Stability Ball Workouts
What is a Stability Ball Workout ?A stability ball workouts
are an entire exercise session on the stability
ball.
A stability ball or Swiss ball is considered the
best exercise ball by some.
People who have never used stability balls before may be skeptical to the
idea you can get a good workout with just a Swiss ball.
These people would most likely be experienced "old school" weight lifters who
have the mindset that if their not using triple digit weighing steel weights the
workouts are not effective.
Stability ball exercises have a place in any exercise program and a good
stability ball workout can be performed at home, in the gym or even outdoors.
A workout is a full exercise or training session is a certain amount of time.
During the time you workout, your exercise selection should be determined by
which exercises are best for achieving your fitness goals.
Are Stability Ball Workouts Effective for Accomplishing
your Goals ?You Must first Ask Yourself and Write Down what Your
Specific Goals are
In order to determine the most effective workout for your time you must have
a reason for working out in the first place.
Goal setting is very important as it will eliminate wasted time due to
performing an ineffective exercise selection.
If your goal is to lose a very small amount of weight (tone up), strengthen
your muscles slightly, strengthen your stabilizers or strengthen your abdominals
and core, then stability ball workouts may be all you need.
If you have significant goals such as gaining 20 pounds of muscle, losing 20
pounds of fat, becoming a powerlifter or just increasing your strength
dramatically, a stability ball alone will not do it.
A Stability Ball can be an Integral Part of Any Workout
Stability balls are versatile and can be used by themselves for a total
stability ball workout or they can be used in conjunction with other pieces of
equipment or body weight exercises which require no other equipment other than
the Swiss ball and your willingness to perform exercises on it.

There are 3 Types of Stability Ball Workouts
Stability Ball Only
If you want to perform an entire workout with exercises which involve the
stability ball for whatever reason, you can do so. You can also use
multiple stability balls for some exercises. There are stability ball
exercises for most of your body's muscle groups. You can perform groups
supersets which is doing 2 exercises back-to-back with no rest in between for
one set.
Performing supersets and even larger sets with little or no rest are easy to
perform with the stability ball. Since every exercise is being performed
on the ball, you never have very far to go so you have little excuse for rest.
If workouts with just the stability ball are designed
properly, you will not have to stop to rest very often because you will be
working opposing muscle groups. "Supersetting" opposing muscle groups
together allows you to recover one body part while you exercise the other.
Stability Ball & Body Weight Exercises Only
An example of an exercise set which uses body weight exercises along with
stability ball exercises is on the right. Stability ball crunches and
rotating down to the floor for push-ups is a great way to work your chest,
abdominals and transverse abdominis (core) at the same time.
If you do not have access to any other equipment and want a great workout you
can create one on a stability ball which involves body weight exercises off of
the ball.
Since you are using your body weight as resistance with stability ball
exercises, it makes little sense to limit yourself to exercises on the ball.
Stability balls are great, but during some situations in your workout a body
weight only movement may be the best exercise to use.
You can also superset a stability ball exercise with a floor exercise which
works the same body part.
For example, push-ups on the stability ball or 2 stability balls are far more
difficult than push-ups on the floor.
To work your chest muscle group very hard you can perform a set of stability
ball push-ups to failure and immediately transition into floor push-ups until
you cannot perform another rep with good form.
Stability Ball & Gym Equipment
An example of part of a stability ball workout in the gym or at home would be
the dumbbell stability ball chest press (right).
It is a great exercise because it helps build stabilization strength as well as
work additional muscles such as the core, glutes and quads while concurrently
working the target muscle group.
Workouts in the gym or your home gym with other equipment are tremendous.
You may be bored with your current workout or simply want to experience the
benefit of stability balls.
Workouts with a
Stability ball along with dumbbells, barbells, cables, tubes and any
equipment which is available to you can be some of the most effective and fun
workouts you could do.
This holds true for athletes, bodybuilders, novices, beginners and expert
personal trainers.
Any exercise which can be performed on a weight bench, can also be performed on
a stability ball. With knowledge and imagination you can create a great
the best workout for your specific goals by utilizing the stability ball along
with a variety of gym equipment.
What are some Good Stability Ball Workouts ?For
more information about workouts and custom workout programs for your specific
goals check out the workouts page.
Where can You Find more Information and Exercises to use
for Creating Stability Ball Workouts ?
Best
Core Exercises
It is important you know the anatomy of the
core and have strong enough base core strength before you perform stability ball
workouts.
Stability Ball Exercises
Learn some stability ball exercises for the
entire body. Learn more about why a stability ball may be your best friend
when it comes to accomplishing your fitness goals whether you use
stability ball workouts or not.
Stability Ball Exercise Videos
Just watch the exercise videos. You can
browse through many different stability ball exercise videos based on the body
part which they target.
Exercise Information
Click on the anatomy guy and find exercises
and the detailed anatomy, physiology and kinesiology background.
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