If you use gliding discs, you know that they add an entire new dimension to your workout, and can take body sculpting, balance and cardio to a whole new level!
If you don't own a pair of gliding discs, now is the time to invest. They're small enough so that you can keep them in your gym bag, or you could keep them in your home gym (aka your living room) for a quick workout on those days when you don't have time for the gym. Plus, they're designed so that you can use them on both carpet and hard floors, so you really have no excuse not to use these in your workouts!
Check out these 25 moves you can use with your gliding discs, or watch the video above for an 18-minute total-body disc workout.
This move will target your abs for a strong core. Be sure to engage your core muscles when performing this exercise!
Step 1: Come to all fours with your knees about 6 inches apart at the most, then slide your body forward until you create a straight, diagonal line from your thighs through your hips and torso. Your hands will be on top the gliders and directly underneath the shoulders. Have your toes curled under; this is your starting position.
Step 2: Bracing the abs and locking in the hips, slowly slide the arms out in front of you. Go a few inches the first time, exhaling as you slide the arms back under the shoulders. Go a little farther with each rep until you find your max extension. As you pull in, be sure the hips do not pike; you want to use your abs, lats and chest to control the movement.
Looking for the perfect exercise that will get you toned, muscular calves? Then the ankle flick is the one for you. Your legs will look stunning in your heels in no time!
Step 1: Start in standard plank position with your feet on your gliders, about 6 to 8 inches apart, and your hands holding your weight under your shoulders. Let the shoulder blades pull apart slightly so you're not sagging into them. Push back through your heels.
Step 2: Without moving any other body part, take one foot and point it as shown. The top of your foot should now be facing the floor. This contraction will be felt in the back of the legs – the hamstrings. As you reverse the movement, you'll use your quads to pull the foot back to the starting position.
Modification (Beginner): Drop to one knee and keep the other extended as you repeat for several reps, then switch sides.
Step 1: Stand with your feet parallel and hip-width apart with one foot on top of one glider. Your hands are in a comfortable position to help you maintain your balance during the exercise. Keep your head over your shoulder and your chin tipped and slightly upward. Shift your weight onto your heels. Engage your abs to stabilize the spine. Pull the shoulder blades down and back. Try to maintain these engagements throughout the exercise.
Step 2: Inhale and slowly step to the slide one foot out (the foot on top of the glider) while keeping your weight in your other heel. Both feet are still facing forward. Begin to shift your weight toward the stationary leg, bending that knee and pushing the hips back. Continue to lunge until your shinbone is vertical to the floor and your right knee is aligned with the second toe of your right foot. Your sliding leg should be as straight as possible and your body weight should be distributed into that hip. The heels of both feet should stay flat on the floor. Your arms can be positioned where necessary to help maintain your balance.
Step 3: Exhale and push off firmly with your stationary foot, returning to starting position. Repeat several times on one leg, then switch.
Step 1: Lie down on the floor placing with your heels on top of the gliders and legs completely extended. Place your hands behind your head and lock them together by clasping your fingers. This is the starting position.
Step 2: Exhale and elevate your upper body so that it creates an imaginary V-shape with your thighs as your thighs pull in toward the chest. Breathe out when performing this part of the exercise. Once you feel the contraction for a second, lower your upper body back down to the starting position while inhaling.
Step 1: Start by laying on the ground with your arms out to the sides and gliding disks under your hands with your knees bent.
Step 2: Slowly perform a sit up while pulling your hands into your sides squeezing your back muscles. Return to the starting position and repeat 15 times for a full workout!
Skaters are a great exercise to get your blood pumping and into your target heart rate, but you the gliders will add a little extra oomf to the move.
Step 1: Stand with your feet parallel, hip-width apart and your feet on top of the gliders. Your hands are in a comfortable position to help you maintain your balance during the exercise. Keep your head over your shoulder and your chin tipped and slightly upward. Shift your weight onto your heels. Engage your abs to stabilize the spine. Pull the shoulder blades down and back. Try to maintain these engagements throughout the exercise.
Step 2: Inhale and slowly slide one foot to the right while keeping your weight into your left heel. Both feet are still facing forward. Once your right foot is firmly placed on the floor, begin to shift your weight toward the right foot, bending the right knee and pushing the hips back. Continue to lunge until your shinbone is vertical to the floor and your right knee is aligned with the second toe of your right foot. Your left leg should be as straight as possible and your body weight should be distributed into the right hip. The heels of both feet should stay flat on the floor. Your arms can be positioned where necessary to help maintain your balance.
