Why Should I Do Core Work If I am Already Doing Kettlebells?
đ Systematic Core Training For Kettlebells
https://salutis.kartra.com/page/systematic-core-training
I think thatâs a really smart and fair question.
Especially since most people think kettlebells âwork the core.â
The Truth âIt depends on the individualâ....
Iâve seen people âfix their issuesâ from kettlebell training.
And unfortunately, Iâve seen people get injured using kettlebells.
So, my answer is, I donât know if you should or not.
But I can give you some guidance.
Here are some reasons you should do direct and systematic core work even if youâre using kettlebells:
1- Your lower back hurts, gets sore, or gets tight after using KBs.
This could be an indication that your deep core musculature is not working properly to stabilize your spine and pelvis and your lower back is overworking.
As a result, your hips and hamstrings are not fully doing their jobs - moving your kettlebell!
Either that or your technique is just bad.
Or the first is causing the second.
2- Your knees hurt during or after using your KBs. Or both.
Same thing here.
Unless of course youâve gone to your doc and heâs said you have osteoarthritis, are bone-on-bone, and youâre staring down the barrel of a total knee replacement.
And thatâs because the knee is âtrappedâ between both the hip and the foot.
Itâs like the middle child stuck between his little brother and big sister in the back seat of the car. His big sister reaches across him to hit the little brother, misses, and hits the kid in the middle.
Many times, your bodyâs innate stabilization mechanism is âoffline.â
So the hip doesnât work properly. It canât fully internally and externally rotate or move into extension.
As a result, your body rotates or âducksâ your foot / feet, your arch or arches start(s) to collapse, and your knee or knees take the brunt.
This is only exacerbated by loading like Swings and Squats.
I know, I suffered from 25 years of chronic bilateral knee pain - from early teens to my late 30s.
Once I started focusing on reflexive core stability work, followed up by specific strength work, it disappeared.
3- You had some kind of abdominal, lower back, hip, or knee surgeryâŚ
⌠And no follow up rehab.
And if youâre a woman reading this, yes, a C-Section counts.
And thatâs because for whatever reason, when you have surgery on your abdominals, the lower back, hip, or knees, your body âshuts downâ or âunplugsâ its internal stabilization system.
So you need to ârebootâ your bodyâs stabilization mechanism.
Failing to address this, and then loading the lower back, hips, knees, or even shoulders with KB training can lead to injury.
4- Youâre trying to lose fat by using kettlebells, but you're not losing fatâŚ
Ok, this is a weird one, so hear me out.
Working out is a stressor on your body
You have 2 types of stress - DIS-stress and EU-stress
Fighting off an infection is a distress
Laughing at a movie is an eustress
Working out is a distress that becomes an eustress, when the right conditions exist
If youâve met any or all of conditions 1 thru 3 above, using kettlebells increases stress - distress - on your spine. Your spine houses your spinal cord, which is part of your CNS - your Central Nervous System
Your CNS controls your entire body - both consciously and subconsciously
If youâre unduly stressing the spinal column, this increases whatâs known as a âthreat response,â which amps up your sympathetic nervous system (SNS)
And keeps it amped up
Your SNS is responsible for the âfight or flightâ response - the adrenaline dump you get when you almost rear end the car in front of you - but donât. Or youâre being chased by a bear.
Your body also mobilizes cortisol for quick energy.
Many people are in a chronic âfight or flightâ state, so their cortisol levels are always elevated above normal. And as weâve discussed many times in the past
Chronically elevated cortisol levels signal fat storage in your midsection - the heart attack inducing stomach / visceral fat
I know that may sound hard to believe, so hereâs a story about a private client
Karen was a 47-year old perimenopausal cancer survivor. She hired me to train her to pass her SFG 2 Certification.
Problem was, she had chronic right shoulder instability from having one of her neck muscles removed as part of cancer treatment.
So, she and I stopped pressing, and focused on rebuilding / restoring her reflexive core stability for a whole month.
The results?
She dropped about 15 pounds of fat and her Press increased.
So there are 4 great reasons - kinda like the North, South, East, and West of reasons - of why youâd want to start doing direct and systematic core work, if youâve only been relying on your kettlebells for âcore trainingâ.
Check out my program Systematic Core Training For Kettlebells if you have one or more of those issues.
Letâs get you squared away and make your kettlebell training even more productive.