The Power of Horse Stance - 5 Minutes a Week Can Change How You Move!

2023 ж. 23 Мам.
733 400 Рет қаралды

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***
The horse stance, or Ma Bu, is a position from Chinese martial arts. This is a low stance that can be held for time as an isometric contraction. This builds strength and stability in the lower body, but also mobility, endurance, and control. And this is why horse stance is a secret weapon not only for martial artists, but anyone that wants to develop powerful, functional movement.
Many of us have lost the ability to seamlessly transition between levels and planes of motion. Can you drop into a deep squat, shift into a cossack squat, then stand up on one leg? All without pain and discomfort? A couple of heavy lifts entirely in the sagittal plane and with limited range of motion won't get you there.
But this, to me, is what performant legs should look like.
The horse stance is also a great tool for developing willpower and the mind muscle connection. I forgot to mention in the video that Ma Bu was also sometimes used as a form of punishment!

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  • NOTE! The Vivobarefoot code has now changed to "THEBIONEER15" Thanks!

    @TheBioneer@TheBioneer9 ай бұрын
    • Read your bible! (KJV, preferably) ♥‎‎ ‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎ ‎ ‎‎‎‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎

      @abel6298@abel62989 ай бұрын
    • Back in school I was skinny and never worked out. I was reading a lot of martial stuff for inspiration. One morning I woke up and wanted to do some kind of sport to change my life. I started with horse stance. I remember the first day I did it for literally 5 breaths !!!!! I just couldn't do more. Every morning I woke up to go to school I did the horse stance just once, with the goal of improving from the previous day. So the 2nd day I added maybe 1 or 2 breaths. It wasn't long, like 1-2 weeks till I could use a timer for 30 seconds. Then time flew again and I was doing 2 minutes !!! Some months passed and I got to 5 minutes. By that point I started working out a little bit in my own spare time after school, in my bedroom. I was doing hindu pushups for upper body and horse stance. I remember when about 5 minutes was my max, I would have to lay down and then it takes about another 5 minutes for all the lactic acid in my muscles to go away and finally relax my muscles. Then another 5 minutes (so double your stance time) to lay down and recover so your legs aren't sore and tired when you get up. Of course your legs are still sore but you will notice only if you start working out again like sprinting, etc. I kept it up and a year or two later in high school I did 23 minutes :) After 15 minutes your intestines start to vibrate and works that part of your body. Its very healthy. If you a male that masturbates regularly, it will heal and give you a strong stomach :) So that's my story of how i went from total dork who could barely do 5 breaths in horse stance, to doing 23 minutes, everyday. PS: when you can do 15-20minutes it also starts to strengthen your back. Until that point you may notice that your posture is odd, unnatural and weak which strains your back. So you will have to do back bridges and such before and after every horse stance to avoid back pain. But when you reach the higher times your bodies muscles are actually getting stronger ! PSS: I have a few friends who are way more advanced. When you can do 30 minute get a weight vest on to save your time! When you get much stronger take the vest off and try doing it with one leg in the air (horizontal) ;). Now you are really doing MARTIAL ARTS training. I know a dude who can do all kinds of stances not just horse stance all day long. He said something like "if you can do a stance for 2 hours you can do it all day" (I don't remember exactly if its 2 hours but he definitely said no more than 6 hours. So I would bet its either 2 or 4 hours he said. If you can do a stance for 2 or 4 hours then you can probably do it all day - literally. ).

      @rohanofelvenpower5566@rohanofelvenpower55667 ай бұрын
    • I would advise you always stick to tucking your lower back in horse stance. Otherwise you are doing sitting on the toilet stance. Feet should point fixed front but obviously modern man has terrible bone aligment which can take many, many years to fix. So point them forward as much as comfortable - you will feel the strain in your knees if you over do it. ( And yes knees never heal. Knee injuries are for life so you absolutely never strain the knees no matter how little). If you tuck your ass inwards/frontwards, you will notice your bones lock and you can't go as low as you could if you let your ass jiggle like a bar club hostess. That's fine. Tucking your ass in is the healthy and ergonomic position. When you can do like 10minutes or more you will notice you naturally lower yourself while still staying in fully tucked in position. Its just the muscles relaxing under the strain of gravity. So yes, if you tuck in you will start high and magically end up lower near the end of your stance. So never strain to go lower. You can't go lower because you have no leg, hip and knee mobility. If you could really go lower without straining your knee caps in horse stance then you can probably go into actual "full lotus" stance as well, not just crossing your legs. Modern man cannot rotate his legs to go into full lotus and neither can he do very low horse stance so modern should not strain him/herself and break their knees :) Just a health warning, hope my long message serves someone.

      @rohanofelvenpower5566@rohanofelvenpower55667 ай бұрын
  • Ma Bu(horse stance)training has been a staple of my training since the eighties. It doesn’t require equipment and is a fantastic rehabilitative exercise that helped me walk again after the brain surgery in 2010 and the recent craniotomy 03/21/2023.

    @ReasontoLiveAdventures@ReasontoLiveAdventures11 ай бұрын
    • Mind to share whats your time you can hold the horse stance? Hope you recover soon!

      @Seraphim262@Seraphim26211 ай бұрын
    • I am down to under five minutes these days. Before the tumor in 2010, my best time was around eight minutes. Today, Because of the neurological damage caused by the mini-stroke I break the mabu training down to 3-4 minute blocks done throughput the day. Recovering from a 15 hour craniotomy forced me into some of the best and safest training. Because I jumped the gun a few weeks ago and went against the orders of the neurosurgeon and used just 40 pd machine weight, which caused spinal fluid to collect around the excision site. That forced me to do basically only Qi gong and Dai ji jian(tai chi chuan) training lately.

      @ReasontoLiveAdventures@ReasontoLiveAdventures11 ай бұрын
    • @@ReasontoLiveAdventures Hey bro, good luck with your rehab and training.

      @dylhemsley9458@dylhemsley945811 ай бұрын
    • @ Reason To Live Adventures you sir are a powerful person and inspiration to all you sir are The Champion Of Mortal Kombat!

      @usaotomasonictrash7562@usaotomasonictrash756211 ай бұрын
    • I'm about a month out from having a brain tumor removed. Non-cancerous, they think, but it's right over the part of my brain that controls right-side body movement. I'm so scared. They say 4-6 weeks to full recovery, but I find that hard to believe. Can you tell a bit more of your story? Up to you of course, but I'd rather hear from someone who triumphed in their recovery than just to google "brain tumor recovery" and see what I find.

      @lacanian_lifter@lacanian_lifter11 ай бұрын
  • 3 weeks ago, I started Horse Stance for 1 minute as part of Leg Day warm up. It is so, so humbling.

    @fluffyscruffy@fluffyscruffy11 ай бұрын
    • static holds before? er.... you should be warmed up already before performing static holds otherwise how does the energy flow?

      @Jafmanz@Jafmanz11 ай бұрын
    • I keep getting theese weird coincidences with Bioneer, like I was literally practicing horse stance today for the first time in years, and then boom Bioneer uploads a video, on it, it's like what ever he is doing gets sent to my brain when he goes to edit the video lol cos this happens way too often.

      @crazyjay6331@crazyjay633111 ай бұрын
    • I wouldn't want my muscles to generate so much energy BEFORE the workout, if I wanted to perform...

      @WBlake01@WBlake0111 ай бұрын
    • @@Jafmanz Wrong. Static holds are good for introducing blood flow as well

      @salj.5459@salj.545911 ай бұрын
    • @@salj.5459 always do dynamic stretching first ALWAYS!

      @Jafmanz@Jafmanz11 ай бұрын
  • About 45 seconds after you settle in you realize this is serious business.

    @lowellcalavera6045@lowellcalavera604511 ай бұрын
    • More like 5secs 😂

      @raymondwall3788@raymondwall37882 ай бұрын
    • Hahaha facts you in some deep shit 45 sec after then u start shaking lol

      @kingm6242@kingm6242Ай бұрын
  • Horse stance and holding primal squats have both improved my mobility so much and made me stronger and more confident in calisthenics movements in particular. Definitely extremely valuable!

    @calebgross912@calebgross91211 ай бұрын
    • I completely agree. Back when I started training I was bullied almost every day by rednecks. But I found a great kung fu Sifu. He was a former green beret that taught wildness survival, mountain climbing and repelling.

      @ReasontoLiveAdventures@ReasontoLiveAdventures11 ай бұрын
    • Read your bible! (KJV, preferably) ♥‎‎ ‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎ ‎ ‎‎‎‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎

      @abel6298@abel62989 ай бұрын
    • I do read my bible. As a matter of fact, I only lack three credits to have a third BA in theology.

      @ReasontoLiveAdventures@ReasontoLiveAdventures8 ай бұрын
    • ​@ReasontoLiveAdventures when do you start how to stop bragging class?

      @nategalvan3907@nategalvan39078 ай бұрын
    • ​@@nategalvan3907He teaches that class 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

      @criticalbil1@criticalbil18 ай бұрын
  • Bro! Shenmue! Thanks for taking us down memory lane.

    @besharafereg2198@besharafereg219811 ай бұрын
    • Don't be surprised, Adam is one of the coolest nerdiest internet fitness nerd along with lads like jaxblade himself

      @michaeltagor4238@michaeltagor423811 ай бұрын
    • I loved that game

      @GrantNolan.@GrantNolan.11 ай бұрын
  • I used to train in stances heavily when I was self-training in my teens. Was out with my friends and there wasn't enough chairs at the table... but they didn't know that because it looked like I was sitting as I just chilled there in a low stance the entire time as if I was sitting down. With proper training the amount of endurance and leg strength you get from simply holding these traditional stances is something you can easily take for granted. Keep your body strong and conditioned.

    @CogniVision@CogniVision11 ай бұрын
  • Used to do these at a hung gar kung fu dojo my uncle taught in when I was 10 - 12 We'd start with two minutes per stance. Once we started to master two minutes we'd have to adopt a better posture with a bo staff behind our legs And once we perfected that we moved to 5 minutes, bo staff behind legs, arms straight out with weighted rings on our arms! Doing this twice a week made me a monster in primary school! Best part was we had to 100 bunnyhops straight after without losing balance

    @MilitaryHistory2011@MilitaryHistory201111 ай бұрын
    • Hung Gar kung fu is legit. Great training for mind and body.

      @yilderim1924@yilderim192411 ай бұрын
    • @@guitar-jo I believe the dojo sifu had to do it for 2 and a half hours, completely uninterrupted to get his position!

      @MilitaryHistory2011@MilitaryHistory201111 ай бұрын
    • Is that where the Hung Gar Games Came From? China !?!?! 😂😅😂😅😂😅😂

      @thorragnarok2861@thorragnarok286111 ай бұрын
    • @@MilitaryHistory2011 Are you sure? Even 15 mins is murder, how can he get to an hour?

      @datoolz0@datoolz011 ай бұрын
    • ​@@datoolz0 either improper form, or children being wierd. maybe its some weight/tendon strength proportion thing. Like how pullups are easier the lighter you are. I remember easily doing 100 pushups as a child, now i can't remember if i had good form (i probably didn't) but it could have been because i was tiny and weighted about as much as three feathers and a marble, so my tiny stick-like arms where plenty enough to lift my even tinier even more stick-like body.

      @oscarlove4394@oscarlove439411 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video! The horse stance is one of my favorite exercises of all time. Doing this for years as a kid gave me a sort of "permanent" level of mobility that has been very useful for martial arts practice and general fitness as I've gotten older. I would also credit horse stance training for giving me the pistol squat for free. It's an all-around superb exercise that checks a ton of boxes, and for anyone interested in improving their usable mobility, focus, and leg endurance, it's a no brainer! This video is a top-tier breakdown of the movement! Well done, Bioneer. 🙏

    @Kboges@Kboges10 ай бұрын
    • yoooo its kboges!!

      @mindmast3r@mindmast3r4 ай бұрын
    • Training horse stance finna increase my T levels or nah

      @archsys307@archsys3073 ай бұрын
    • Heya! 👋

      @siskfjkfkk@siskfjkfkkАй бұрын
  • Horse Stance (Ma Bu) is basic prerequisite training for many Kung Fu styles. I have practiced it for over 20 years. Best to do it every day and slowly build the time it is held. It can be used as an exercise but also contains a martial function. Love the comment on rooting which is really important.

    @luisbonnet3957@luisbonnet395711 ай бұрын
    • how many sets should u do if doing it daily?

      @TatooedDoc@TatooedDoc7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TatooedDoc i usually do it 1 set to max time i can do, then i do rest pauses, wich is to rest 5 to 10 seconds and repeat the exercise for more 1 or 3 times. Makes it intensier and that don't consume your time

      @rafa-lk6lf@rafa-lk6lf5 ай бұрын
  • This is killer! As someone who can do 3 sets of 12 pistol squats, I’m humbled. Only managed a minute on my first go 😂

    @Lorry_Draws@Lorry_Draws10 ай бұрын
    • Wow

      @shaspearman8647@shaspearman86472 ай бұрын
  • Man this is exercise is fire🔥 Nothing hurts more than this. I’ve been able to reach 2 minutes, but I’m not so consitent with it. Want to be able to hold for 5 minutes now.

    @joaotanaka3071@joaotanaka307111 ай бұрын
    • its actually nearly as bad as a 20 rep squat

      @josephperkins4857@josephperkins485711 ай бұрын
    • If you believe that nothing hurts more than this then you've never been really seriously hurt. Good for you.

      @ithinkthereforeitalk935@ithinkthereforeitalk93511 ай бұрын
    • ​@@josephperkins4857 It depends. If they are bodyweight squats for an advanced athlete then yeah, pretty bad. But you can't say the same about a 20 rep squats with a weight challenging enough to keep you from repping more than 20.

      @JorgeMP53@JorgeMP5311 ай бұрын
    • @@ithinkthereforeitalk935 I mean, no exercise that I’ve ever done before hurts more than this. But yeah, I can say that I’ve been really luck and never got any serious pain, or injury problems

      @joaotanaka3071@joaotanaka307111 ай бұрын
    • @@joaotanaka3071 take the weight you can squat for ten reps and then extend it out to 20 with it

      @josephperkins4857@josephperkins485711 ай бұрын
  • Crazy, I tried the horse stance directly after watching this thinking I could do at least 2 minutes and could only do it for like 15 seconds 😅 feels so good in the hips, knees and core after doing this! Definitely something I will include in my training!

    @ludviglila1407@ludviglila140711 ай бұрын
    • Due to isometrics training with the Isochain which involved 20 second static holds of dead-lift and zercher squat, among others. It made the Horse Stance much easier.

      @mreverybody1150@mreverybody115011 ай бұрын
  • As a Bajiquan (Eight Extremities Fist ) and Baguazhang (Eight Trigram Palm ) Hsing Yi (Mind Form Boxing ) practitioner you are right. There are so many ways to do the Horse stance and many different ways to breathe there is an incredible art to holding tension or proper alignments. I got up to 45 mins in a mid to deep horse stance holding the golden ball or hugging the tree. It is called zhangzhung which means post training in the styles I have done. My Instructor told me stories of people holding these positions for six hours two hours is considered average. It is a fundamental training that you need to incorporate every day just to do certain styles. five to ten minutes of proper standing will destroy the average person. I did 108 days of standing consecutively I felt energetic experiences during this training intense heat similar to Kundalini experiences that I have had in the past. Be careful doing this training as it is harder than most things you will ever do, There are body alignments that are of a major benefit to the practitioner. I was taught to sink in the legs but you also hold a tension through them keep the tail bone neutral in holding the ball position or slightly tucked in, you are actually slightly pushing legs outwards, depending on the width of your stance. Hollow the dan tian your stomach area and chest pull shoulders lightly back arms rounded back should be full like pressing it away from your chest every joint relaxed, lift from the top of your head like something is pulling you up from the top of the head with a string. Neck straight lifting up slightly chin in neutral position eyes looking forward. You can do all of this holding tension making it isometric. Standing is an incredible journey and there are so many ways to do it it is an art form in itself there are postures that just hurt but will become better in time. You hate this at first but once you get used to it you will look forward to doing it. Life becomes easy because there, ends up being nothing physically or mentally harder than the standing practice. I challenge anyone to simply standing in one position for 2 mins straight legged or bent standing doesn't even have to be done in a horse stance. You can simply take a small step out in front and stay in that position. I guarantee it will start to work muscles you have never worked on. Anyone one gets great at standing should try San Ti The Hsing Yi standing training it is brutal of course all of this stances have incredible health benefits.

    @soulmage9@soulmage911 ай бұрын
  • I've actually been experiencing some ankle and knee pain lately and in just doing some of these horse stances on the first day of seeing this vid seems to have lessened the pain just a little. Thank you!!!!!!!!!!!

    @physicalimprovement8384@physicalimprovement838411 ай бұрын
  • This video brought my fire for Ma Bu back. When I was in my latter teens I was doing half hour horse stances no problem. My record was 40 minutes but I wasn't super deep and because of my long femur had to turn my toes out some but still I could jump like nobody's business. Just did a 2 minute set while watching your video ahah so I'm going to make it a daily thing till I get back to at least 15 minutes with solid form. And as a practitioner of martial arts since I was a small child thanks for taking the time to get to know your stuff before you made a video about Gong Fu and our training.

    @LawDescendant@LawDescendant11 ай бұрын
  • i've been hearing about the possible benefits of this training. thanks so much for breaking it all down for us with no nonsense.

    @lavishglittergun9017@lavishglittergun901711 ай бұрын
  • I'll definitely add it to my routine ! I've practiced karate so sometimes for my legs I'm just doing some zenkutsu very low or kokutsu too but this one is the challenge I need right now !

    @jeroenmorhen@jeroenmorhen11 ай бұрын
  • Been watching this channel for 6 years. Dependable. Informative. Entertaining. Flawless. Upping my horse stance practice today, never realized the full extent to the benefits.

    @kylanpierce8415@kylanpierce841511 ай бұрын
  • I reached 1 min 10 secs in a week's time. I have been doing weight training both heavy and light for past 5 years. And this horse stance has given me the all new direction to manage and take my fitness to the whole new level. I have now started adding a few martial arts and calisthenics movements in my workout routine. And this shift is doing wonders in a very short period of time.. thanks and kudos for sharing such valuable info.

    @mmasoomali@mmasoomali7 ай бұрын
  • Love your content, especially because you're a dad and your little tips here and there about how you try to incorporate training into busy family life is super. ;) Started horse stances a while ago and didn't really focus on it or do it regularly but my time that I can stay in the stance has doubled already. About 1:30

    @paolodomingo3571@paolodomingo357111 ай бұрын
  • Ive added this into my stretching, DDP Yoga days. I love it. Getting the Horseplay into practice, headphones on with chilled out Synthwave and Tool's "Fear Inoculum" soundtracking the trance and stance. Thanks again for videos like this.

    @kylereece1979@kylereece19799 ай бұрын
  • Bro I have been waiting for this video for a long time. Thank you for making it 😊

    @matejzorko7890@matejzorko789011 ай бұрын
  • There are many layers to Horse Stance that are generally unknown or overlooked. In baguazhang, the legs are held closer together (3 foot-lengths wide) and the depth is lessened. This opens up more mobility/plyometric options. The internal training element comes from how the legs are held. The name gives it away; one imagines holding something along the inside of the legs with more engagement than the outside of the legs. As if you are holding something between them. In Zhan Zhuang (Standing Post), this effort is mirrored in the arm position; intention to the inside of the arms, relaxation to the outside while maintaining the structure. Intention travels along these circles; energy flows throughout the body from the relaxation element (Song). Connective tissue is conditioned, supported through fascial engagement.