Step 3: Exhale and push off firmly with your right foot, returning to starting position. Repeat the movement for the opposite side.
Step 4: Repeat on the other side.
Tip: Reaching for your right foot with your left hand will emphasize hip flexion (alternate with the right hand reaching for the left foot).
Step 1: Stand with your feet parallel, hip-width apart with either foot on a glider. Your hands are in a comfortable position to help you maintain your balance during the exercise. Keep your head over your shoulder and your chin tipped and slightly upward. Shift your weight onto your heels. Engage your abs to stabilize the spine. Pull the shoulder blades down and back. Try to maintain these engagements throughout the exercise.
Step 2: Inhale and slowly slide one leg slightly in front of you while keeping your weight in the other heel. Both feet are still facing forward. The heels of both feet should stay flat on the floor. Your arms can be positioned where necessary to help maintain your balance.
Step 3: Exhale and slide the leg around to the side, keeping the weight firmly in your stationary leg.
Step 4: Finally slide it to the back and return to the starting position to complete this move.
Step 1: Lie on your stomach on an exercise mat or floor with your elbows close to your sides and directly under your shoulders, palms down and fingers facing forward. Place your hands on the discs. Engage your abdominal/core muscles. It should feel like you are tightening a corset around your ribs, waist and lower torso. Contract your thigh muscles to straighten your legs strongly and flex your ankles. Slowly lift your torso and thighs off the floor or mat. Keep your torso and legs rigid. Do not allow any sagging in your ribcage or low back. Avoid hiking your hips into the air or bending the knees.
Step 2: Slowly slide your left arm out in front of you putting the majority of your weight on your right arm. Hold, return to the starting position and repeat on the other side. Exhale as you extend the arm outward and inhale as in returns.
Modification (Beginner): Drop to your knees or use only one slider at a time.
Step 1: Place your hands on either of the gliders, belly to the floor. Slowly slide the hands straight forward, stretching your body into a straight position.
Step 2: After a pause at the stretched position, start pulling yourself back to the starting position as you breathe out.
Step 3: While holding your chest and head up, slide your hands to your sides slightly in front of you.
Step 4: Send the hands back toward the hips, then push through to find your starting position again.
Tip: Go slowly and keep your abs tight at all times.
For a move that will work your arms and your abs, try the gliding arm circles. Remember to utilize your core as well.
Step 1: Start in the standard plank position. Feet are hip-width apart, pushing back through the heels, while your hands are under the shoulders and on top of the gliders. Do not let the hips sag or pike as you work.
Step 2: Without shifting the body forward, slide one hand in front of you while the other hand stabilizes your body weight.
Step 3: In a continuous motion, you'll slide the hand out to the side as far as you can reach while maintaining your strong plank.
Step 4: Finally, slide the hand behind and to the side of you before sending it up through the middle again. You can alternate sides or repeat several reps on one side before switching.
Modification (beginner): Drop to your knees.
You already know that the army crawl is notorious for being a great (read: difficult) full-body workout, but have you ever tried it on gliding discs? Now's the time!
Step 1: Lie on your belly with your nose to the floor and your arms extended in front of you. Have a glider under each foot.
Step 2: Keeping your forearms glued to the floor, pull your entire body forward until the elbows are tucked into your rib cage. You should feel this move in the lats – the muscles on the sides of your ribs as well as through the upper back and shoulders.
Step 3: Lower the chest back to the floor as you extend the arms in front of you again, preparing for the next rep.
The burpee is a simultaneously loved and hated exercise because it gets results. The added gliders will kick your cardio up a notch!
Step 1: Stand tall with each foot on top of a glider. Your feet should be under your hips.
Step 2: Lower the body down until your hands are on the floor on the outside of your legs.
Step 3: Slide the feet behind you until you get into a high plank position. Shoulders are over the wrists, hips are locked into place (no sagging or piking) and feet are still hip-width or about 6 to 8 inches apart.
Step 4: While you're there, drop into your push-up! Real Mom Model Jean Sherfick shows a tricep push-up here, but you can perform a traditional push-up with the elbows pointing at a 45-degree angle behind you, or drop to your knees. Just keep your feet on the floor and on top of the gliders.
