulling down on this
pelvis here into anterior tilt. Well, it attaches right here and is pulling
down, so it's into anterior tilt. The second part of this โ this really exaggerated
arch โ is coming as a compensation to create this extension of Jessie's body because he
can't be all the way over here. He's got to extend. But guess what? His glutes are not helping him to extend. Normally โ okay, Jessie, go ahead and lay
back down โ normally the glutes right here would extend my hip behind my body. When it does that, look at what it's doing
to my upper back. It's creating a relative extension of the
upper back, relative to the lower part of my torso here. So if my glutes are weak and not doing their
job, what's going to happen? The low back and the lumbar spine is going
to say "Oh, I could do it! I can cause extension!" And it's going to be really tight and short. That's not what you want. So, when we look at this, we want to first
of all stress a few different things. We already know Jessie's got tight hip flexors. What I want to show you โ what you don't
want to do โ is start stretching your hamstrings. Because in somebody that has anterior pelvic
tilt, they're going to โ go ahead and bend down for a second so we can show this โ they're
going to have a tight hamstring. Why is that? Because the pelvis is already tilted. I'm going to show you here in a second. It's already tilted so far forward that the
hamstrings are already stretched. They donโt have anywhere else to go. Because he's already moved his pelvis this
way, his hamstrings are tight. The pelvis isn't in that position because
the hamstrings are tight. The hamstrings are tight because the pelvis
is in that position. It's a huge distinction. The pelvis is in that position because of
the tightness of the hip flexors. So going, and stretching tight muscles โ like
the hamstrings โ in an attempt to just stretch everything that's tight, it could actually
make your problem worse. So you donโt want to start stretching your
hamstrings if you see tightness in them, if you have an anterior pelvic tilt. What you want to do instead is strengthen
them. At the same time that you're strengthening
the glutes that are inactive, that are causing the low back to do all the work. I hope this is all making sense. Then finally, you've got, again, with this
tightness here of the hip flexors pulling down this way, right? So we have the pelvis being tilted down here. We get a stretching here of the abs and a
weakness there because they're not really able to contract very strongly out of this
overly stretched position. So you have to figure out a way to strengthen
your abs, and you have to figure out a way to stretch your hip flexors, while strengthening
your glutes. So we can actually do that. Jessie come on up. Abs, I've got plenty of videos here, guys. We have Washboard Wednesday devoted to 'how
to strengthen your abs'. The main thing you want to do is not use hip
flexor dominant ab movements. I actually have an entire video showing you
how to keep the hip flexor out of it when you're doing ab movements. So I'm going to link it right up here behind
Jessie's head. Make sure you do those types of ab movements
to stop using the overlay active hip flexors. As far as the glutes โ come on up โ we
can do something here which is a combination of a lunge and a stretch. So, hold onto both of those dumbbells. So focus on the lower part of Jessie's body. He's going to turn here. What we're going to do is, we're going to
preset his glutes and load them by stepping forward. Once we step forward here and we have the
glutes loaded โ because all the weight's in front here โ these are pre-stretched. They're ready to work. If we're here, what we're going to do is come
up into extension on the glutes. But look what's happening on this back leg
over here. We're actually getting a stretch of that hip
flexor at the same time that we're loading up this right glute, and then strengthening
the glute. So we want to be able to do both things at
once. So, Jessie, put the left leg back. Good. Now, put your arms out in front. Pre-stretched right here. I'm actually hitting Jessie's ass right here
on my YouTube channel. Go straight down. Never thought I'd say that. Go straight down, now he's coming up. As he extends through the hip he's strengthening
this glute, but he's stretching this left hip flexor out. So you want to start doing this. This is a โ go ahead and do a few reps. This is a great way here. We call this a modification, or a sprinter
lunge. Strengthen through here, stretching through
the back side. Drive it forward. There you go. At the end. So it's a dynamic stretch for the hip flexors
and at the same time, like I said, strengthening those glutes on the right side. You can see by orientation of the hip flexor
here, it's attached to here, and it comes all the way here and attaches to our low back. So as this is being kept in this position
all day long from sitting, we're getting this shortening โ adaptive shortening โ of
this muscle, and again, this weakness that's coming in from the glutes that's making the
low back overwork here. It's causing โ he's falling apart. It's causing him to not only fall apart, but
you to fall apart, too because you are not in balance. So I hope by bringing in Jessie here, in this
constant barrage of information, that you've caught the key points here. Stop stretching your hamstrings. They're probably going to be tight anyway,
but they're not causing this problem, they're a result of this problem. Number two: strengthen those glutes. Get that ass going, again. Number three: stretch out your low back if
it's overly tight, there's a lot of stretches to do that. Number four: stretch out your hip flexors. You can do that at the same time in one dynamic
exercise, like I showed you. And number five: get those abs strong again
and make sure you're not doing hip flexor dominant movements. All right, guys. I hope you've found this video helpful. In the meantime, if you're looking for a scientific
program that puts the science back in what we do, I donโt make it this long and drawn
out, but this is one of those more complicated issues to describe; we have it all step by
step in a program. I tell you exactly what exercises to do to
make sure we're not ending up with these types of imbalances that a lot of other programs
will leave you with. You can get that over at ATHLEANX.com in our
ATHLEANX training program. In the meantime, if you've found this video
helpful leave your comments and thumbs up below. Tell me you did it, and tell me what else
you want to see in the days and weeks ahead. All right, guys. I'll see you again soon.
I struggled with ATP for two years before I finally got it figured out in the last year, during which my max squat and deadlift went up by around 100 pounds apiece.
I agree with all of his take-home points, but I also think that for someone who has been lifting for a while, the remedy has to be a bit more severe than the fixing exercise he laid out.
When you are in ATP, you are already in lumbar extension, so forget the cue of keeping your head up during the squat and deadlift and focus on remaining neutral (think Mike Tuchscherer or Richard Hawthorne) as the head-up cue will only result in more extension.
Rolling my hip flexors between every set and doing a lot of front squats (not in extension) were the main factors that fixed my ATP.
Now I don't have to bother with the foam rolling and can actually just lift, but it was a battle for a while.
Even if you have to compromise on your big lifts for a while, it is absolutely a battle worth winning, and you will be way stronger when you get your body moving the way it was supposed to move again.
For more reading on fixing ATP, /u/troublesome had a great post about it over on /r/fitness, here
I subscribe to his channel and actually watched this the other day. Great info from him as usual! I would definitely recommend it/the channel to anyone looking to understand these concepts, such as this one, a bit better.
The #1 way to fix APT is to not sit hunched over a keyboard for hours a day. Get a reclining chair, a wireless keyboard and trackball and watch your posture magically improve.
So should I be doing these lungy deadlifty things at the end of my workouts?
This is basically me to a T. I have genetic inflexibility and a fondness for sitting. I have also been to a few well regarded PTs who never touched on APT. I'm going to start stretching the flexors habitually, it feels great.
Posture is reflexive. You beat APT by focusing on PRI breathing exercises and overhauling your force couples. Correct exercise is corrective.
I'll tell ya, two weeks in the gym isn't gonna fix it.