    @pranakhan@pranakhan11 ай бұрын
    • I feel the burn quicker when I do a narrower stance. I find a wide horse stance easier. Think I might be able to do 10 minutes on a wide horse staance.

      @VickersVickers-rk8uk@VickersVickers-rk8ukАй бұрын
  • Your one legged squat /dip was phenomenal! Good video, thank you.

    @AllanGildea@AllanGildea6 ай бұрын
  • It's good seeing you again hope you and your family okay and I'm glad you started the series on horse stance training

    @dwight00001@dwight0000111 ай бұрын
  • Such a humble guy.. talking openly about his weaknesses. Lovely.

    @thomasbrouwer2771@thomasbrouwer277111 ай бұрын
  • I appreciate you going through the points of contentions, instead of teaching only one way! I was confused before your video as I had seen different people que the exercise differently

    @pomegranate8593@pomegranate859322 күн бұрын
  • OMFG I saw the title and immediately thought of shenmue. You did not disappoint!!!! you've got a sub today!

    @TKRevRay971@TKRevRay971Ай бұрын
  • Adding this to my routine, love the video and now love your channel 🙌🏽

    @whosurchiefy7733@whosurchiefy773311 ай бұрын
  • YES THANKYOU BIONEER, I've been into the horse stance for awhile now and was wondering when you'd do a video on it

    @crowtunnel41@crowtunnel4111 ай бұрын
  • Big dad energy! Thanks for the video and providing more options for anyone's fitness journey

    @bagel411@bagel41111 ай бұрын
  • I love this channel. I'm always learning new exercises or training modalities that are fun and exciting! How does this guy not have 5 million subs???

    @DepressionShaman@DepressionShaman10 ай бұрын
  • You got my motivation back for doing this exercise everyday

    @koleszgdanska7149@koleszgdanska714911 ай бұрын
  • Wall seat is one of my main exercises in my combo. Keep it up

    @Trustee-of-The-Most-High@Trustee-of-The-Most-High11 ай бұрын
  • i love the graphics, scenery and shots on this video pls keep it up!

    @adoaskdaosdkasodkas321@adoaskdaosdkasodkas32111 ай бұрын
  • So Happy I found this Chanel Thank You My Friend

    @josecastrosemental@josecastrosemental11 ай бұрын
  • Yes! Yes! Yes! I always do this, either in long 3-4 minutes holds, or many sets of 1-2 minutes! People at work first stared at me like I'm weird, but slowly they got used to it.

    @Punster101@Punster10111 ай бұрын
    • I'm proud of them for getting used to it. That must have taken a lot of effort.

      @technic1285@technic128511 ай бұрын
    • @@technic1285 the funny thing is, one of my coworkers does karate, so he was already used to that kind of stuff. Sometimes we would light spar, but I would always lose.

      @Punster101@Punster10111 ай бұрын
  • Great vid man 👏👏👏. Our Instructor gives out Horse Stance a lot. I find the only way through it is too truly aim to relax, breathe, and enjoy it. Otherwise it's too punishing and you fail out under tension. Really appreciated the info on different tweeks to the style though 👍👍👍. Thanks brother 🙏. 😎

    @johnbradford9235@johnbradford923511 ай бұрын
  • Zhan Zuang and Ma Bu completely changed my life. Great vid!

    @thommccarthy1139@thommccarthy11393 ай бұрын
  • About ten years ago, when i was in the middle of high school, I studied a Vietnamese kung fu called Binh Thai Dao and part of warm ups was a 10 minute horse stance. They were absolutely killer. I just tried holding one now and I couldn't even make it 30 seconds. Watching this video has inspired me to get back in form.

    @Golgiaparatus2@Golgiaparatus210 ай бұрын
  • Thanks foe this, yes, I remember from Goju ryu doing the stance, I have continued squats but will reintroduce the horse stance..nice one. Keep the videos coming

    @mikeince2929@mikeince292911 ай бұрын
  • This video made me realize how much of an impact this had on my fitness as a kid. I did kenpo karate and we held these constantly in our training. It was not uncommon for advanced belts of all ages to hold this for 5-10 min at a time regularly. I always wondered why I had way better calisthenics and running ability than anything else athletic. Ig I always took the value of this exercise for granted but I think formed an amazing foundation for me.

    @jamesburnett3594@jamesburnett359410 ай бұрын
  • another one to add to my ever growing list of movements i could and should use regularly! massive cool points for the Jackie Chan clips...that guy is simply amazing!

    @ArtbyPaulPetro@ArtbyPaulPetro11 ай бұрын
  • One of the best channels ever!

