The squat is one of the 7 primal movements and is the only global movement that can assist in your posture if you do it right. Too often, when watching exercise tutorials, going to fitness classes, or personal training sessions, they teach the squat wrong. Doing the 100 squat challenge will tell your body more times how to squat wrong😑. So check out this video on ALL the areas needed to squat correctly.
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The squat. The squat is a very important movement to get down. Not only is it part of the seven primal movements, which take us through life, but it’s also really important for your postural system. Now, I’m not going to just regurgitate information on how to do a squat. I’m going to dive a little bit deeper on all the components necessary for a good squat to do in the gym, but also in life. Hello, I’m Ekemba Sooh. I’m a Soma Therapist and Soma Trainer. I own Solcore Fitness and I’ve been in this field for professionally for 30 years, and I started off as a personal trainer, but I’ve been working out since I been about 16 years old. So tack on another five or six years of experience of being in the gym. At the beginning, I got a lot of hearsay information on how to work out, and I’m sorry to say it was 90% bad.
Most of the information you get in the gym is not based on science. They may have some information, but it’s kind of convoluted in this is what I’ve felt and stuff like that. You need to use experience. This is what I felt with science. Okay? If not, you’re kind of guessing and listening to Joe in the corner who has been working out for a while but doesn’t know the science of exercise. Again, that’s why in school, in class or degree, they call it exercise science. Now I go a step further and I make it holistic because guess that’s how the body is designed. So it’s about combining how everything’s connected with the science and experience so that you can live your best life. That’s what we’re going to talk about here on this channel is more of a holistic way of doing things that is steeped in science.
So if you want to hear more, then subscribe and hit that bell to be notified. If you like this video, please give it a thumbs up. It tells the YouTube overlords that this is good and I show it to more people. Then share it with your friends. So the squat is part of the seven primal or basic movements that we do in life. Squatting, bending, pushing, pulling, twisting, lunging, and gait, which is your walk or your run. Those movements are done by themselves or together all the time in life. There’s no getting away from that. You can also talk about global movements. So global movements is more of a broad topic saying I use my whole body to produce a movement. That global movement can be one of the seven problem movements, a combination of the seven problem movements or something just more abstract like dancing, which does use them. But globally, I’m using my whole body to produce a movement now at the squatting. Now when you go to squat, you’re going to be learning to squat consciously or unconsciously, meaning you’re either consciously teaching yourself to squat or you’re just going to a class or a trainer
And learning it kind of unconsciously, kind of just doing it. I can’t tell you how many people I’ve seen show me a squat that does this, assuming that because the teacher in class was doing that for tighten your booty class or burn body fat, and some of the techniques then seen in some of these functional training classes aren’t functional at all because the function of body will go down. I know because back when I was 16 or 17, whenever it was, I was taught to squat like that head up out. I’m not quite sure what the thinking was back then and why to teach it that way, but that is totally stupid. There’s a terrible way to do a squat, yet it’s still being taught today. Now, there’s a lot more details I’m going to talk about later on what could also be part of a good squat, but just from the standpoint, if I’m sticking my butt out and looking up, that’s a lot of force in my lower back and my neck through gravity and if I have weight on my back through weight.
So now the forces aren’t going through my body nicely, they’re stopping my lower back and my neck. And so when I ended up getting an L 4 L f5 pinch of my vertebrae and sciatic pain, a big part of that was a squat that started when I was 16, and so I got the injury at like 35. So it’s a big time in between. So learning how to squat and in particular of the squat, like all global movements is very important. So now the big difference between the squat and the other six primal movements that the squat you can use to directly influence how good your posture is. So the other ones use your posture, but they don’t help it get better. So your postal system is made up of two main components. You have your plumb line, which is your ear, shoulder, hip, knee, and ankle lined up approximately.
And so the squat doesn’t, it doesn’t help that get better, but having a good plumb line helps to squat. So it’s better if I have a posture like that before I put a bar or do a body weight squat. And if I have a posture like most people like that, because if I squat in this position, it’s going to make my plumb line posture worse. The other component is a gravity line as part of the postal system. So you have a plumb line and now you have the gravity line. The gravity line is an inverse four degree cone. So right below my pubic bone as it comes up, it envelops between four degrees. I want to be able to keep myself in that four degree cone. There’s some basic areas of your body that communicate to your brain to tell you where your plumb line, your feet, your spine, your eyes, ears and TMJ.