Step 5: Exhale and push yourself out of the push-up, returning to your plank. Inhale here.
Step 6: Exhale again as you slide the knees back under you until your feet are completely under your hips again.
Step 7: Use the power of your squatted position to explode upward into a vertical jump or stand and raise your arms overhead. Be sure to land directly back on the gliders to perform the next rep.
Modification (Beginner): Drop to your knees for the push-up; perform the burpee with your hands on an elevated surface like a bench or step.
Step 1: Lie on your back with your arms at your sides and the soles of your feet together. Let the knees drop out to the sides for the butterfly position and have a single glider under the feet. Squeeze the glutes (do not use your lower back) and lift the pelvis off the floor.
Step 2: Slowly slide your feet away from your body as far as you can go. The knees will likely have a slight bend in them even at the max of your extension. Exhale; squeeze the glutes and your inner thighs to pull the feet back to the starting position.
Here's another move that will work your glutes; the gliding curtsy lunge will really give your legs a workout!
Step 1: Stand with your feet under your hips with one foot in the center of the glider. The heel can be behind it since it will lift off of the floor at the full extension of the movement. Stand tall with the abs braced.
Step 2: Inhale and slide the leg behind you at a diagonal so it not only goes backward, but to the other side. Your legs create a crossed formation, bending in both knees. The front knee must stay behind the toes of the front front. Try to get the back knee as close to the floor as possible. Exhale and push through the front leg to return to the starting position.
The gliding discs will add a whole new element to the forearm plank. It's important to keep your core engaged in order to get the most out of the move.
Step 1: Assume a forearm plank with your shoulders over the elbows and feet together. Push back through your heels and let the shoulder blades round out to engage the lats. If you need to step the feet out wider for better balance, do so no more than 12". Have each elbow on a glider.
Step 2: Move the arms forward and back, alternating between the right and left arm. Each arm will extend about 6 inches in front of you. As you slide the arm forward, keep your entire body square to the floor – this means no rocking or opening up to the side!
Modification (Beginner): Drop to your knees, but maintain the straight diagonal line from the thighs through the hips and torso.
Step 1: Lie on your back with your arms at your sides. Have each heel in the center of a glider. Squeeze the glutes together to lift the pelvis off of the floor. Do not put tension or pressure in the lower back – if you do feel discomfort in the low back, stop and switch to a bridge lift to help you strengthen the posterior muscles first.
Step 2: Exhale and use your hamstrings and glutes to pull the heels closer to the body. Your range of motion is limited to the strength of your hamstrings. Inhale and slowly slide the heels back to the starting position without lowering the hips to the floor. Again, you should not feel this in your lower back.
It's important to remember your hips when working out! This move will not only target your hip flexors, but also your glutes and thighs!
Step 1: Kneel on the floor and place a glider under each knee. Brace your abdominal muscles to stabilize your spine. Try to keep the torso from moving throughout the exercise.
Step 2: Slowly slide the knees out to the side while maintaining balance and vertical posture. Hold on to a stable surface for balance as needed. Continue sliding until you cannot move any farther without allowing your hips to shift or torso to lean. Pause briefly. Slowly return to your starting position in a slow, controlled manner without losing your balance or changing the position of your torso.
For this move to be completely effective, keep your core tight and your back straight. It will work your entire body!
Step 1: Come into a standard plank with your wrists under your shoulders and each of your feet on top of a glider. Make sure your hips are locked into place by squeezing through the inner thighs and engaging the lats.
Step 2: Without piking your hips, use your lower abs to pull the knees under the chest. You might not be able to get as close with the first try, but you'll get stronger with each rep! Exhale on the pull and inhale as you push the legs back out to the starting position. Do not let the hips sag as you return.
Remember to keep everything in nice and tight — that means not only your core, but your glutes, too.
Step 1: Position your hands as needed to allow full extension of your body without any bend at the hips or knees. Brace your torso by engaging your core muscles. Contract your glutes and quadriceps (butt and thigh muscles), and align your head with your spine. Place your feet together with your toes tucked towards your shins. Have each foot on top of a glider.
Step 2: Exhale and gently draw one foot in front of the other as your hips rotate to the same side your foot is moving. Do NOT allow your hips and low back to pitch upwards or sag down towards the floor.
