TIMESTAMPS 0:10 Intro - why do we do lateral raises? 1:50 Mistake #1 - Not enough range of motion 2:56 Mistake #2 - Too much range of motion 4:02 Mistake #3 - No standardized/consistent range of motion 5:30 Mistake #4 - No eccentric control 6:50 Mistake #5 - Thumbs drifting up 7:38 Mistake #6 - Using body English 9:03 Mistake #7 - Being too strict 10:14 Mistake #8 - Elbows either too flexed or too extended 11:50 Mistake #9 - Grip becoming the limiting factor 13:13 Mistake #10 - Poor stimulus 14:53 Mistake #11 - Going too heavy 16:43 Outro
I used to do side laterals with 35 lb dumbbells with shit form like an idiot. I decided to drop the weight way down to 10lbs with strict form, working my way back up to the 25's after MONTHS. The end result is that my side delts have made significant gains. They used to be flat and non-existent but people have noticed the improvement. Took about a year for serious change.
same bruh, changed from standing to sitting lateral raise + lowered weight a little. i use slight momentum to ascend but i control weight when decending, my side delts are burning
I never did much volume before on side delts, and now after doing 15+ reps while decreasing the weight, i really do feel the delt fatigue and I can’t stress enough how important high reps are.
Mike gives the best explanations for proper technique. Extremely specific without going into the weeds and killing interest. These series of technique videos are definitely some of the best on YT.
Regarding thumbs up, I find that I have to. The internal Rotation caused from pinkys up causing my left shoulder to hurt and click. But thumbs up (externally rotated shoulder) doesn't hurt at all. So I compensate by leaning forward 20 odd degrees till I feel my side delta take over.
I don’t know why everyone doesn’t do that. Slight external rotation might shift the focus to your front delts, but it also opens your shoulder joint up so that the head of your humerus isn’t crushing all the tendons above it into the acromion process. By bending forward a bit you change the angle of pull to put the focus back on your middle delts even with the slight external rotation. There is ZERO downside. It’s safer, and you’re perfectly isolating the muscle your after. Granted, not everyone will develop shoulder problems from doing standard lateral raises, or upright rows. However, just because some people do them with no pain now doesn’t mean they won’t feel horrible after years of doing them. If you can accomplish the same thing in a safer way with no extra effort at all... why wouldn’t you?
I have proximal biceps tendinitis and I highly recommend this, virtually no pain, and I can actually feel my medial delts contract even more...thanks Jeff Cavaliere
@@jasonabercrombie7869 Agree completely. To me, you just want the muscle you're working to be facing to the ceiling. I have also found that leaning forward allows you to stay in the scapular plane more easily. I use this same principle when doing barbell shrugs. It's amazing how a little forward lean allows you to squeeze the traps and rotate the scapula.
Cable row would be nice, I see soooo many variations in the gym, people who lean forward to stretch the lats and come back with the rowing motion, some people have a much more strict torso position, some pull low, some pull high. I usually advise to just "do what feels right for you, gives you a pump and makes you sore and stick to it" but I'd love to hear your take on it!
Your method is the “right” way. You seem to realize that there’s no universally “perfect form” for everybody. We all require slight tweaks to exercises :)
First time iv’e scene this series. After lifting for so many years much of this is lot of common sense, but I love how u pick apart these exercises. Always something new to learn or incorporate. Look forward to watching the rest of your videos! Thankyou!
Can’t believe this was put out for free - real valuable information (that you would think would be common sense for most folks) I’d love to see calves or lats covered next! Go through the whole body!
On your tip #5, you call for pinkies up on the side raise. I've also heard that is indeed harder and more stressful for the side delts but putting weight on that movement with internal rotation also puts the rotator cuff in vulnerable position. I am older and have had shoulder impingement and rotator cuff pain so I am worried about doing all pinkies up. Should I stick to safer thumbs up and just be disciplined in the movement?
Warm up your rotator cuffs before any lifts that place your shoulders in internal rotation. I like to superset side laterals with face pulls and my shoulders feel good with a lot of blood flow
I naturally like 30 reps with 10lbs dropped to 5 half way through. Some friends thought my weight was too light and i did too many reps. It's the only way I feel the burn and hit a stimulus point..plus I tore my shoulder cuffs and it's not worth the ego gains. On top of that I do alot of handstands because they feel amazing and I want to save my shoulders for the fun stuff. I cut down my front raises or push and I increase rear delts by a small bit to help stabilize my handstands. So glad to no I was listening to the right sensations and made the right choice.
I am a fairly skinny runner and I have no business here in general, but I watched to learn and I did learn. Thank you for the information and good video. Even runners need some upper body strength.
Both Mike and Jeff are right. just different takes on it.But yes i developed big delts when i dont mind my traps. And i also fixed my shoulder pain when i dont engage my traps. so i combine their takes and i fix both hehehe. Thanks Mike MD. You are my idol!
you do a deadlift...with stiffer legs. typically in a normal deadlift you would bend your knees until they are flush with your elbows with the bar over your mid foot, in a stiff leg deadlift you only bend your knees to the extent that is nessecary to get your hands on the bar without rounding your lower back. the thing with these kinds of variations like stiff leg deadlift/close grip bench press is that words like stiff/close are relative. how flexible your hamstrings are will determine to what level of knee bend you need. how much low back/thoracic flexion can you tolerate will also determine that. dan green is well known for doing very stiff leg beltless deadlifts off a 3.5 inch deficit which sounds amazing but i'm sure he works for many years building up that tolerance and hamstring flexibility and didn't get to those overnight.
I cant believe ive veen working out for over a year now and just discovered this channel. Woooow so much to learn from here. Looks like my yt watch list is full for the next 5yrs 😂
Really enjoy mike's commentary. Really brainy guy but super down to earth and really funny. It's especially entertaining when he and menno henselmans are going back and forth- they're both on the same level intellectually but polar opposites in terms of delivery.
Hi Mike, great video! Definitely gonna be making sure I'm sticking to these points to get the most out of this movement. I am curious as to your thoughts in regards to people talking about potential shoulder impingement from "Pinkies up" during this exercise. Obviously the goal here is hypertrophy but for some one who is also quite focused with lengevitiy could it be possibly a good idea to have the thumbs slightly higher or is it really not an issue at all? Any research into this topic would be greatly appreciated if anyone has anything, I haven't been able to find much on either side of the fence.
Athlean-X has a video on this I believe but the gist of it is to lean forward then have your thumbs facing up. Doing this has the force now perpendicular to your medial delt rather your anterior delt if you were to stand upright
not only is this great advice but Dr Mike's delivery is impeccable. Idk how many takes they're doing, but based on the sit down style videos I"m convinced this man is nailing these monologues in one take, perfectly executed.
3 questions, what's your opinion on, after failure,(& logging only good reps): 1/Continuing w/best possible partial reps? 2/ Flexing elbows, (pulling back to line up weight w/torso), to enable more full reps? (This can continue incrementally until it becomes rows.) or 3: Swing up, control down, unitl weight falls on its own.
I love your videos, content and delivery are always spot on. A few questions about lateral raises. 1. Does doing them seatted make any difference? Especially in regards to cheating. 2. are you better off to do them on cables to better match the strength/ resistance curves? 3. what path should your hands take? At the bottom of the movement should they be at your sides or in front of you?
Preface by saying I am not a trainer... 1. Seated reps will eliminate nearly all of your body movement influence. However, this is not always a good thing. Minor body movements are natural and can be beneficial to your training. As he mentioned in the video, you know (feel) when you are cheating the movement. 2. I think this is personal preference. Bands, cables, dumbbells; whatever works best for the health of your shoulder. I had a pretty severe shoulder injury and the mechanics of using cables hurts my joint. Maybe it's psychological, but dumbbells do not cause any discomfort. 3. Just in front of your hip works best for me, as long as the weight maintains tension. Keep your delts engaged, if you cannot, then shorten your range of motion on the bottom.
Would love to see a video about the correct way to do an OHP. I can’t seem to get a comfortable position for my shoulders. They just love to click and clack and I have tried different hand positions too. Any help would be awesome. P.s. I have been using Dumbbells instead but don’t want to miss out on any benefits I may get from OHP
I found some on the ohp that worked for me. About grip width. When the bar is at its lowest position your forearms should be parallel to the floor. Lift the bar straight up moving your head back and out of the way and once the bar is passed your head, poke it through your arms. Most importantly, shoulders back and down at all times. Can't remember the name of the guy who made that video though.
It's always felt best to me to do lateral raises quite high up despite people's advice about traps taking over too much. Thanks for validating what my body has been telling me.
Best advice EVER for Side Deltoids. Put into action today and they were on fire by the 3rd set. I was only ising 10 lb dumbbells, reps 30, 25, 20 on 1 minute rest between sets. Thanks Dr. Mike
5:23 i found standardized range of motion for training particularly helpful when training completely alone in the gym and not having anyone around to save me if I failed. Instead of lifting the weight untill I couldn't lift it anymore at all, I lifted it until my technique or form failed me, which in 90% of cases would happen before actualy failing to move the weight from A to B position, so I didn't have to risk killing myself on a squat or benchpress.
I really enjoy this because I’ve been consistently working out for about 2 almost 3 years now and the one muscle group I wish was bigger and more round is my shoulders. My front and rear delts look amazing but my side delts are lacking and when I don’t have a pump and can’t help but feel smaller in a sense. I take all the tips I can take and I hope 6 months from now I’ll have the boulder shoulders I’ve been working for.
Great video! Only one thing I'd like to point out... Light-years are a unit of distance, not time. It's the distance light travels unimpeded in one year.
i have been lifting for 50 years and still always trying to do perfect lat raises for best results... i think for many years i just over did them for sure...good form and amount of time under tension and not over doing them is the key...
Absolutely brilliant content here Mike I'm very grateful! I'd love to see a barbell row tutorial that's something that I'm not really sure that I'm doing right.
@@willmoffat2979 tbf most people who internally rotate when doing them keep their elbow stupidly higher than their wrist instead of putting their pinky slightly up
one of the biggest, leanest dudes i knew about 20 years ago, a trainer with massive highly striated delts with perfectly defined heads, never used more than 20lbs for his lateral raises. he gave everyone one of these tips and followed them. he did his squat working sets in the 400s for bodybuilding rep ranges, but 20 lbs was enough to get the right stimulus for his shoulders with sufficient control.
Holy shit, I wish this video had been around 15 years ago. I've got a congenital tear in one of my upper biceps tendons that has made delt exercises really painful. Tweaking the exercise and dropping the weight has made lat delt raises actually work without crippling me. Only got into your channel recently and just started dipping into your older stuff. Will defo check the rest out now, absolute legend.
Side lateral raise is a variable resistance exercise... that means the bottom two-thirds of the rep is low resistance... the top 1/3 of the exercise is high resistance.... also the traps and rhomboids serves as a stabilizer for the shoulder joint!
I hope this video helps, I have not increased strength or felt even the slightest burn or soreness with this exercise, I'm doing the exact same weight since I started weight training about 6 months ago, should I do 1 arm at a time if all the other tips don't work, something else, please help it's really frustrating as I do my best but don't get any positive results back for doing so. Please can anyone help me. Great video with lots of different tips hopefully combined they should help. Great video thankyou.
How is V-Shreds advertising on your vids?! 😂 How is it that after decades of doing lateral raises with such great coaches as Vince Gironda, Charles Glass, Mickey Goldmill, and Norman Dale we are still doing it wrong?! Great video!
I have waited years to find this no bullshit channel. An encyclopaedia of meaningful information and technique instruction. I guess the downvotes are from pumped up little "fitness influencers" in their freebie Gymshark wear 🤓
Awesome video. Please keep them coming. My suggestion would be inclined dumbbell press. My right elbow hurts after performing these and I've been trying to make adjustments to correct this. My left side gets the correct stimulus in the upper chest which is what I'm targeting. I have done these unilaterally with lighter weight and still having a hard time figuring out what I'm doing wrong.
The best thing about Jones designed equipment (Nautilus, MedX, Hammer Strength, Life Fitness) is their lateral raise machines allow for all of these technique tweaks to be made pretty much automatically by the design of the machines themselves
good video and explanation. It's important people realize they need to think about moving up and away so that they can activate their delts more. also keeping their traps disengaged while doing it as well. as you bring up your arms to also stick your chest ur as well so that you can allow the delts to activate better.
