Khan Porter, Author at Men's Health Magazine Australia Fitness, Health, Weight Loss, Nutrition, Sex & Style Wed, 12 Jun 2024 05:38:59 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://menshealth.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/cropped-Mens-Health-32x32.jpeg Khan Porter, Author at Men's Health Magazine Australia 32 32 Khan Porter: how to pull off the ring muscle-up https://menshealth.com.au/khan-porter-how-to-pull-off-the-ring-muscle-up/ Mon, 11 Mar 2024 01:27:36 +0000 https://menshealth.com.au/?p=56552 Men's Health's fitness expert Khan Porter takes you through his step-by-step guide to pulling off the mother of all calisthenics moves: the ring muscle-up.

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WHEN IT COMES to show-off gym moves that also have underlying functional benefits, it’s hard to go past the ring muscle-up. Essentially a combination of two killer moves, the pull-up and the dip, the ring muscle-up (RMU) is a compound gymnastic movement popular in CrossFit. To pull it off successfully, the athlete must move from the hanging position at the bottom of the rings to up and over, finishing the movement in a full lockout position.

So, apart from turning heads on outdoor gym equipment in your local park, how can the RMU actually benefit you? Gripping the rings and swinging yourself back, forward and upward requires quite decent grip strength to support your body’s weight and ability to go from the bottom hang position to the press and lock-out at the top, above the rings.

RMU’s also require full-body strength and coordination. While a lot of the force for the movement comes from the hips, RMUs also require a great deal of upper body strength to complete the movement once your chest turn over on the rings. At the same time, to pull off the move while remaining stable on the rings, you also need to develop strength in the back, biceps, triceps, lats, glutes, hips, and core, basically everywhere.

Importantly, your shoulders need both strength and mobility to execute the movement fluidly and without injuring yourself.

How to do a ring muscle-up

While flashy, RMUs are not a move you can just expect to complete without a solid foundation in other compound gymnastics moves. It’s a progressive exercise and you need to be rock solid in fundamentals before you even attempt the full movement.

 

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First, you must be able to execute five strict form pull-ups.

 

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Next, you need to be able to do five ring dips.

 

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Now for the complete movement:

1 Grip a set of Olympic rings that are high enough off the floor that your feet will not touch it.

2 Drive your lower body backward, squeezing your glutes and hips, arching your back, and driving the feet behind you.

3 Engaging your core, swing your feet, legs, hips and core forward, with your arms still extended overhead.

4 As your hips come forward,  engage your lats and begin to pull yourself up to the rings, tucking your chin and starting the upward movement towards the turn-over position.

5 Kick your feet back behind you, turn over on the rings, keeping your shoulders tight to your body before thrusting your chest and head forward.

6 Bring your feet and knees upward and press out of the movement using the force from your lower body.

7 Lower and repeat.

8 Bow to the adoring crowd.

 

 

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Related:

How many chin-ups should you be able to do

Khan Porter: 3 moves to build a killer back

 

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Khan Porter: 3 moves to build a killer back https://menshealth.com.au/3-moves-to-build-a-killer-back/ Sun, 03 Mar 2024 22:25:56 +0000 https://menshealth.com.au/?p=56088 A strong back can carry you through life. Here, Men's Health fitness expert Khan Porter reveals his go-to moves to build a back you can count on.

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WHO WANTS A strong back, you might ask? You do if you want a symmetrical, evenly proportioned, and most importantly, functional body. With some of the biggest muscles in your body in the Latissimus dorsi (lats) as well as the Trapezius (traps), building up your back increases your overall strength, allowing you to lift heavier overall and perform movements with greater output. If you want to jump higher, sprint faster or throw further, a great base of maximal strength is needed and your back is a crucial component of that.

According to Harvard Health, strong back muscles also aid injury prevention, supporting your spine and reducing the likelihood of strains, sprains, and other injuries that can occur during lifting, bending, or twisting movements. Strengthening your back can also improve your posture, helping you walk taller and helping prevent issues later in life.

Finally, a nod to aesthetics. You might not be able to see it, but a strong back is a gift to onlookers on the beach. Let them drink it in a little as you hit the surf.

Here, Men’s Health’s fitness expert Khan Porter reveals his three go-to moves for building a back that won’t let you down.

Build a strong, functional back

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1 Pull-up – 5 x 10

Place your hands outside shoulder-width apart. Initiate movement from your back rather than arms. Squeeze at the top, lower with control.

 

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2 Incline dumbbell row – 3 x12

Keep your chest flat against the bench and your elbows at a 45-degree angle from your body. Begin the movement by pulling your shoulder blades back and keep them back through the entire row.

