B2R Shoulder Stability Project. The Handstand
As mentioned in the overview article of this project, there are unique benefits to training the upper body in a closed chain and specifically on our hands, of which there are many ways to do so.
Our reference point for the structured strength component will be the freestanding gymnastic handstand.
A straight gymnastic handstand described from top to bottom; toes pointed hard, legs locked at the knee, posterior pelvic tilt (PPT) & hollowed out lower abdomen (see the flat back), scapula elevation (shoulders to ears), elbows locked in extension, hands shoulder width apart, index fingers pointing forwards and eyes fixed on a point between the hands. See the video below for my verbal description.
Bodyweight training differs to other training in that any given movement at any given time could shift from being a high intensity movement to a low one with training and practice. The same exercise for one person could be a strength exercise and for another a skill. This has implications for each of us, particularly when it comes to handstand training. When people start training handstand with us, and they learn ‘the line’ described above, they are generally very surprised at the strength required for a straight handstand. When we train strength there is a limit to which we can perform with high quality before fatigue will diminish our work and we need to be able to rest and recover well. More is not always better.
When a drill becomes not limited by strength, but by skill, our approach is different. We cannot sugar coat this honest advice; the more we practice a skill, the better. If you are new to handstand then we invite you to observe how a baby learned to stand up. Failing and falling over and over, practising and practising, trying different ways until they figure it out. If you have ever observed this then you have witnessed real life skill acquisition.
There is something unique about the child like process of being on our hands, cartwheeling, crawling and playing around. It tends to be interesting and fun and we know that this has been shown to be essential in predicting whether we stick at something or not. There is a realistic trade off however with really nailing a skill down and progressing with it via repetition and practice. It is this balance we will attempt to support in this programme; to encourage a playful child like rediscovery of yourself and simultaneously practice specific conditioning with enough repetition that we can play more.
There is not a correct way to move and there is not a correct way to handstand; gymnastics, breakdancing, capoeira for example will all teach us different ways in and interpretations. There are however components and themes that will enable us to progress faster and generalise what we achieve across to other things; like shoulder stability. Learning and mastering the strict gymnastic handstand is how we will do this. If we understand how we train and are diligent in the process it should not take more than 6 months to have mastered a 30 second freestanding handstand and 6-9 months for a 60-second hold (Ido Portal). Committing to achieving this means we can really enjoy playing and being child like.
When we observe people at this point it looks easy and beautiful. It can often even look relaxed. This is not how we start out as a beginner. We need to learn to understand tension and body position awareness, starting with the hollow body.
Useful story
Albert Einstein once sought a professional golfer to help with his swing. In the lesson the teacher observed Einstein swing and proceeded to describe how he needs to feel a slight bend in the knees, keep a straight back, rotate at the hips and internally rotate his lead leg on the back swing, which brings his thumb just behind his head, then to keep his head down and rotate his hips the opposite way through the swing phase.
With frustration at trying to think about all of these things with each repetition, Einstein picks up a bag of golf balls and throws them at his teacher and asks him to catch them all. The golf teacher, flailing his arms around looking like a fool misses all the balls. Einstein follows up with: “you trying to catch all those balls is like me trying to catch all the cues you are giving me. Give me one cue and let me own it” - Taken from The Language of Coaching, Nick Winkleman, 2020.
As humans, we have a finite attention capacity, we can only focus on one thing at a time, one cue. In the case of the golf swing above, we want our attention to be on the ball, not on all the subtle internal locations of our joints - which will be different for different people. There may be specific drills a golf professional (I am not one!) may use to develop the things described with the internal language used above), however focusing on something external that enables all of those other processes to snap into place is a superior way for learning skills. Visualisation and imagery has been shown to impact the process also, what we think, literally becomes our movement.
Review the image of handstand right at the start of this article, try to come up with an image that works for you to create that body shape. Try replacing the cheetah in this thought bubble with an inverted pendulum, or one that works for me is to think of rigour mortis. Whatever works for you, we need to build an implicit physical understanding of the position that your image helps snap into place. For this we use the floor and wall as a constraint to condition our pendulum. Please watch the following videos, in full, several times and bring these to your practice.
The next progression is to take your handstand line now and invert on the wall. To safely do so, please watch how to spot and exit. If you cannot do this or have someone do this with you we advise staying away from the wall until you build up strength in other exercises.
It is not possible to put a time frame on how long it will take to progress with handstand for different people, however training in the middle of the room and not being able to actually spend time in the position we need, is not an efficient use of training time, for these reasons we have set progression to ‘balance’ work as 5x60 on the wall with good shape (our reference shape at the start of this article) and double the rest to work (1:2).
We also appreciate that this repetition can be boring for some. For these reasons I have included a more playful sample session on your hands at the bottom of this article which is to be used at your disposal, to maintain interest and motivation and assist you in accumulating the required time for skill acquisition on your hands. You will notice that to do the more challenging variations, will require structured strength training; mastering the gymnastic handstand in this programme being how we will work towards this.
This programme will also have allocated ‘core’ training which will weave both handstand and hang together to train body shapes required for progress.
All the core training will be modelled on handstand and the programming will be two sessions (A+B) alternated each week where you strive to get further through it and increase quality. Simple, not easy.
EXEMPLAR PLAYFUL HAND BALANCE SESSION
Coaching points for this session, worry less about all of the strict coaching points in our gymnastic handstand training and have fun. Play with the variations, bent leg / straight leg / bent arm / straight arm / fast / slow / look at the floor / straight forwards. This session could be repeated and varied multiple times per week or weaved into your normal exercise routine once per week.
General warm up including wrist prep and some hang time. 10 mins
Parkour rolling practice. 5 mins
Handstand falling practice. 5-10 minutes continuous in as many different ways
A1. Bananeira kick ups - with 3s hold @ top. 5-10 meters
A2. Aú forwards - low / high / single leg / tuck / straddle. 5-10 meters
A3. Aú sideways through squat - head on and off floor / tuck / straddle. 5-10 meters
A4. Aú walkback - with bananeira hold 3-5 seconds. 10 reps
*Move from A1 through to A4 with as little rest as required for a total of 3-5 rounds. If pushed for time consider a 20 minute time cap.
B1. Bananeira leg stretch on the wall / free standing - 2 minutes in as few sets as required.
These movements are largely from my capoeira practice; credit Mestre Claudio Campos.
Handstand is really a long term process always refining our line and working towards more difficult skills.
Welcome to the start of your journey.
Luke R. Davies,
#B2Rhealth :)