Your Booty Means More Than Looks
The reason why building booty will improve your entire body.
The Gluteal muscle (butt Muscle) is most important of all the skeletal muscles in your body. They consist of the gluteus minimus, medius and maximus. Maximus is the largest muscle of the three. The glute muscles stabilize your pelvis during running and walking. You need strong glutes to help with hip extension and forward propulsion. It helps move your thigh in different directions. Every time you take a step, you’re using your glute muscles.
When the glutes aren’t doing their job, muscle function and movement mechanics in the hips– as well as strength, power, mobility, stability, posture, and athletic performance all suffer. Their function is to allow us to run, walk, climb stairs, squat and move. Proper alignment of the pelvis, torso and legs also depend on strong glutes and play an important role in maintaining your balance. We need to keep this muscle healthy and active.
How it effects back pain
There is a strong link between lower back pain and weak glute muscles. If your glutes are not strong, your entire lower body alignment may fall out of balance. Weak glutes lead to lower back problems. If you are finding yourself feeling sore in your legs, back or both for even a short period then weak and inactive glutes could possibly be contributing to your back problems. Your lower back depends on your hip flexors, glutes and hamstrings to work properly to remain balanced and safe. All three Gluteal muscles have important roles to play in assisting with the stabilisation of the lower back and pelvis, as well as extend, externally rotate the leg and adduct or abduct the hip.
When you lose hip mobility you take more movement from the lower back. Lose movement in one place and you move more in another. The back hurts because it’s over working. The best thing to help your lower back is to activate your glutes. When the glutes start to weaken, compensation occurs elsewhere. The legs, and hips, the lower back and quads must work harder to compensate.
Remember an inactive gluteus tightens hip flexors and curves the spine, throwing off posture and causing back pain. The more that you use your gluteus maximus, the less your back and knees will suffer. Having strong glutes is key to being pain-free.
Siting doesn’t help the Glutes
Unfortunately from all of the skeletal muscles the Gluteus muscle group is the most neglected. With a large percentage of our population spending the majority of their day sitting, we are developing what has become known as “sloppy bottom”. When you sit for long periods of time your hip flexors tighten up and prevent activation of the glutes. Your pelvis can’t rotate forward, causing compression in the lower back which can lead to back pain. Sitting also reduces the activity of the nerves that are involved in stimulating and contracting the muscles. This is very significant and detrimental to the healthy functioning of the glutes. Health practitioners are finding a marked correlation between the lack of strength in this glute area and chronic pain in the lower back, hips, knees or ankles.
Glute activation
It is really important to activate your glute muscles. Your gluteus maximus is one of the largest and most dominant muscles in your entire body. This muscle controls and powers almost all of your lower body movements. It connects to your core, quads and hamstrings, and your iliotibial band that runs along the side of your legs. The iliotibial bands connects your glutes to your knees. If your glutes aren’t activating to their full potential you are then relying on other smaller muscles to do their work. You’ll fatigue, run slow, and be prone to injuries in your lower back, knees and shins, and ankles. Therefore a tight Gluteus Muscle and trigger points in your Piriformis can cause low back pain and tightness. They can even lead to hip pain and cause referred pain down your leg.
So how do you activate your glutes and build strength on your backside? You want to incorporate specific strength training exercises that isolate and target your glutes. There are many simple exercises that will create strong glutes without requiring you to spend hours at the gym. Exercises Like the Clamshell, the Glute Bridge, deadlifts, deep squats, lunges and step-ups will help activate those Glutes. It’s always best though to see your local chiropractor or health practitioner as they can assess you properly and provide you with the necessary exercises.
Remember the body is an interconnected system. If the muscles do not fire in the right sequence, other muscles compensate, resulting possibly in strain or injury. Weak glutes can’t stabilise your pelvis, which causes it to tilt forward. This puts pressure on your lower spine. As a result the lower back can be injured if it is forced to do the hip-extending job of the glutes. The ankles can be strained if misused due to improper alignment caused by inactive glutes. Strengthening your glutes can help improve posture which is especially important for women and mother’s post partum as we spend time sitting down feeding , standing with baby, picking up heavy objects and climbing stairs as well as other household or work chores.
Fit Mamas it’s time to lift that booty and improve your glutes for a your whole body improvement.
Grab a copy of Fit Mama – complete bonus set 7 – 3 times weekly.
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Health and Happiness,
b.x
This article is gold. Ever since I started working on my glutes I’ve noticed considerable improvements regarding my lower back pain. I’m still lacking in the activation department, but I’m trying out neat little cues that help with glute activation. What do you think about this hip flexors program https://fitnessproductsreviews.health.blog/2019/05/17/unlock-your-hip-flexors-review/ by the way? I can’t decide if something like this would be helpful to start doing in tandem with the other stuff I’m already doing. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.