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3 Dumbbell Reverse flys – 5 x 12

Keep your arms as straight as possible and don’t let the angle of your elbow change throughout the move. Use the back of your shoulders to move the bells not momentum. Keep your midline tight.

For more workouts from Khan, check out @iamkhanporter on Instagram.

Related:

How to build a chiselled chest

Khan Porter on staying positive when you’re injured

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How to build a chiselled chest https://menshealth.com.au/how-to-build-a-powerful-chest/ Sun, 25 Feb 2024 23:47:57 +0000 https://menshealth.com.au/?p=55444 Your pecs are the key to a killer physique. Here, Men's Health fitness expert Khan Porter reveals his go-to moves to build a strong chest.

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LITTLE KNOWN FACT, a chest can make or break a physique. Sick guns, boulder shoulders and eye-popping abs mean nothing if your chest is a flat expanse of flesh, devoid of even a hint of contour.

A strong chest isn’t just an aesthetic necessity, though. Solid pecs contribute to your overall upper body strength, increasing your ability to push objects, whether that’s a loaded barbell, a mate’s queen-sized bed (this guy!) or a stalled sedan.

A powerful chest can also help you throw and heave things, allowing you to put extra mustard on returns to the keeper from fine leg, add metres to your drive on the golf course or lift a gurgling toddler into your arms.

So, what’s the best way to build them? Use the three-move workout below to fashion your chest into one you’ll treasure.

What are pecs?

The pecs refer to the primary muscles of your chest, the pectoralis major and pectoralis minor. The pectoralis major is the large, fan-shaped muscle that comprises most of the chest wall. In addition to keeping your arm attached to your body, the muscle is responsible for flapping, pressing and lifting actions. The pectoralis minor is smaller and flatter; it lies underneath the pec major and is intrinsic to functioning of the shoulder.

 

Build a powerful chest

 

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1 Plyometric push-up – 5 x 4

Keep your midline tight and avoid bending through your back. Press the floor away as hard as possible. Try to catch with your arms as close to straight as possible.

 

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2 Bench press – 5 x 5

Pull your shoulder blades back, then drive your feet through the floor as you press the bar upward. Lower the bar to the bottom part of your chest but not lower than your sternum.

 

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3 Incline bench 3 x 12-15

Slowly lower the dumbbells under control. Maintain tension through your pecs by not locking out your elbows entirely.

For more workouts from Khan head to @iamkhanpoter on Instagram.

 

Related:

Khan Porter on staying positive when you’re injured

Check out CrossFit legend Khan Porter’s gym and fridge

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Khan Porter on staying positive when you’re injured https://menshealth.com.au/khan-porter-on-staying-sane-when-youre-injured/ Thu, 07 Dec 2023 01:02:31 +0000 https://menshealth.com.au/?p=53472 Dealing with a long-term injury can impact your mental wellbeing. Here our fitness panellist Khan Porter reveals his strategies to cope.

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ANYONE WHO’S PLAYED sport or worked out for any length of time has most likely found themselves at the mercy of some sort of injury. They pop up, meddle with your progress and empty your pockets as you fork out for various healthcare professionals and scans.

They’re a pain (literally and metaphorically) and can mess with both your body and your mind.

This year I found myself at quite the existential crossroads, when I was faced with the worst injury of my CrossFit career. A back injury, which lead to an elbow injury, both of which have kept me off the competition floor for coming up on twelve months now.

I started CrossFit in 2012, competing in various local, national and international events for the following 11 years. I dealt with an assortment of injuries of varying severity but, thanks to the world-class coaches, physios and chiros I’ve worked with, I’ve always managed to get through the competition season in one piece. Until this year, when a recurring back injury, which stems from two herniated discs and some nerve damage, flared up and left me barely able to bend over and put on my shoes, let alone lift a barbell.

There’s a concept in Japanese philosophy called ‘Ikigai,’ which proposes we can live a life of joy and fulfilment when we pursue a career (or passion) that combines:

  • What you love
  • What you are good at
  • What you can be paid for
  • What the world needs

 I feel immeasurably lucky to have found the sport of CrossFit at a point in my life where I could have otherwise gone down a very different path. I loved it. I was good at it and I saw an opportunity to get paid to do it. I’m not sure the world NEEDS people doing burpees quickly. But for some reason people find it entertaining enough they feel it adds value to their lives.

My sport was my Ikigai. Competing gave me a sense of purpose, a goal, which was of value to me and provided a source of consistency and stability when the rest of my life could otherwise be chaotic. There are few places I feel as present and alive as when I take the competition floor.

Beyond that, fitness has always been a pillar in managing my mental health. An outlet. Something I could channel my emotions into on a bad day to help me destress. It was also something I could consistently progress at, providing a sense of accomplishment with each little goal achieved. When that was taken away from me for the first time in eleven years, needless to say I struggled physically, mentally and emotionally.

As I navigated the last twelve months being side-lined by these injuries, I learnt a few valuable lessons about how best to keep progressing towards meaningful goals—such as appearing as Spartan on Gladiators—and stay sane (or as sane as possible) along the way.

Here are four of those:

 

INSTAGRAM I @iamkhanporter

 

1 Prioritise Your Recovery

 

This seems like a no-brainer, but I’ve certainly fallen victim to trying to prioritise what I could do in the gym and just training as normally as possible around an injury, rather than making addressing the issue at hand top priority.

When I initially injured my back in January, I tried to work around it with the main goal being to compete in the CrossFit Games Open in late February.

I flew to Bali for a one-month training camp, during which I worked around my back injury rather than working on it.
I wish I’d just stayed in Australia, got the scans and tests I needed done and began the process of rehabilitation immediately under the guidance of a medical professional and specialist who could monitor my progress along the way.

Additionally, making sure you do EVERYTHING you can outside the gym to ensure you’re improving should be a top priority. Sleep, stress management, nutrition, alcohol consumption, recovery protocols like massage, sauna, red-light therapy etc, all stack up and aid in your recovery when you do them regularly.

 

2 Maintain Your Regular Routine

 

As I’ve grown and matured as an athlete (and human being) I’ve come to learn that I function best when I am in a routine.

My training helps me stay in routine and provides a focal point around which many other habits stem.

A key component in recovery is our Central Nervous System (CNS) function. Routine offers predictability and stability, providing a sense of structure and security, which allows the CNS to function optimally by anticipating and preparing for upcoming activities or tasks. As a result, the body’s stress response diminishes, allowing our parasympathetic nervous system to operate properly, which assists our body in achieving optimum recovery.

If you are someone who usually trains for an hour every day before work, go to the gym every day for an hour before work. If you can’t fill that hour with training, do extra mobility or incorporate some of the recovery protocols outlined above, such as sauna, stretching, massage or a physiotherapy session.

OR use the following principle to create a training program you can do.

 

3 Focus On What You Can Do

 

For the duration of my injury, my mantra was ‘There’s Always Something You Can Do’.

When injured, it’s easy to focus on everything you can’t do in the gym, which keeps you in a negative mindset. This then makes it infinitely harder to stay motivated with your training and routine (which we know is crucial) as we are less likely to see ourselves as capable of reaching our goals and thus our drive and willingness to take action drops dramatically. We make excuses, miss sessions, fall into bad habits and ultimately delay our recovery longer.

While rehab should be the primary focus, I am someone who thrives when I am working towards a clear, performance goal in the gym and I am also just a sucker for a challenging workout.

When I first injured my back, my coach and I looked at what I could do in terms of movements and set some goals based on those. As I continue to rehab my elbow injury, I’ve managed to maintain a sense of purpose and feel like I am capable in the gym as I see gradual improvements towards those goals. You can always do something, but it’s up to you to do it!

 

4 Lean On Your Values

 

The hardest part of my injury journey has been feeling like I lost a core part of my identity. For 11 years I have been a ‘competitor’. It’s been a central plank of who I am and provided me a sense of purpose, fulfilment and joy that I didn’t think I could get in other areas of my life.

At the peak of my frustration, after officially withdrawing from the season, I spent some time doing guided self-reflection and revisiting my values. I returned to the concept of Ikagai and used that framework to find other meaningful pursuits I could invest more time into, aligned with my values, I enjoyed, I was good at, I could get paid for and helped others in some way.

I also used my values to help me find meaningful pursuits I could do simply for their enjoyment, ensuring I was filling my cup and giving myself the opportunity to enjoy the extra time I had as a result of these changes in my life and replenish the mental and emotional energy I lost dealing with the negative impact the injuries were having on me. As we grow older, we seem to spend less time doing things we love that fulfil us and instead pursue those that offer short-term gratification. An injury or setback can be a beautiful opportunity to discover some of the activities that nourish us, physically and mentally.

 

One Last Thought

 

The most important thing to remember when dealing with an injury, or any major setback in your training is that everyone’s journey is different. As the age-old adage goes ‘comparison is the thief of joy’ and no matter how similar someone else’s injury or training looks to yours, we are all going to progress at varying rates and cope with the emotional toll of those injuries differently. Focus on what you need rather than what someone else tells you that you need.

And ALWAYS get professional help in the treatment and management of your injuries… as soon as they happen!

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