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Q & A: What’s Wrong with Sit-ups?

May16
2012
Written by Stevo

Q: “What’s wrong with situps?

I’ve read Steveo’s comments about rarely programming them and offering better choices.  I also read that getting an obese person to endless situps won’t work.  My wife wants to argue with me about it!  Do they just plain not work?  Are the somewhat effective?  What makes the wrong?

Thank you!!!”

A. I wouldn’t go so far as to say that sit-ups are WRONG, per se. It’s just that the majority of people’s time would be better spent throwing themselves in front of a moving school bus, or traveling back to the 14th century to ensure a solid infusion of the Black Plague into their bloodstream. Either one, really.

All kidding aside (even though I wasn’t really kidding), when it comes to performing sit-ups: there’s a time and a place. When people tell me they they “need” to perform sit-ups, I usually ask them a very simple question:

“WHY do you feel the need to do sit-ups?“

To which they’ll usually respond with one of four answers:

1. “I like feeling my abs burn. You know, because I enjoy that sort of thing.”
2. “I want six-pack abs.”
3. “I partake in activities that require repeated spinal flexion (ex. MMA or military training).”
4. “Now that you mention it, Steve, I actually do not know why. Please kick me in the balls, repeatedly, to remind me not to be so stupid.”

Maybe #4 is made up, and maybe #4 only applies to males, but I digress. Let’s briefly tackle responses #1-3.

1. “I like feeling my abs burn. You know, because I enjoy that sort of thing.”

Sure, I get it….fair enough. Allow me to present you with a myriad “core” exercises that will allow you to satiate your palate craving for all things burning abs without putting your spine at risk.

According to Dr. Stuart McGill (professor of spine biomechanics at the University of Waterloo), when you perform a sit-up, it places roughly 3,300 N (or, 730lbs) of compressive force on the discs of the lumbar spine. In case you were wondering, that’s not a good thing.

Given that 80%+ of Americans will experience significant back pain during their lives, why include something in your routine that will only make your odds even more unfavorable? Maybe, perhaps, if we still lived in hunter-gatherer societies, we could get away with them. Not so much anymore thanks to the invention of the computer, office work, and sitting 8+ hours a day.

And please, for the love, never perform something like this, let alone for a bazillion repetitions:

Hahahaha, Really?.......I mean......Really???

I’ll still train the heck out of people’s “core”, and give them plenty of what they need to reach their desired goals, but I do my best to do it via methods that AVOID placing that kind of ridiculous compressive force on lumbar vertebrae.

Try a few sets of any of the following, and I guarantee that both you – and your low back – will thank me later.

Pot Stirrir Plank

Bodysaw Plank (performed by my beautiful wife) If you don’t have sliders, you can use towels on a tiled floor.

TRX Jacknife with Neutral Spine

Plank with Band (or Cable) Row

Reverse Crunch (hold a towel – or a half foam roll – between your calves and hamstrings)

Landmine (again, performed by my better half)

Any of these:

Not to mention, I didn’t even include any of the myriad chop, lift, and pallof press progressions. Be consistent with training spinal stability (ex. using variations similar to the above), for a few months, then get back to me and let me know if your midsection didn’t become stronger.

You’re welcome.

What it comes down to is that if someone is paying me to help them look, move, and feel better – oh, and not to mention virtually putting me in charge of a large portion of their spinal health – I’m not willing to roll the dice with sit-ups.

Could they get away with it? Maybe. But why not strengthen their core via safer, and more effective, means?

2. “I want six-pack abs.”

I have a very simple answer to this one: Be less fat. And, maybe, choose a different set of parents.

Don’t mistake my tone here…my aim is not to appear cold, aloof, and perhaps even narcissistic toward their situation. I’m simply trying to save them some time, give them some realistic expectations, and save their spine to boot.

Possessing visible abs is a function of two things, and two things only: Bodyfat %, and genetics. The former is pretty self-explanatory, and with regards to the latter – well, some people will “unveil” their abs at a higher bodyfat than others.  Also, typically, it’s easier for people with longer torsos – relative to their legs – to see their abs sooner than those with shorter torsos. There are other forces at play, of course, but in general it is how it is.

Do you really think that performing sit-ups is the way to a shredded midsection? How about putting away the Oreos, and maybe saving dessert for weekends and special occasions? (Hint: getting home from work doesn’t count as a special occasion.) Every one of us, as Homo sapiens, possesses a six-pack. Some are just more insulated than others.

I’m not going to elaborate on this point any further simply because I feel that the majority of you are able to put these puzzle pieces together for yourselves.

3. “I partake in activities that require repeated spinal flexion (ex. MMA or military “stuff”).”

As deep-rooted as my vendetta is against sit-ups, I’d be foolish not to program them for this group. After all, there’s a point where we have to respect specificity of training, and it’s tough to get good at sit-ups without, well, TRAINING THEM to an extent.

With this group (fighters, military, along with some contact sport athletes), I will indeed intersperse sit-up variations into their training. Heck, we’ve even given the military guys timed BAND-RESISTED sit-ups in preparation for their testing. (Jason cursed us for this and continued to remind us of how much he hated them.)

Another favorite of mine is the Turtle Roll, which, IMO, looks like the easiest exercise in the world but yet will provide the most insane abdominal contraction of your life:

I’ve seen many well-conditioned athletes lie on the floor, gasping for breath after turtle rolling for just one set of twelve reps.

And there you have it. 

Posted in Core Training, Q & A - Tagged are sit-ups bad for you, should you do sit-ups and crunches, sit-ups
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8 Comments

  1. Joey's Gravatar Joey
    May 16, 2012 at 1:10 pm | Permalink

    ….Planks with Band/Cable row make me cry. I’ve done alot of exercises in the name of a stronger core, but these…it’s just not fair. They destroy you. Haha

    • Stevo's Gravatar Stevo
      May 17, 2012 at 9:31 am | Permalink

      Joey – Haha, I agree. And they never seem to get any easier, do they???

  2. panda's Gravatar panda
    May 16, 2012 at 2:07 pm | Permalink

    #1. lol @ picture … and yet I keep looking at it :) . Why would you do that on an expensive GHR? You can break your back on the floor for free.

    If you must do situp, try the McGill situp. You don’t need a large ROM to contract the abs. Much of the ROM in a typical situp comes from flexion of the back and hips anyway.

    • Stevo's Gravatar Stevo
      May 17, 2012 at 9:33 am | Permalink

      Panda – I literally spewed water out of my mouth I was laughing so hard at your comment re: breaking your back on the floor for free. Yeah…I almost put in the video of the McGill situp for those very reasons you mentioned.

  3. Billy's Gravatar Billy
    May 16, 2012 at 8:28 pm | Permalink

    Ummm, you have to balance one leg on a bosu ball or lie down on a bosu ball and do crunches. That builds abs. Cant you feel the burn? #snark

    I have a bad attitude towards stirring the pot, moving the mountain planks, or alphabet palloff presses and dont get me started on bodysaws. They are deceptively simple and evil to weakness. Never want to do a situp ever again though.

    • Stevo's Gravatar Stevo
      May 17, 2012 at 9:34 am | Permalink

      Awesome Billy, glad to hear. And I *know* that your attitude toward those exercises is actually that of a love/hate :)

  4. john's Gravatar john
    May 16, 2012 at 9:16 pm | Permalink

    Look, there’s nothing wrong with doing a gallion, billion reps of total-spinal-flexion-give-yourself-a-brain-problem-from-too-much-inverted-exertion-during-situps IF it’s in the name of “Forging Elite Fitness,” or, as some call it, The World Series of Exercise.*

    Let’s be honest, you just wish you were a total WODKilla and could be a super elite exerciser, I mean athlete.*

    *(Stevo will know my sarcasm in the event any internet commando decides it’s appropriate to engage in internet pwning)

    • Stevo's Gravatar Stevo
      May 17, 2012 at 9:35 am | Permalink

      John – LOL!! That comment cracked me up dude. I’d love to see an internet commando jump on you for that.

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