How to peak for a skill before a competition or photo shoot
Full Body Tension: The Underrated Performance Variable
Full body tension — consciously contracting every muscle simultaneously during a skill or strength movement — is one of the highest-leverage performance cues in calisthenics and one of the most consistently ignored.
In the handstand: full tension means squeezing your glutes, pointing your toes, tensing your legs, bracing your core, and pressing actively through your fingertips — all at once. A handstand with full tension requires fewer balance corrections because the rigid body is more predictable than a loose one.
In the planche: every muscle must fire. Loose hips or drooping legs immediately drop the position. The planche is physically impossible without full body tension maintained throughout.
In pull-ups: engaging your glutes and abs during a pull-up raises your body mechanically into a stronger pulling position and prevents the lower back from arching.
Practice full tension in easier exercises first — the push-up is a great place to start. Once you can feel and maintain the tension through a simple movement, transfer it to harder ones.
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