Compression strength for L-sits and V-sits: what and how to train
Wall Handstand: Getting the Alignment Right
Most people's wall handstand is not actually helping their freestanding handstand because the alignment is wrong. Here's how to fix it.
Chest-to-wall handstand (the better variant): kick up facing the wall, with chest close to the wall surface. Your lower back will want to arch — resist this. Squeeze your core, tilt your pelvis under, push actively through your shoulders, and try to create a straight line from your wrists to your heels.
The test: in a chest-to-wall handstand, try to take your feet off the wall briefly. If you immediately fall away from the wall, your body mass is behind your hands — your hips are not stacked. Work on tucking the pelvis and engaging the core more.
Back-to-wall handstand (more common, less useful): this allows the lower back to arch (banana handstand), which trains exactly the wrong position. Use it only to build confidence, not for alignment work.
The alignment work pays off when you go freestanding: a straight aligned handstand requires dramatically fewer corrections than an arched one. The investment in wall alignment work is worth every session.
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts.