Apart from sit-ups and crunches for six-pack abs (your obsession), there are other exciting exercises to strengthen your core. Though people are already comfortable with the traditional ab workouts, adding other variant crunches can benefit you more. Crunches may be pretty beneficial for the core. Sit-ups are somewhat questionable and may be harmful to your lower back.

However, another core strengthening ab exercise is feasible, manageable, yet challenging for intermediate to advanced bodybuilders. And this is called “Butterfly Crunch”. With this crunch, your rectus abdominis will burn. In contrast, your transverse abdominis and internal obliques will be very tight, and your lower back will be safe.

Now I don’t know about you! But those who are jam-packed with the same old workout schedule can add butterfly crunches to their abs routine to stimulate their core strengthening exercise.

Let’s Talk about Butterfly Crunches

Butterfly crunch is meant for the advanced trainees seeking to go beyond the regular crunches. Here at first, you need to lie down on your back while keeping a tight core. Then, in each repetition, keep your focus on tightening your abs as you would with a regular crunch. However, in butterfly crunch, the placement of the leg and the movement of the leg make it harder than the normal crunch.

Here you have to keep your feet together in a way, so the soles of your feet touch and create a shape resembling butterfly wings. That’s why it is named “Butterfly Crunches”. In this post, we will explain the few different ways for this crunch that are not only different in the leg movement but also different in resistance.

 

The primary goal of this technique is to prevent the body-grounding effect that more conventional crunch positions produce on your legs. Your quadriceps and glutes cannot be engaged against the ground to provide stability and motion because you cannot press your feet firmly into it. Instead, your abs are forced to take charge and essentially do the entire task themselves, which puts a lot of pressure on them.

They are therefore more difficult and sophisticated, resulting in improved adaptation and, ultimately, stronger abdominal muscles.

What Butterfly Crunches Can Do for You

By now, it should be clear that adding harsher core variations like the butterfly crunch has several positive effects. But first, let’s go through some ways that doing hard ab work, like butterfly crunches, can help you achieve your fitness goals and better overall health.

1. Develop Core Stability

Straight sit-ups and crunches will help you get through the plateau that many people encounter. However, as you become accustomed to these exercises, they no longer benefit you much without progressive overload. Finding more challenging variants will fix this. In turn, developing your core muscles will result in more fluid, stable movements of your body as well as excellent posture.

2. A Fantastic Physique is Created by the hypertrophy

Not everything relates to performance and wellness. Many of us desire to develop the six-pack and toned midriff that many athletes and fitness enthusiasts display. When you reduce your body fat, breaking through core training plateaus and experiencing the resulting hypertrophy will result in bigger, more noticeable abs.

3. It can be Performed Anyplace

Butterfly crunches don’t require much equipment, if any at all, like so many other core workouts. So you can do butterfly crunches anywhere, anytime, without worrying about putting together any kit. We’ll get into this in more detail below.

4. It Focuses on your Abdominal Muscles rather than your Hip Flexors

According to Lauder-Dykes, “in most crunches, the motion is generally dominated by the powerful hip flexors.” He explains that this is because your body uses hip flexion (not your abdominal muscles) to lift your torso.

Alternatively, the butterfly crunch places less emphasis on the hip flexors because of the specific alignment of the legs. You can’t help but rely on your abs to do the heavy lifting.

5. It Hits your Obliques Better

The obliques don’t get much workout from regular crunches, but the rectus abdominis will get a good workout. These muscles are targeted with butterfly crunches.

For the second time, “opening the hips reduces the usage of hip flexors to accomplish the crunch,” as stated by Lauder-Dykes. This allows for greater engagement of the internal and external obliques throughout the entire motion.

6. Your Inner Thighs will be Stretched Out

Not the primary focus, but the open leg placement in butterfly crunches also provides an excellent stretch for the inner thighs. Flexible adductors are important since they contribute to your body’s overall stability and balance.

7. It Facilitate Hip Opening

Most of us fight stiff hips caused by too much time spent sitting. In addition to other stretches and exercises, butterfly crunches may assist in alleviating the tightness and releasing the hip flexors. But, again, bringing your feet together forces you to open your hips further.

The Best Way to Do Butterfly Crunches

Simple Crunch

Let’s get started and examine the butterfly crunch in more detail. There are a few distinct variants, each with a different level of intensity. Below, we’ll examine both. Both exercises, though, adhere to the same fundamentals to guarantee that you maintain proper form, upright posture, and core engagement throughout the workout. Doing butterfly crunches requires:

  1. Lay down on the ground or a mat. Your heels should be as near to your buttocks as feasible, and your back should be flat against the floor.
  2. Allow your knees to open up softly as you get into this position. Please do not force or push them apart; let them drift toward the earth. Again, we’re looking for the “butterfly wing” appearance.
  3. Your buttocks should be comfortably spaced apart from the soles of your feet when you touch them together. Throughout the workout, your feet should stay together.
  4. Put your hands behind your head or your temples. Avoid clasping or pulling on them if they are behind your head because doing so will reduce the activation of your core and increase the risk of neck injury.
  5. This is how you should stand. From this point on, squeeze through your abdominal muscles while contracting them. Next, bring your shoulders up from the floor while they are engaged. Then, as they rise a few inches, you should experience a sharp tightness in your abdomen.
  6. Throughout, maintain a flat back as much as you can. Instead of arching your back or raising your shoulders, we aim to tighten your midsection.
  7. Back to your starting position when you squeeze at the top. Repeat as many times and in as many sets as you like.

Butterfly Crunches, Variation for Experts

The butterfly crunch comes in several varieties, as was already described. It is possible to take it to a more difficult, advanced level.

Your arms will be in front, and your legs will rise with your torso in the advanced variation. Because your lower body will no longer serve as a stabilizing force, your core must work more to maintain stability. It will also more effectively engage your lower abs in that crucial crunching motion.

To carry out this more difficult variation of the butterfly crunch:

  1. Start by repeating steps 1 and 2 above to get yourself in the beginning position. Your hands should be at your head in a relaxed, neutral position with your back neutral. Your knees should spread into a butterfly form, and your feet should be positioned together slightly below your buttocks.
  2. From here, tighten your abdominal muscles and lift your torso off the floor. Next, bring your arms out in front of your body, extended, palms facing in the direction of your feet.
  3. Perform the crushing motion as previously, using your entire body this time. As you move your hands toward the floor, squeeze your abdominals. Then, keep your legs in the butterfly position and raise your knees to your head. Exhale as you ascend, squeeze into the action, and hold for a moment before coming back down.
  4. Go back to the beginning place. For the number of sets and reps you desire, repeat.

After each rep, you can either put your feet back on the mat or, for an incredibly challenging workout, keep them elevated a few inches off the ground the entire time.

The importance of doing crunches correctly

When performing any workout, proper form is essential. In particular, crunches and crunch variations demonstrate this. Unfortunately, if you utilize lousy form, the risk of injuring your neck or back is rather remarkable; as a result, many trainers and athletes entirely substitute other core workouts for crunches.

But if you remember the following guidance and maintain good form, you ought to be able to concentrate the strain on your core and keep it away from your neck and lower back:

Allow your core and abdominal muscles to perform the difficult lifting. For example, instead of attempting to lift your head or neck, try to lift your chest while maintaining your neck relaxed and neutral.

Maintain a neutral posture, lifting your body forward from the core rather than folding in towards it, and avoid hunching your neck or upper back.

Try to maintain your heels as close to your buttocks as possible when completing the basic variation. Your lower body and back will benefit from being less stressed, which will help your abs contract with the necessary pressure. Of course, this approach makes it more challenging, but the extra effort is well worth it.

Feel free to drop your feet a few inches if you find it difficult to keep them placed up against your buttocks in the first place. As you master the fundamental techniques, this will make the practice simpler. Just remember to maintain the ab contraction.

Equipment or No Equipment

As was already noted, one of the best aspects of any crunch variation is that little to no equipment is required. You only need to be yourself and a little bit willing to do any set.

You might want to pick up a few items to make the whole process a little more pleasant.

First, any type of groundwork is always better with workout mats. Any similar mat, whether a yoga mat or gymnast’s mat, that you may find at your neighbourhood gym will work wonderfully. If you wish to purchase one for use at home, they are typically also very affordable and simple to locate.

By deflecting some of your body’s downward pressure into the ground, mats will support in protect your back. But, of course, this can be unpleasant, cause bruising, and worsen existing joint and bone disorders.

Clothing that is loose, adaptable, and comfy is also recommended. For example, although you can perform core workouts anywhere while wearing anything, it might not be ideal to do them in your office while wearing a sharp suit. So instead, wear loose-fitting t-shirts and shorts or jogging bottoms.

Alternatively, you don’t need to wear anything if you want to do butterfly crunches at home or when travelling in a hotel room! However, if you’re not using a mat, be cautious of carpet burns and consider wearing underwear or even your birthday suit.

All that’s needed now is a solid program and some dedication. Make sure to frequently incorporate core workouts (3-4 times per week, for several tough sets.) Maintain a strong work ethic, push yourself hard, and make sure you maintain proper form whenever you can.

Can you make ABS in the kitchen?

