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5 Reasons Why Balance Exercises are Important for Runners

August 22, 2023 · In: Movement, Strength for Resilience

Balance exercises should be incorporated into every runner’s training regimen.

Why? Because if you were to take a snapshot of yourself running, you would notice that it essentially is a one-legged action. In other words, you are switching from standing on one leg to another. This post will address five reasons why all runners should be incorporating balance into their training routines.

**This is not medical advice. Please consult your medical provider for more information.

balance exercises

Running is a Single-Legged Action

Take a snapshot of anyone who is running and you will notice the same thing with everyone: running is one-legged. During the running cycle, there are two instances where the legs can be. Either both are in the air at the same time or one leg strikes the ground at a time. This means that a good way to train for running is to practice and perform exercises that involve one-legged actions. Single leg balance exercises are great for this!

Cross Training Reduces the Risk of Injury

Have you ever heard of a football player participating in dance to help with footwork? Curious as to why golfers incorporate lifting workouts? This incorporates the idea of cross training.

Cross training is a way of using various forms of exercise, skill work, training, etc. different from an athlete’s main sport in order to develop or fine tune something specific required of their main sport. In the football example above, football players may take dance lessons in the off season in order to improve their footwork come time for when they are in season.

Cross training helps reduce the risk of injury by preventing overuse injuries and by training multiple facets required of each individual sport.

Balance Exercises Improve Running Efficiency

Balance exercises improve running efficiency by helping an individual maintain their center of gravity. Without maintaining the center of gravity, we would be off balance. Each person has a slightly different center of gravity depending on their body shape and the positioning of their limbs. Simply put, running efficiency is achieved by running as quickly as you can in a straight line and balance training helps you achieve this.

Training Balance Improves Your Stability

If you step on a rock while you are running, you need to have the ability to react quickly to stabilize yourself so you don’t roll your ankle. If you switch from running on hard concrete to soft grass, your body needs to be able to adjust to the newer surface. Training balance, especially on one leg, helps improve your stability so your body can react and make these quick changes to help protect you from injury. This is the difference between rolling your ankle and keeping yourself upright and continuing running.

Better Neuromuscular Control = Better Proprioception

Our balance is acted upon by three different systems: the somatosensory system, the vestibular system, and the visual system. The somatosensory system refers to what we perceive when our bodies touch and feel different things, like our foot striking the ground. The vestibular system is the workings of the inner ear and the small crystal-like structures that help detect movement. And the visual system is straightforward – its what we see. All three of these systems work together to tell us where our body is at in space.

By training our balance and neuromuscular control, we are directly improving proprioceptive input to the body.

TL;DR

Runners should be incorporating balance exercises into their training regimen because running is a one-legged action. It takes balance, proprioception, and stability to be able to run to protect against injury and improve running efficiency. Cross training in this manner can ultimately improve your form as a runner.

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Tera Sandona

Tera Sandona is a licensed Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) and the founder of PT Complete. She helps high-achieving women break out of cycles of chronic pain, stress, and burnout through her Regulate and Rebuild Method, a sequenced approach that addresses the nervous system first and builds strength second. Her work focuses on helping women finally understand their bodies, rebuild strength, and create lasting resilience that fits real life.

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By: Tera Sandona · In: Movement, Strength for Resilience · Tagged: capacity building, confidence with movement, functional movement, stability, strength training

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  1. Weak Ankles Running? Stabilization and Strengthening for Pain Free Running - PT Complete says:
    September 5, 2023 at 7:31 pm

    […] 5 Reasons Why Balance Exercises are Important for RunnersCore Strengthening Exercises to Reduce Back PainKnee Pain Walking Down Stairs? This Can Help!Next Post > […]

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I'm a practicing physical therapist based out of sunny SoCal who loves to educate others and share information and knowledge. You can typically find me hard at work trying to manage normal life or cuddled up under a blanket enjoying coffee or desserts I can never seem to get away from!

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The label got attached to slow yoga, easy walks, a The label got attached to slow yoga, easy walks, and gentle bike rides. Active recovery became a category of workouts.

But the label is doing the wrong job. What makes movement “recovery” isn’t the modality. It’s whether your body finishes with more capacity than it started with.