    @gregiep@gregiep11 ай бұрын
  • Looking really good recently 💯 glad I stayed subscribed

    @robocu4@robocu411 ай бұрын
  • Used to do this for 3 mins, but left doing them 2 years ago. Good thing you reminded me

    @bigfool8819@bigfool881911 ай бұрын
  • Video start is on point!!

    @matthewsimmons2246@matthewsimmons224611 ай бұрын
  • Awesome, thank you. I've been wanting to get into this. It is the foundation of marshal arts

    @grndragon7777777@grndragon777777711 ай бұрын
  • Love your content, dude! Prompted me to horse for a total of 40 seconds. Quickest way to break a sweat without actually moving!

    @CalWong1@CalWong111 ай бұрын
  • This is so good! And i was so surprised to see Shenmue at the beginning!

    @stefanljungberg6313@stefanljungberg631311 ай бұрын
  • i love how you dont let your previous ankle injury stop you from doing the awesome movement.

    @BreatheChristian@BreatheChristian4 ай бұрын
  • Adam, Love your content. The "Old Dusty Film" look is very distracting when studying your positioning. Been working on the horse stance for 3 months and only can hold about 45 seconds. Lit the F up! This is Evil and I love it. 64 years young and getting younger practicing your moves. Thank you!

    @philloder@philloder11 ай бұрын
  • Just throwing it out to the aether that I really appreciate the shot at 11:40 Adam is beautifully parallel with the rail, hedgerow and scape and it makes the artsy part of my brain happy; good work 👌🖤

    @bellewhite3764@bellewhite37649 ай бұрын
  • Im inspired! Defently implimenting this into my training I love running and calistenics but always lacked flexibility and mobility with my legs

    @cuffss7455@cuffss745511 ай бұрын
  • My legs just feel really damn good the day after I've done these. Also helps with keeping good lower body form in my boxing stance.

    @carlandersson7870@carlandersson787011 ай бұрын
  • Last 2 years been using it for rebuilding my shattered hip and pelvis works beyond expectations

    @OleSmokey@OleSmokey11 ай бұрын
  • Takes me back to my youth karate days. Really helped when I played football in high school.

    @letstrylogiclogic7726@letstrylogiclogic772611 ай бұрын
  • Was waiting for this

    @V1turbo2@V1turbo211 ай бұрын
  • Not only are algorithms paychic but now creators are also. Not 2 hours ago i was doing horse stance. I haven't done it in months. Heres your video!

    @Santa-ny1yp@Santa-ny1yp11 ай бұрын
  • Great stuff bro il set timer and do this intermittently while sat for long periods 👍

    @vxsuperbadxvx5792@vxsuperbadxvx579211 ай бұрын
  • Tried this and was really struggling in the first minute or so. Then, I started doing qi gong, and pushed through for another 2 minutes. I just decided to stop as not to strain myself, but I'm confident I could've lasted the full 5. Glad to see you mention this as a viable option, since I wasn't sure if I was somehow making it easier on myself by not keeping my upper body tense. Gonna incorporate this in with my daily planks and pushups and see how I feel in a couple weeks. Great video!

    @whimsycole246@whimsycole2465 ай бұрын
  • Since I've torn my ACL in my right knee and my back has issues also, the horse stance is my primary way to train my legs. I'll do different times and sometimes I'll do sets like this: 1 min horse stance followed by 30 seconds jump rope and do 3 to 4 sets like this.

    @RickW0071@RickW007111 ай бұрын
    • I tore my ACL as well in December. I'm going to be asking my pt if this is ok for me to do. I miss training karate so much this will be one step closer.

      @rpoillucci@rpoillucci11 ай бұрын
    • Did you have acl reconstruction? I had it Dec and was curious how long others waited to start doing these type exercises.

      @chriscarmack1016@chriscarmack101611 ай бұрын
    • @@chriscarmack1016 never had the surgery...tore it about 3 or 4 years ago

      @RickW0071@RickW007111 ай бұрын
    • ​@chriscarmack1016 I had reconstruction about 23months ago I was advised (by top surgeons and sports physios) to start doing isometric holds like glute bridges pretty much straight away - I was doing them in the hospital bed. For a horse stance hold there really shouldn't be any movement in your knee so you should be able to start pretty much as soon as you get your stitches out. I would advise that you make sure you knee mobility is up to par first though, i.e. being able to bring your heel equally as close your ass as the "good" leg and being able to extend it as much as the other leg also. You need to mobility in order to perform the movement with less pain. Good luck on your journey back brother, it's steady progress but I was back to playing rugby at my previous standard within 10months

      @ruairimurray6796@ruairimurray679610 ай бұрын
    • Cool! I just found rope jumping and the horse stance as two additions to calisthenics. I have found these sorts of training to give a huge improvement to my running. Always like to try something new.

      @bigbattenberg@bigbattenberg10 ай бұрын
  • i used to do it in martial art training, i got up to 8 mins the variation i used was with my fists by my hips and elbows back. it got me from relatively fit kid to beeing able to jump twice as high as before and kicking above my head in 6 month

    @wnohr77@wnohr7711 ай бұрын
    • @Wnohr77 u got upto 8 mins? world record is 8 mns or 8-30 seconds I think

      @vr1902@vr19023 ай бұрын
    • @@vr1902 a 15 seconds google search shows the record at 3 hours

      @wnohr77@wnohr773 ай бұрын
  • Back when I was young I didn’t like this stance but I did it. Thanks for the challenge!

    @MrFmccarty@MrFmccarty11 ай бұрын
  • so much knowledge and generosity in these comments ♥

    @Yo-cr9ol@Yo-cr9ol8 ай бұрын
  • One of the first stances you learn, it's very powerful and very useful.

    @timephire@timephire11 ай бұрын
  • hey this is actually one I have experience with. I'm grateful I took martial arts as a kid before I got into weight lifting.

    @GrimDarkHalfOff@GrimDarkHalfOff11 ай бұрын
  • Great video sir. The old ways are still the best ways

    @bludstone7598@bludstone759811 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this video. Because of you I have started my journey to become strong enough to avenge my father.

    @sumguyasmr@sumguyasmr10 ай бұрын
  • Thanks man, much love to all 💙💜❤

    @truestorey3158@truestorey315811 ай бұрын
  • Gonna start training this, thanks mate!

    @SlickJarl.@SlickJarl.11 ай бұрын
  • Man I love this filter you have on ur videos

    @orhan1149@orhan11495 ай бұрын
  • Fairly recently I started adding the horse stance, warrior stances (and variations), bow stance, cat stance, cross stance, and drop stance to my training. They're genuinely humbling, but feel really good when I train them consistently

    @nolankingmusic9761@nolankingmusic976111 ай бұрын
  • Yesssssssss I've often wondered if you would ever get to this topic

    @drip369@drip36911 ай бұрын
  • Love martial arts style content, bro. Props from Somerset.

    @JivecattheMagnificent@JivecattheMagnificent11 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this helpful video. I started doing horse stance after seeing a Lee Weiland video. I came hère for more help on form. 66 year old lady. I started at thirty seconds and am up to 1 minute 20 seconds. Adding one second a day. I can feel the difference every where.

    @lamccullen@lamccullen10 ай бұрын
    • A wise lady

      @stelicapetre7724@stelicapetre77242 ай бұрын
  • I've a practitioner of Southern styles since 1989. My first school taught 5-Animal Shaolin, my 2nd school taught 5-Ancestors Fist. Obviously, the Ma-Bo is a fundamental part of both. I've noticed that the Northern version of the Horse Stance is lower & wider.

    @antonydrossos5719@antonydrossos571911 ай бұрын
  • this helped with my walking problems. I always had weird swings to the sides when walking straight, but It slowly faded away in like 2 months after doing this daily

    @fast1nakus@fast1nakus11 ай бұрын
  • Very well done mate, as per usual! Just one small tip regarding the horse stance. Whenever you're doing it, make sure to tuck your tailbone in just a tad bit, so that the spine is completely straight without its natural curve.

    @gmeister3022@gmeister302211 ай бұрын
  • my Qigong/ gung fu teacher had us doing Gōng Bù for 6 minutes on our first day. he taught us how to do it before hand... we spent 45 minutes learnign to breathe then learnign to stand and do some steps... then6 minutes was so tough... after about 1 minute the shaking stopped.... my hands went bright. My vision cleared... when I left that first day i could see individual raindrops with utter clarity as they fell from the sky. sounds like horse poo but I stand by my words...

    @Jafmanz@Jafmanz11 ай бұрын
  • iso holds that make you use most of your bodies kinetic chain at a high intensity is how you make your fascia connect more/grow stronger. also helps create a better / more quickly utilized mind muscle connection because nothing else really forces us to focus on using all of our body like iso holds.

    @saturationstation1446@saturationstation144611 ай бұрын
  • Great video dude, very informative and also clear and concise. Learned a lot as this is a new training tool I am applying to myself. Keep up the good work and shit, your'e friggen ripped!

    @TheIamPC@TheIamPC6 ай бұрын
  • I have practiced kick boxing and now learning judo with juijitsu and u know what horse stance actually helped me A LOT, everyone should do it, its hard to explain but its like it made me have this leg strength and that proper posture on executing sime take downs, its simple and effective people should do it more

    @anjoesteban7639@anjoesteban763911 ай бұрын
  • The horse stance you do is much wider than the one I was trained to do, which is in line with a more athletic foot width. I was also taught to focus on mind body connection with the glutius specifically, essentially using it as a glute activation exercise.

    @anonperson3972@anonperson397211 ай бұрын
  • Great exercises from when I was doing martial arts

    @alanb1498@alanb149811 ай бұрын
  • I’ve seen that video Jessie put out. When you start incorporating the ‘round’ principle to such things as pinching, kicking and even defending the squeeze I’d a rear naked choke, it’s astounding how powerful it is, and I feel I’m only scratching the surface. Give it a go and see for yourself. Next time you punch, just think”round” and see if the punch is stronger and more effortless. Same foe when y out re being choked. Concentrate on round and see if you survive longer before taping out. 👍🏻

    @lanceuppercut7436@lanceuppercut743611 ай бұрын
  • When I was a teenager (42 now) I did Qi Gong and Hun Gar, forgot about the horse stance completely. Now Im seeing this it's coming back, Another good pose was the Swan (i think) on 1 leg, ither leg held in hip flexion at the waist, one hand palm up reaching over head, other hand palm down reaching for the earth. That was a great stretch for the spine.

    @ayejaymofo@ayejaymofo8 ай бұрын
  • This exercise is greatly recommended mastering before going on holidays to France!

    @Nairezs@Nairezs11 ай бұрын
  • Love what you do! As always, great video. I’m a huge fan of yours. Your positioning is quite stiff, though, and causing too much tension. Misalignment is the cause. As you did mention the tucking of the pelvis. Push knees outward also. Proper structure does, as you mentioned, direct force into the ground. Not necessary to drop so low and 45° is still quite beneficial. Source: I studied with a Shaolin monk and am certified Shaolin Qigong teacher as a result. Had to do horse stance for over an hour regularly. Yeah The Shake is real🤣

    @Upnpersonal@Upnpersonal9 ай бұрын
  • One thing I switched was a shikodachi in place of a kibadachi. With a kibadachi the feet are parallel facing the front and is a little higher while in shikodachi the legs should be nearly parallel to the ground and feet pointed to 45 degrees. By leaning backward (forcing one to engage the core) and pushing the hips forward (posterior tilt), you get a perfect abductor squeeze and a greater stretch on the adductors and higher load on the quads. I hold a karate punch position as this works on upper body posture simultaneously and I don't see the point in working on just the lower body when you can connect the entire body and save time. The only benefit of kibadachi over shikodachi is ankle stabilised mobility which can reduce major injuries from twisted ankles.

    @amhawk8742@amhawk874211 ай бұрын
  • Exactly the details i was looking for. Thank you so much mate! Great video. 1'10 so far...

    @kpoline@kpoline11 ай бұрын
  • from a karate (shinkyokushin) perspective, i noticed better lateral engagement of my trunk muscles when i punch to the body in shiko dachi. keeping my trunk stable but allowing better power production on the punch. When in kumite dachi (fighting stance) i flex my lateral trunk wall MUCH better and with more rotational force, the power production is increased again.

    @ADAM_CAMMA@ADAM_CAMMA9 ай бұрын
  • Studied Shorin Ryu every since I was a boy and this was a fundamental stance. Someone said in a previous comment this stance can be very humbling. I couldn't agree more. I think you are the first I've seen on KZhead to elaborate on the benefits of this stance incorporataed in training. I would also say the cat stance "neko ashi dachi" is also a great stance to incorporate into training since it requires you to put all your body weight and balance on your back leg.

    @JamesG800@JamesG80011 ай бұрын
    • I started with Shorin Ryuu as well. Shorin Ji Kenpo also has mostly the same stuff as well.

      @CobraTheSpacePirate@CobraTheSpacePirate11 ай бұрын
    • Hey I did too!

      @infunerous666@infunerous66611 ай бұрын
    • @@CobraTheSpacePirate It's always great to meet someone else who's a fellow practitioner of Okinawan karate. And I also appreciate your taste in retro anime 😉

      @JamesG800@JamesG80011 ай бұрын
    • @@infunerous666 Not many are familiar with Shorin Ryu or know that is was one of the very first mixed martial arts with influences from all over South Asia since Okinawa was a melting pot of culture at the time. I always love hearing from others who have trained in this ancient, but still practical, art of fighting.

      @JamesG800@JamesG80011 ай бұрын
    • @@JamesG800 Actually from a few years back, I started over with Tanihata ShitoRyuu Karate here at the local Budoukan with a local friend of mine who is teaching there... It is fun doing the demos and working with the kids! Most all of the kata are exactly the same. However, the Japanese Department of Education renamed the kata from a few years ago? Pinan etc., is another name. Like Hinan...Maybe same thing as renaming Peking to Beijing.?

      @CobraTheSpacePirate@CobraTheSpacePirate11 ай бұрын
  • Really really good stuff 👏!!!

    @jimminykricket4067@jimminykricket406711 ай бұрын
  • Awesome... Thank you... Have a great day...

    @ddub6135@ddub613511 ай бұрын
  • Congrats on the Vivo sponsor! Best shoes on the planet

    @manuchoaguirre7190@manuchoaguirre719011 ай бұрын
  • Thank u for making this vid!

    @rubberduckyinc.1162@rubberduckyinc.116211 ай бұрын
  • Did some barbell squats in horse stance: great exercise to add in for some variation, thank you very much

    @icysamurai1485@icysamurai148510 ай бұрын
  • Thanks will add to warm up.

    @chriss6971@chriss697111 ай бұрын
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