Saturday, February 4, 2012

Use This Old School Neck Workout To Strengthen Your Neck

ByMichael David McIntyre

Expert Author Michael David McIntyre

Other than aesthetic reasons building your neck using neck workouts has the added benefit of reducing injury to this area if you are an athlete. Boxers and wrestlers especially train their neck. It also allows you to take a punch to the jaw better as your head will be sturdier, but do try to block the punch instead of taking one.

The Best Neck Workout

Here is a neck workout you can use to build an impressive neck. It comprises two neck exercises, with an easier version for you guys to practice before performing the hard version. If you are involved in heavy contact sports like MMA, boxing, wrestling, rugby, American football or just want to look like you have pythons crawling out of your collar, do try the following neck exercises.

Preliminary Wrestlers Bridge

Lie on your back with the bottoms of your feet on the surface, with your hands each side of your scalp with fingers towards feet. Propel your body away from the surface until your hips are high, with your trunk plus limbs forming an arch. Lay the apex of the head on a flat rolled up towel. This is the starting position. Now keeping both your hands and also the head touching the surface, bring down your head until your neck and upper shoulder muscles rest on the surface. Now steadily raise your head back upward using only your neck muscle plus palms.

Full Wrestler's Bridge

Lay on your back with the bottoms of your feet on the floor, together with hands either side of your skull, with fingers pointing towards legs. Push your body off the surface until your hips are high and your trunk plus limbs form an arch. Relax the apex of your head on a flat rolled up towel. Steadily take both your hands off of the floor until just the head and feet are on the surface. Rest the arms along your chest. This will be the start point. Now, lower yourself down little by little once again using only your neck muscles and come down until eventually your neck and also upper shoulder area touch the ground. Gently push back up with your neck muscle to complete 1 rep.

Preliminary Front Bridge

Kneel down on the floor with your knee joints wide apart. Bend over forwards, inserting the palms on the floor, and place the top of one's skull in the middle of your hands. Rest your head over a slim cushion. Take away both your hands, until finally all the pressure goes through the knee joints, shins, feet and also head. Place both your hands at the rear of your back. Enable your head to pivot back until your nose reaches the floor. Return back to the beginning then rotate the head rightwards, move back to the beginning then rotate the head left. Return to the beginning position again and perform repeatedly.

Full Front Bridge

Enter into a wide position with the feet greater than shoulder length apart. Bend forwards at the hips, putting your hands on the surface with your skull in between your hands over a narrow rolled up towel. Clear away both your hands until eventually it's just your feet and head making contact with the floor. Right here is the beginning position; now rotate backwards till your nose touches the floor. Return to the initial position and rotate your head right. Go back to the start and pivot the head leftwards and go back to the start position. That is just one repetition and continue for designated amount of repetitions.

About the Author: Michael McIntyre is a trainer who gives advice to men and women who want a body that has "The Hollywood Look". Get the big & toned physique like a fitness model or favourite Hollywood superstar by checking out my website http://www.somebodylied.com. Click on neck workouts, to view this article accompanied with video instruction.

Article Source:http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Michael_David_McIntyre

Did you find this article helpful?00Get Involved0 commentsSuggest a topicArticle ToolsPrint this articleE-mail to a friendEzinePublisherReport this articleCite this articleStay InformedGet notified by email when new articles are added to this category or written by this author.Subscribe to New Article Alerts:

Health and Fitness: Build-Muscle
Michael David McIntyre

Email Address:SubscribeBuild Muscle Article FeedFind More ArticlesSearchSimilar ArticlesNeck Exercises - Strengthening Workouts and Stretches For Neck Pain7 Advanced Stability Ball Workouts to Strengthen Your CorePlank Workout Routine to Flatten Your Abs4 Neck and Upper Body Strengthening ExercisesStrengthening Your Heart5 Exercises For Your Back, Neck and ShouldersImpossibly Simple Ways to Strengthen Your "Core" Muscles For Weight LossExercise Ball Exercises - A Great Way to Strengthen Your Core2 Best Exercises to Strengthen Your Lower BodyBest Workout Routines to Strengthen the Upper BodyRecent ArticlesFemale Bodybuilding - How to Ensure Correct Training Depending on Body TypeGetting the 8 Pack Abs You Dream AboutFemale Bodybuilding Information for the NewbiesBuild Muscle, Lose WeightWhat Is Creatine and What Is It Used in Bodybuilding?How to Gain Weight Body BuildingHow To Build Lean Muscle - The Right WayHow You Can Build Your Biceps Quickly And Maintain Muscle Mass EffectivelyLean Muscle DietDon't Teach Bad Weight Lifting TechniquesSubmitted On January 13, 2012. Viewed 23 times. Word count: 596.

MLA Style Citation:
McIntyre, Michael D.".".13 Jan. 2012EzineArticles.com.26 Jan. 2012 .APA Style Citation:
McIntyre, M. D. (2012, January 13). . Retrieved January 26, 2012, from http://ezinearticles.com/?Use-­This-­Old-­School-­Neck-­Workout-­To-­Strengthen-­Your-­Neck&id=6815659Chicago Style Citation:
McIntyre, Michael D. "." EzineArticles.com. http://ezinearticles.com/?Use-­This-­Old-­School-­Neck-­Workout-­To-­Strengthen-­Your-­Neck&id=6815659EzineArticles.com© 2012 EzineArticles.com
All Rights Reserved Worldwide

About UsFAQContact UsMember BenefitsPrivacy PolicyShopSite MapBlogTrainingVideo ArchiveAdvertisingAffiliatesCartoonsAuthorsSubmit ArticlesMembers LoginPremium MembershipExpert AuthorsEndorsementsEditorial GuidelinesTerms of ServicePublishersFollow UsTerms Of ServiceEzines / Email AlertsManage SubscriptionsEzineArticles RSS

View the Original article

No comments:

Post a Comment