A 20 minute walk can be active recovery on a Monday and a workout your body can’t handle on a Wednesday. It’s the same walk on a different day with a different answer.

The thing most of us are missing isn’t a better workout schedule. It’s a daily look at what your body can actually hold. Some days, that assessment points to movement. Some days, it points to rest. Either one, when it’s used at the right time, it supports the body. When used at the wrong time, it makes things worse.

If you want help learning to read your body signals, comment SIGNALS for the free nervous system workbook.

#activerecovery #pushcrashcycle #listentoyourbody #nervoussystemregulation #chronicpainmanagement
This pattern was mine for years. And if your weeke This pattern was mine for years. And if your weekend looks anything like the one I am about to describe, you already know how Sunday night feels.

Rough week, exhausted by Friday, on the couch all weekend hoping to reset. Sunday night, I would be more depleted than when I started with nothing prepped for the week ahead. And the conclusions running through my head about what kind of person I must be to keep ending up here did not help.

The fix I always reached for was discipline…more structure, more consistency, and more grit. The crash kept coming anyway.

What moved the needle was learning to read what my body could hold, day by day. Some days a workout, some days a walk, some days a couch Sunday was the choice. The decision was made each morning, based on what was actually there.

If you want help learning to read the signs and what to do for them, comment SIGNALS and I will send you the free nervous system workbook.

#chronicpain #chronicfatigue #nervoussystemhealth #painscience #listentoyourbody
If by Wednesday you are already running on fumes, If by Wednesday you are already running on fumes, this one is for you. I called myself undisciplined for years.

Every Sunday night I would land on the same conclusion: more structure, more consistency, and more grit. That was the fix. And every Friday I would crash anyway.

Here is what I did not know about the cycle.

Both doors lead to the same room.

Door one is push. The body sends signals about what it can hold that day. Discipline overrides the signal. Push past the signal once, you crash once. Push past it for a year, you live in the crash.

Door two is rest. The week was rough so the weekend is for resetting. You sit Saturday hoping it works. Sunday comes and you feel worse, so you rest again. By Sunday night nothing is prepped and you are still depleted. The week starts in deficit, so you push harder to catch up, and the crash arrives by Friday.

Different doors. Same room. The room is the cycle.

The missing piece was never more discipline. It was a daily read on what my body could hold and the willingness to let the read be the decision instead of overriding it.

Some days the body can hold a workout. Some days a walk. Some days a couch Sunday is the work. The decision gets made each morning, based on what the body is signaling that day.

If you want help learning to read your own signals, comment SIGNALS for the free nervous system workbook.

#nervoussystemregulation #nervoussystemwork #burnoutisreal #lıstentoyourbody #reclaimyourenergy
is treating movement like it only has two settings is treating movement like it only has two settings.

Keep training like nothing happened or do absolutely nothing.

This is where we need a little more nuance, because if you’re doing your normal gym routine, hikes, runs, or workouts and your pain keeps increasing, something is swelling, you’re limping through it, or you keep changing how you move just to get through it, that is your cue to scale back.

Not because you’re weak or because you ruined everything, but because your body is trying to do its job and constantly irritating the area can drag the whole process out longer than it needs to.

The body is made to heal, but it needs the right environment to do that.

On the other hand, being injured does not automatically mean you need to sit around for two to three weeks doing absolutely nothing until it magically disappears.

If you hurt your shoulder, maybe bench pressing and shoulder presses are not the move right now. But can you train legs? Can you walk? Can you modify the range of motion, load, tempo, or exercise choice? Most of the time, yes.

That middle ground is where a lot of people get stuck.

They either push through because they don’t want to lose progress or they stop everything because they don’t know what else to do.

But injury rehab usually lives somewhere in the middle. It is figuring out what still feels safe, what does not increase symptoms, and what allows you to stay active without poking the bear every single day.

Pain is information, but it is not always a stop sign.

You are not broken, but we do need to be smarter about how you’re moving while your body heals.

Save this for the next time your brain tries to convince you that your only options are “push through it” or “do nothing.”

#movementismedicine #injuryrehab #injurymanagement #stayactive #worksmarter
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