They all tell the brain, I’m here in space. If one of those is off, your body thinks it’s somewhere else, the squat can help with that gravity line position as a global movement to help keep you in that four degree cone. Now, the squat, like most global movements, is made up of a bunch of different little parts working together to make one big movement. You want to work with your body in all these little individual ones before you try to master big ones. So the easiest way I can tell you about this is your body’s interconnected together and interdependent. That means they all work together. It’s like a links of a chain. So you’re a bunch of links in a chain and you’re only as strong as your weakest link. So if one of my links is a piece of bubble gum, then when I could do is squat my squats only as good is that bubblegum link, right?
And it’s a little silly to think about, but I want an extreme example for you to think about. So in all these aspects I’m about to talk about, you need to trade ’em separately. So with a squat, there’s a thing called the beam phenomenon. It means when I squat, when I do my movement, I want my torso to be like a beam, like a two by four. I want that because as I move up and down, I want it to stay in my beam area and not wobble around as it wobbles around. As I’m going up and down with force, I can even body weight, but even worse with weight on your back, that force goes in weird places, places you don’t want it to go. So you want to have a strong pelvic floor, abs, diaphragm, peck, lats, res, interior and bucco mouth pharyngeal down your throat fascia.
These components keep me in that beam phenomenon and each one needs to be trained separately. But again, you’re squatting, so don’t forget your feet. Your feet are on the ground. They need to push you up and down. So they need to function properly, which you’re going to lead me to a quick side note about squatting without shoes. I’m all for being barefoot and letting your feet do their job. I tell people to walk around without shoes at home all the time to do different things to train your feet. But when you do weighted squats, heavy squats, and you go up and down, your foot’s being supported by your arch, namely your navicular bone on the inside of your foot, the arch part. And so if that navicular arch can’t support the squat up and down, it collapses. So I’m not saying don’t squat without shoes, but there’s a certain limit to the weight that you should be doing.
So if you’re going three, five, even eight reps in a really heavy weight, I probably wouldn’t not wear shoes. I’m going to wear shoes with some arch support. How’s your squat? Are you working on it? Did you know about all those different parts of your body that are involved in the squat? Well, stay tuned because I’m going to go over some more details on how the form of the squat. Okay, so let’s talk a little bit about the form of a squat. So I’m dealing with my hands and then I got my bench here so I can kind of show you a couple reps. But first and foremost, I want my body to be even, and this is from math is not from because Ekemba said. So that’s my upper body, that’s my tibia and my shins, okay? I want my upper body, my shins, to be the same angle as you go up and down.
That means my center of gravity stays below me right here like that. If I don’t do that and I end up bending forward, my center of gravity goes back and I get more tension, my lower back. Or if I too far forward, my center of gravity goes forward and I tip back and I get too much a tension in my knees. So you want to be even, I always tell people kind of like an accordion because to me that made sense. I don’t know why, because you’re folding yourself kind of in thirds as you move yourself down and up. But the whole goal is to move straight down and straight up. So the two areas I see people have issues with are keeping their pelvis tucked and push her knees forward. So a term that was used at some point, I dunno if they still use it now, is that a squat is a knee dominant movement.
What that means is the knees dominate the movement of going up and down. It’s the main area that you want to focus on to produce that movement. Now, it’s not the only area as I’m going to show you here in a second, but think about the knees moving up and down. So I go to squat, ouch. I go to squat. The first thing I want to do is I want to stand like I’m standing on a clock, right? 12 o’clock is my pubic bone. My feet are 10 o’clock and two o’clock. That’s normal physiological position of your feet. People who tell you to turn your toes straight ahead, that’s internal rotation. Standing like that in some varying degrees is normal. That’s your feet. That’s normal. So as I stay in there in 10 o’clock and two o’clock, I want to first think about tucking my pelvis and tucking my chin.