Step 3: Continue to move until your hips cannot rotate any further. Your head and shoulder should remain level throughout the exercise. Pause very briefly.
Step 4: Reverse the rotation until you return to the starting position. Immediately perform the rotation on the other side.
Kick your cardio up a notch with the gliding mountain climber! This will raise your heart rate and work your entire body.
Step 1: Come to your hands and knees on the floor. Your hands should be slightly ahead of your shoulders and your fingers pointing forward. Bring one knee under your chest while extending the other leg behind you. Brace your abdominal muscles to stabilize your spine. Pull your shoulder blades down and back.
Step 2: Keeping your hands firmly on the ground, your abs engaged and shoulders strong, jump to switch leg positions. Both feet leave the ground as your drive your right knee forward and reach your left leg back. Now your left leg is fully extended behind you and your right knee and hip are bent with your right foot on the floor.
Modification (Beginner): Place the hands on an elevated step or bench.
Step 1: Come to a seated position on one hip with the legs stacked over each other and bent at the knees. Place the bottom hand on the glider.
Step 2: Slowly slide the hand out keeping the elbow straight. Stabilize through the bottom oblique, going only as far as you can with good control. Pause at the bottom of the motion, and then slowly return the handle to the starting position. For multiple repetitions, avoid completely returning the weight to keep tension on the muscles being worked.
Keep your legs and back straight to get the most out of this move. As usual, it's important to really take advantage of your core muscles.
Step 1: Begin in an all-fours position with your feet on top of the gliders. Lengthen your legs and stretch your heels behind you. Your hands should be under your shoulders. It is important to keep your ribcage knitted together and the abdominals strong in order to maintain a rigid torso. Keep your shoulder blades pulling away from your shoulders and toward your hips. Elbows must be straight and hands directly under your shoulders. Keep your legs active.
Step 2: Exhale. Keeping your legs straight and strong, pull your feet toward your hands. The ball will roll forward as your hips pike upward toward the ceiling. Continue this movement until your hips are directly over your shoulders, if you can. Your legs, torso and arms should all be straight and strong. Keep your neck long; your head between your arms. Your can point your toes but always keep your toes connected to the top of the ball.
Tip: This brings your body into somewhat of a handstand position. Be aware of your shoulder strength and keep the elbows straight.
Step 1: Lie on your stomach on an exercise mat or floor with your elbows close to your sides and directly under your shoulders, palms down and fingers facing forward. Slowly lift your torso and thighs off the floor or mat. Keep your torso and legs rigid. Do not allow any sagging in your ribcage or low back. Avoid hiking your hips into the air or bending the knees. Keep the shoulders away from the ears (no shrugging). The shoulders should be directly over your elbows with your palms facing down through the entire exercise.
Step 2: Continue to breathe, keeping the abdominals strong while holding this position. Then, slide the legs away from the midline of the body about 6 to 12 inches. Do not pike the hips or let them sag. Pull them back to the starting position and repeat.
Tip: If you experience any pain in the low back with this movement, stop the exercise immediately and consult with your doctor.
Modification (Beginner): Slide one leg out at a time or drop to the knees sliding one leg out at a time.
Step 1: Begin in a standing position. Your hands should be on your hips or hanging at your sides. Look directly forward, keeping your chest up, with your feet shoulder-width apart. Place the foot of the moving leg on top of the glider. This will be your starting position.
Step 2: Initiate the movement by sliding the foot to the rear, allowing your hips and knees to flex to lower your body. Contacting the back leg through only the ball of the foot, descend until your knee nearly touches the ground. Use a slow and controlled motion, paying special attention to proper mechanics and posture. The knee should stay in line with the foot, and the thoracic spine should remain neutral. After a brief pause, return to the starting position by driving through the heel of the front leg to extend the knees and hips.
Step 1: Begin in a reverse plank with your hands under your shoulders and legs extended in front of you. The hips should be in line with the rest of the body and your heels are placed in the center of the gliders.
Step 2: Now bend your hips at a 90-degree angle and bring them through the arms. Exhale as you pull them in, leaning the chest forward.
Tip: Try to straighten your legs as much as possible while at the top. Reverse the movement.
Original article and pictures take asset.popculture.com site
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