It is often known that abs are created in the kitchen. It’s off by a hair. Like any other muscle group, Abs can be built through strength training and development in the gym. However, their true identities are exposed when cooking. Most people’s stomachs are always covered by extra fat, so they never get a chance to show off their abs. Despite your best efforts, you will never be able to spot diminish the layer of fat that covers your abdominals by exercising.

Your body could not access the fat stores in your stomach to supply energy even if you were to expend a thousand calories every day (which you won’t). So first, you need to create a calorie deficit so your body can start burning off its fat reserves. A caloric deficit happens when you eat less than you burn daily. Your body fat reserves will have to make up the difference.

However, you’ll need to cut calories elsewhere, not only from your stomach.

If you aren’t eating enough to establish a calorie deficit every day, completing workouts like butterfly crunches won’t help you see your abs any faster.

Internal Anatomy of the Stomach and Abdomen

The flat, muscle-like rectus abdominis grows from the pubic bone. The front of the ribs is where it inserts. This muscle’s sole function is to tighten the area between the pelvis and the ribs. That makes it the muscle with the most straightforward mechanism in the body.

It’s important to remember that your rectus abdominis is just one muscle in your abs. You can’t separate your abs into upper and lower sections. We have shown that there is only one origin and one insertion for this muscle. Its one, and only purpose is to unite the upper and bottom halves of the body.

What are the several “abs” that collectively form a six-pack? Tendons, not individual muscles, are being discussed here. These tendons’ size and arrangement are fixed by heredity. Some people have six abdominal sections, whereas others have eight. Nothing you do will make your abs look like they did when you only had six packs. However, by reducing overall body fat and engaging in workouts like the butterfly crunch, you can increase the thickness of the fibres between your tendons and make them more noticeable.

As a result of all of this, it should be evident to you that there is no way that you can isolate separate sections of the rectus abdominis. Any abdominal exercise will work all muscle fibres because there is only one origin and insertion point. It’s a common misconception that exercises like hanging leg lifts help strengthen the lower abdominal.

Is the Butterfly Crunch any good?

For a rectus abdominis exercise to work, the orientation of the muscle fibres and the way the abdominals typically move should be in sync. That indicates that the workout must entail spinal flexion or the curl of the body. There are a lot of postures in which you can perform the crunch or curling motion, including lying on the floor (as in butterfly crunches), sitting on a bench, and even reclining on a fitness ball. Of the three, the floor position is the finest.

When resting on the floor, your abs are fully stretched, which is the optimum starting position for the crunching movement. However, whether you position yourself on a bench or a fitness ball, there is the risk that you will overextend the spine without adding any further benefit to the crunching exercise. Bringing the arms up and through to the knees delivers the additional contraction at the end of the butterfly crunches to achieve a full range of movement. This action also cues you to the right degree of spinal flexion – you come up until your hands reach between your knees.

Many folks who claim to be doing butterfly crunches are merely lifting their heads. Others come up too high by actually raising their lower back off the floor.

You can prevent the temptation to put your hands behind your head by keeping your arms above your head. Unfortunately, as a result, the upper spine will be pulled, which could cause long-term issues.

Can I lose tummy fat with butterfly crunches?

Slimming down the midsection requires a reduction in overall body fat, as localized reduction is impossible. Physical activity is helpful, but crunches aren’t nearly as effective as other, more metabolically taxing workouts.

Maintaining a caloric deficit of about 500 calories per day is adequate for losing abdominal fat and resulting in a weekly weight loss of roughly 1 pound. After a while of doing core workouts like crunches, your hard work will pay off, and you’ll be able to show off your muscular abs.

How can I get rid of my stomach fat once and for all?

Everyone has their unique way of bearing extra weight. For example, two people can have the same overall body fat percentage. Still, one has more fat around the midsection than the other.

To display your abs, you’ll need to reduce your body fat percentage more than someone who carries their extra weight elsewhere. It’s unfortunate, but everyone has some flaw in their DNA.

Closing

There are many benefits to the butterfly crunch. It’s challenging but not too complicated; it allows you to strengthen your core and build contractile strength in your abs. But, in a nutshell, it will force you to rely on your weaker transverse abdominus and obliques to keep your body afloat at the expense of your stronger rectus abdominus.

True to its billing as a “complete core exercise” with benefits for performance in all sports, this routine is designed to strengthen the body from the centre.

As we saw at the outset, the butterfly crunch may be just what you need to add some variety and stimulation to your core workouts.

Author

Shakir Hasan is a fully qualified personal trainer and award winning writer, with a decade’s worth of experience under his belt. He has helped hundreds of people to meet their dietary and fitness goals, writing exercise and nutrition plans to suit any and every requirement. Shakir founded ThisIsWhyIamFit as a way to share his vast knowledge of exercises, diets, and general fitness advice.

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