This is part of that beam phenomenon. The pelvis tuck, the chin tucked. Again, those other aspects I talked about before that need to happen. But let’s start with just those. After I tuck, tuck, again, knee dominant movement. So my knees start moving forward first, and because I want my torso and my shins to be same angle, then I start to bow forward. I like to reach forward because I want to have a little counterbalance. Then I move myself down and up. Knee dominant movement, keeping my torso and my tibia, my shins the same angle. Now, if you’re having trouble tucking your pelvis when you do that, couple reasons. One, your abs and specifically your lower abs are not strong enough to keep your pelvis tucked. So you need to train not just your lower abs, please don’t think that train all of your abs, but understand the lower abs or for that tuck.
But it can also be through tight chain, tight myofascial chain. So when I go to tuck, I could have the strongest abs in the world, but if all this is tight and is stopping of the tucking, then I’m going to lose my tuck. So it’s not just the abs you want to think about, am I tight through my lats and S radius and all those thorac or fascia? All that fascia in back for the knees going forward. The big thing I see is tight soleus and calves because as they go down that area, the heel start to come up and the knees stop moving forward. It would stop them moving forward. So at basically need to stretch the soleus in the calves, but you also probably need to strengthen because I can only stretch a muscle that’s there. So if I don’t have muscles in my soleus, in calves, I also need to strengthen because muscle tissue works much better.
Then tenderness type tissue. Now, when you practice that, if you see you have issues with the squat in one of these different areas, you need to stop and deconstruct that and then to reconstruct. Now, that’s difficult if you are in a class or in a training program where the focus is more on body fat loss, which the majority of classes are, or a class that uses functional movement to produce a certain effect for a competition, they’re going to do later on with the same type of movements. Their coaches or trainers might teach you some basics about form. But taking time to learn something takes time. So I can’t just show you a couple of movements and you do four or five reps, 10 reps maybe, and you got it down. It takes some time because if you don’t take time to do it, when you go do that class, so that training session and the goal is to perform or to burn fat, you’re going to lose your form, right?
It’s like if I was teaching myself to type and I didn’t teach myself where the keys were because the goal was to type as many buttons as possible to fill the page. I don’t care about typing it properly, proper words. I care about filling the page with letters because that’s what my coach told me. So if you don’t learn to squat and go through, you’re going to be damaging your body. Now, you may think, Kimba, I don’t feel any pain. I’m not damaging my body. You are. You’re beginning to damage your body. You don’t feel pain at the beginning of damage your body. You feel later on the example I gave myself of being taught a bad squat at 16, but then at about 35 or so get an injury. It’s like a leaky faucet.
So if I have a leaky faucet and the drip starts at the beginning, maybe I notice it, maybe I don’t. It doesn’t mess up the basin of the sink, but after 10 years, 15 years, 20 years, there’s going to be a hole. There’s going to be a rust, right? Because I didn’t fix the link, the link at the beginning, okay? Now that you’ve got this great information to squat, what you need to go do is go practice. One of the greatest gifts exercises can give us is to develop a relationship with our body. Tell us where we’re tight, where we’re weak, where we’re disconnected with, so we can do something about it. So there’s not a curse of your body if you feel tight or weak or disconnected. It’s just your body telling you, Hey, brother or sister, I need a little assistance. Because when we find those things out, now we can do something about it to have it work better.
Because if we can take care of our bodies, our bodies will take care of us. We’ve been given this wonderful gift of a body that we can keep for 70, 80, 90, maybe a hundred years. So as soon as possible, get to know it and take care of it. So can live. You can live a great life. If you want some assistance on this, which most people need, then I’d be happy to help. So if you’ve got a free Facebook group where we can be more interactive to learn about this holistic way of taking care of yourself in description below, there’s a link for it. All you got to do is answer some questions. Let us know a little bit about yourself, and you’re in. You can now participate in challenges and masterclasses and interactions within a group. Or if you don’t want to do that, there’s a book.
I’ve got a free ebook. It’s on how to live your Best Life. There’s four steps to it to become mobile and to get out of pain. And then like I said, to live your best life. Again, in the description, there’s a link. All I need is your name and email. We’ll give you an instant access, or if you want to talk about your situation and what you can do, I’ve got a link in the description too. Set up a time to talk to me v Calendly. So I hope to speak to you soon. Good luck to you, and I’ll see you next week.
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