By Martica K. Heaner , Martica K. Heaner is a certified fitness instructor.
The quest for a whittled waistline gets harder as you age. The reason: Hormonal changes encourage excess calories to make a beeline for your belly, where they are stored as–you guessed it–fat. When researchers at the University of Vermont tested 178 healthy-weight women ages 20 to 60, the oldest had 55 percent more belly fat than the youngest.
A bigger belly, however, isn’t inevitable, and tummy-toning exercises can help. Pilates workouts and training is your secret weapon because it works all of your abdominal muscles: the six-pack rectus abdominis, which runs down your center; the waist-defining obliques, which wrap around your sides; and the deep transversus abdominis, which is often missed in traditional ab workouts, says LA-based Pilates instructor Michelle Dozois, who designed this Pilates workout. For maximum results, flatten your belly by pulling your navel toward your spine during each rep. Do these Pilates exercises three times a week, every other day.
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B. Inhale and lower your left leg for a count of two (”down, down”), moving only from your hip and dipping your toes toward the floor (without letting them actually touch it). Exhale and raise your leg back to the starting position for a count of two (”up, up”). Repeat with your right leg and continue alternating until you’ve done 12 reps with each leg.
B. Make a small circle on the ceiling with your left toes, rotating your leg from your hip. Inhale as you begin the circle and exhale as you finish. Keep your body as still as possible–no rocking–by tightening your abs. Do six circles, then reverse direction for six more. Repeat with your other leg.
B. Exhale as you kick, swinging your right leg forward as far as comfortably possible and pulsing for two counts (”kick, kick”). Inhale, point your toes, and swing your leg back past your left leg. That’s one rep. Do six reps without lowering your leg. Then switch sides and repeat.
A. Lie on your stomach with your forehead on your hands, palms on the floor. Separate your feet to hip width. Pull abs in.
B. Raise your head, shoulders, and chest off the floor. Rotate your upper body to the right and back to the center, then lower. Repeat to the left side and continue alternating until you’ve done six rotations to each side.
A. Sit on your left hip with your left leg bent in front of you and your left hand beneath your shoulder. Place your right foot flat on the floor just in front of your left foot so your right knee points to the ceiling. Rest your right arm on your right knee.
B. Pull your abdominals in, press into your left hand, and lift your hips off the floor. As you come up onto your left knee, straighten your right leg and raise your right arm over your head so you form a line from your right fingers to your right toes. Hold for 10 to 30 seconds. Lower and repeat on the other side.
Source: www.prevention.com