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Getting
a full-body workout without having to run around using different equipment is
ideal for those times when you need to be very efficient while still
experiencing a challenge. Heavy ropes are a great way to do just that.
Here
are three things I love about ropes:
1.
The
visual and sensory feedback provided by the rope is a great indication of the
quality of the effort produced by your body.
2.
It
feels like playing even when you are working hard.
3.
The
movement of the rope is a beautiful rendering of physics in action.
In
many ways, a heavy rope is a tool we are still trying to figure out how to use
most effectively. Unfortunately, the inherent simplicity in using a rope has
been unnecessarily complicated by pointless “battling rope certifications,”
giving credence to the idea that there’s a lot of technical stuff to know
before you can use them effectively. Not so. With just a few helpful tips to
keep in mind, you can grab a heavy rope and start enjoying a full-body,
ropes-based workout.
When
using ropes, consider the “grace of the wave”—the smooth flowing wave that
occurs along the length of the rope. Here are a few ways you can use the ropes,
with a nod to Ken Weichert of www.startfitness.com:
In
the following workout, the exercises utilize the heavy ropes in both familiar and
novel ways to enhance the benefit and the enjoyment of the workout experience.
These exercises also feature the primary movement patterns—squat, lunge, push,
pull, rotate—and are multiplanar, moving through the sagittal, frontal and
transverse planes of movement for a total-body workout.
There
are two main types of grip used in heavy rope training:
1.
Handshake
(overhand) grip
2.
Microphone
(underhand) grip
When
programming, I typically use the more visually expressive terms “handshake” and
“microphone” as many people easily get confused on what overhand and underhand
means.
The
objective of the warm-up is to prep the body for the workout and practice the
skills used in some of the exercises to follow. Perform one set of each
exercise for 30 seconds.
Stationary
Side Lunge With Alternating Waves – see and feel the grace of the wave to
bring both the mind and body into focus
Rotating
Lunge With Overhead Rope Arc – move the ropes from the floor to
overhead as you switch sides

Author
His
“800 Pounds of Parents” directly inspired Jonathan’s prolific fitness
career. He is a multiple Personal Trainer of the Year Award-Winner (ACE,
IDEA, and PFP Magazine), creator of Funtensity, brain fitness expert, blogger
and master trainer for the American Council on Exercise (ACE). His book, Abs Revealed, delivers a
modern, intelligent approach to abdominal training. A former astronomer,
Jonathan used to study stellar bodies – now he builds them!