Core fitness

In core fitness training, If you cant just say balance on a swiss ball, does that mean you have weak abs or poor balance?
Could someone be able to give me some info on core strength training or any web links to it.
Just a little confused between the two...
Thanks...

Peace out... :cool:
 
Not being able to stay on the swiss ball is a combination of the both; but more so just bad balance.

The more you do it the better you will get. I used to lay on the ball for abs and slide left and right. Now i can do full situps on the ball, with only one foot on the ground and the other one straight in front of me; it just took a lot of work. There are a lot of ways to work on balance and core.

For balance:

Do squats, without weight, while standing on a bosu ball. First with the flat side on the ground, then as you get better put the rubber half on the ground and stand on the flat side. Do ab work on the swiss ball when you can; and even do some of your weight training on the swiss ball (dumbell bench etc). When doing standing exercises, like bicep curls, stand on a stability pad or bosu ball. Between sets, when you're resting, stand on one leg on a stability pad for 30 seconds then switch.

For Core:

Read this article -
 
Core strength

Yeah but if someone said you have to work on core strengthing, will that require balance, abdomonal strength, lower back strength or all of the above?
 
If the person who told you that was indeed referring to deep core/trunk strength; then yes they mean balance, abs, low back, obliques etc.

Large power movements (squats, deadlifts, pullups, bench press) increase your traditional core strenght was well as trunk. However; a balanced, well planned core isolation program will greatly enhance your overall strenght.

Your trunk is where all motion originates from.
 
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