Workout moves have many different names, but none are better to start your day than a "Good Morning" exercise. Although, unlike the title's implication, you can do a Good Morning at any time of day. To find out what it is, how it's done, and its benefits, we spoke with trainers Kelly Collins and Katie Kollath. Keep reading to see what they had to say.
Meet the Expert
A Good Morning exercise is a weighted squat. Unlike squats with dumbbells you hold in your hands, a Good Morning utilizes a barbell placed behind your shoulders. Its name is believed to have arisen for two reasons: for one, the way you bend your waist in a bowing motion is similar to how a person might bow to someone to say, "Good morning." Another reason for the name is because the move resembles the stretch that occurs when you rise out of bed in the morning.
As the Good Morning move involves a barbell, it's considered an advanced workout exercise even when unweighted, weighing forty-five pounds. There are many muscles involved, and proper form, which we will detail for you at length, is key to preventing injury. Kollath tells us that "you want to make sure you have adequate strength and mobility before performing this movement with the barbell."
This move is all about back stabilization. It will work your hamstrings and glutes, but there is no shortage of workout moves that focus on those. In addition to exercising those muscles, the Good Morning helps to create stability and strength in both your upper and lower back. If you've found yourself at a plateau in your workouts, this move is an excellent way to move past it and increase your strength more than you have before. It falls in the same category of workout moves as deadlifts and squats but works more muscles in your back, too. It engages the entirety of your posterior chain, which are all the muscles needed to keep your back in good form.
With the amount that your back is involved in this move, it's important to follow injury prevention tips. Here are the top ones.
Additionally, Collins notes that heavy weight training is not recommended for "those pregnant or recovering from childbirth, those injured or recovering from an injury to their back, neck, spine, knees or feet, or those who have recently had surgery or are not medically cleared by their doctor." If experience pain during this exercise, you should see a licensed physical therapist or certified personal trainer who can assess your form and suggest modifications as needed.
While this is an advanced move, there are numerous ways to modify it so that beginners or intermediate exercisers can more easily do it.
A Good Morning exercise is an advanced workout move that gets its name because the movement involved looks similar to a getting of bed stretch and a bow. It is a form of squat, but it involves your back muscles more than squats generally do. This is because of both the movement involved and the usage of a barbell of your upper back. With so much back involvement, proper form is integral to preventing injury. If you aren't at a place in your workout journey where a Good Morning is yet within your reach, you can try it with bodyweight, dumbbells, or resistance bands, or do it seated instead of standing. A "good morning" can have an entirely new, stronger definition with these tips than ever before.
This Is the Workout to Do When You’re Short on Time but Want Results