Wednesday, June 27, 2018
After Years of Struggling, Here's How I Finally Learned to Do Push-Ups
Let me tell you about my relationship with push-ups — as in, it didn't really exist. After years and years (and years!) of working out, being able to do a set of perfect push-ups never seemed to happen for me. I can plank for a decent amount of time, deadlift a respectable barbell weight, and have run my fair share of races . . . but push-ups? Nope. And as a fitness editor, this has always felt embarrassing. This month I decided to get serious, conquer the elusive push-up, and invested in personal training.
A negative push-up focuses solely on the downward (aka, eccentric) movement of the push-up. An easy way to envision the exercise is to think of it like doing one-half of a full push-up; by putting all the load on the eccentric movement, "you focus on elongating the muscle," said Austin.
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