• 'Hip bridges are brilliant': A PT who's trained everyone from Ped

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Sat Jun 13 15:15:25 2026
    'Hip bridges are brilliant': A PT who's trained everyone from Pedro Pascal to Margot Robbie shares his go-to exercise for staying pain-free over 30

    Date:
    Sat, 13 Jun 2026 14:00:00 +0000

    Description:
    'It takes 2-6 weeks' to start building a pain-free back, according to a celebrity PT.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter In your 30s? Years of sitting at a desk, in a car, on a sofa gradually teach the body to stop recruiting the glutes properly. It could be that your hip flexors feel a little tighter, or that your lower back picks up the slack when other muscle groups should be working.

    Then, one day, that back starts aching for reasons that seem to come from nowhere. For elite performance coach and Hollywood trainer David Higgins whose client list spans everyone from Scarlett Johansson and Margot Robbie to Samuel L. Jackson and David Harbour this is one of the most common and most preventable patterns he sees. The fix, in his view, starts with a single back-to-basics movement: the hip bridge. Latest Videos From Watch full video here:

    David Higgins also recommended the farmer's walk as his go-to muscle-building exercise for over 50s . What glute dysfunction actually looks and feels like The trouble with glute dysfunction is that it rarely announces itself
    clearly. It tends to show up as something else tightness in the hip flexors each time you lace up your running shoes , persistent lower back tension, hamstrings that feel perpetually strained, or a vague instability when you're standing on one leg. You may like 'You pick something heavy up and you walk with it': A celebrity PT recommends this back-to-basics move as the best strength exercise for over 50s 3 PT-approved exercises that 'replicate activities of daily living' for lifelong muscle 'If you spend hours gaming, then your lower back is paying the price' 11 stretches to fix your body, recommended by a personal trainer

    Desk-bound lifestyles teach the body to live in hip flexion, which switches the glutes off over time, says Higgins. The glutes aren't beyond repair; however, they've simply been trained out of the habit of engaging.

    One of the clearest tell-tale signs is which muscles dominate during lower-body movement. During a bridge, for example, you should feel the glutes initiating and finishing the movement, not cramping in the hamstrings, he says. If your hamstrings are dominating and your lower back is doing the
    heavy lifting, the glutes aren't contributing properly. Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your inbox Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more. Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

    The connection between weak glutes and lower back pain is equally well established. The glutes help stabilize the pelvis, Higgins explains. When
    they stop doing their job, the lower back overworks to create stability.
    Where you feel pain is often not where the real problem lives. Treating the back when the glutes are the underlying issue is, at best, managing symptoms, while the hip bridge can address the source. (Image credit: Abraham Gonzalez Fernandez / Getty Images) Why the hip bridge is the right starting point The hip bridge works because it isolates the glutes and retrains the pattern of proper activation without requiring any equipment, any particular fitness baseline, or any complex technique. Its accessible enough to work for someone returning to exercise after years away, while being specific enough to be useful for people who train regularly but have never consciously addressed their glute function.

    For desk-bound adults who commit to it consistently, Higgins says the results come faster than most expect. If someone's desk-bound but consistent, they
    can usually begin restoring proper glute activation within 26 weeks, he explains. The body adapts to repetition both good and bad. What to read next Not a squat, not a deadlift the trap bar deadlift 'sits between' them and builds muscle quicker The forward lunge is the best simple move you're not doing, and it's vital for over-50s The 'body saw' is a better and safer alternative to sit-ups, researchers say

    His coaching cue is the cornerstone of the whole thing: Ribs down, squeeze
    the glutes before you lift. Not arch, or thrust squeeze. The movement should come from the glutes extending through the hips, not from the lower back overextending to create the illusion of range. Most people get this wrong. They flare the ribs, overarch the spine, rush the reps or push through the toes rather than the heels. Higgins is clear: Posture dictates muscle recruitment. How to perform the hip bridge Hip Bridge - YouTube Watch On To perform the hip bridge, lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat
    on the floor, hip-width apart. Brace your core, squeeze your glutes and drive through your heels to lift your hips until your body forms a straight line from shoulders to knees. Pause briefly at the top, then lower with control
    and repeat. For beginners, Higgins programmes the bridge with a pause at the top.

    I want people to own the top position, not just fling their hips upward, he says. In practice, that means either 1015 controlled reps or short holds of
    35 seconds at the top both approaches force you to actually be in the position rather than simply passing through it.

    You should feel the bridge primarily in the glutes. Some hamstring
    involvement is normal, but if the hamstrings are doing most of the work, either the feet are positioned too far from the body or the glutes aren't yet firing as they should. Adjust the foot position first, then focus on the squeeze cue before you lift.

    Once the bodyweight bridge is consistent and the glutes are clearly
    initiating the movement, progressions include single-leg bridges, adding a miniband above the knees, or incorporating longer holds. What the hip bridge alone won't fix (Image credit: Jason Parnell-Brookes) Hip bridges are brilliant, but on their own they're not enough for most desk-bound people, Higgins says. You also need hip mobility, breathing work, walking mechanics and postural correction, he says, noting that the body works as a system, not isolated parts.

    With Higgins guidance, try to think of the bridge as the foundation
    restoring the basic capacity for the glutes to switch on and do their job. From there, the work expands outward: opening up the hip flexors that have been shortened by years of sitting, retraining walking mechanics so the
    glutes are actually loaded during movement, and building the postural habits that keep the whole system honest.

    Start in your 30s and the work is preventive. Simple exercises done well will always outperform complicated training done badly," he explains. Getting the fundamentals right now is the most efficient thing you can do for your back, your hips and your long-term ability to move freely.

    You can also check out three stretches from a desk yoga expert to undo the damage of sitting at your desk . Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us
    as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds.



    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/health-fitness/hip-bridges-are-brilliant-a-pt-whos-t rained-everyone-from-pedro-pascal-to-margot-robbie-shares-his-go-to-exercise-f or-staying-pain-free-over-30


    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)