I think having your hands in the "pitcher position" when doing lateral raises is going to increase the chances of shoulder impingement. Having the thumbs pointing slightly up is going to avoid that as you are opening up the head of the humerus and preventing the shoulder joint tendons from banging onto the acromion
Pinkies up is old-school If it'hurts don't do it !! I personally put one foot slightly Forward it naturally gives you a tilt forward raise elbows first hands will follow arms and hands should be parallel to the floor 3 sec negatives light weight 4 Sets 15 ,12,10,10
I cheated on my side lateral rises just a few hours ago and this video appeared in my feed. I am starting to believe that Dr. Mike has some super powers
Thank you Dr Mike, me and my brother have had some real improvemnt at the start of our journey, instead of moving weight around, we are now calculated in our exercise plan, feel more soreness then ever and enjoying being able to handel more weight after adequite rest, its really down to me to design the fitness plan, Im going too be looking into downloading your app but im enjoying watching your videos and learning the real science behind improving the body and putting it into practice,were bothing in our 30s and very new to the gym tbh so weve got alot of work ahead of us, do you have or any plans to make a starting from scratch basics of the gym type series, I understand you have many videos that if watched in the right order can give you the basic path but its only after watching them out of order would you be able to recognise the linear path, or have a series with a client/ joe smoe thats very out of shape and working with them over a long period of time so we could watch your decision making, real time to best effectively get gains, I thank you for your time and have enjoyed your comedic stylings, I look forward to continuing to build my body like I should have been doing 10 years ago. XD Thank you again.
"The negative is half the rep" is something my first trainer told me when I first started twenty years ago.
Solid gold advice.
I was the first person to Preach the Importance of Eccentric and controlling it ..... So , YOU'RE WELCOME !!
@@brainhakker7133 oh wow thanks Brian Hakker for being the first person to have this thought, you're a GENIUS.. WHAT WOULD WE DO WITHOUT YOU!!!!!!
@@brainhakker7133 thanks brain hakker
all about that Time Under Tension
Im actually inclined to believe it is more than half the rep.
TIMESTAMPS
0:10 Intro - why do we do lateral raises?
1:50 Mistake #1 - Not enough range of motion
2:56 Mistake #2 - Too much range of motion
4:02 Mistake #3 - No standardized/consistent range of motion
5:30 Mistake #4 - No eccentric control
6:50 Mistake #5 - Thumbs drifting up
7:38 Mistake #6 - Using body English
9:03 Mistake #7 - Being too strict
10:14 Mistake #8 - Elbows either too flexed or too extended
11:50 Mistake #9 - Grip becoming the limiting factor
13:13 Mistake #10 - Poor stimulus
14:53 Mistake #11 - Going too heavy
16:43 Outro
Thank you. The layout of these videos feels all over the place and so hard to follow
Thanks. Help me very well.
thanks
Timespam homies are the reason why we should have faith in humanity.
Bruh you know the name of the intro song?
I used to do side laterals with 35 lb dumbbells with shit form like an idiot. I decided to drop the weight way down to 10lbs with strict form, working my way back up to the 25's after MONTHS. The end result is that my side delts have made significant gains. They used to be flat and non-existent but people have noticed the improvement. Took about a year for serious change.
Hell yeah brother
I had to drop it to 7.5 lbs. I think I have a mobility issue.
We've all been there brother. Congrats on the reminder and success
"People in the gym" 😂😂
500 for things that never happened
@@Jk-zv6tz ???
"Dont run away from the stimulus, run towards it!"
Words to live by
Don't avoid soul burn avoid soul weakness the way of perfection
the phrase is say to myself when doing certain exercises is “chase the tension”
Been doing standing lateral raises forever. After I tried it sitting, I felt my side delts for the first time. And boy did I feel it.
same bruh, changed from standing to sitting lateral raise + lowered weight a little. i use slight momentum to ascend but i control weight when decending, my side delts are burning
I never did much volume before on side delts, and now after doing 15+ reps while decreasing the weight, i really do feel the delt fatigue and I can’t stress enough how important high reps are.
what about lateral raise machine?
@@Luke-ty2cj
They exist.
@@Luke-ty2cjMachines are great. You can further practice form and try more weight without being limited by stabilizers.
Nobody curses so nicely and calmly as Dr. Mike. Calls out the BS while also informing. 👍
Two videos with Dr Mike in one day! Must be a miracle!
Thanks for RP for providing us with this quality content!
Mike gives the best explanations for proper technique. Extremely specific without going into the weeds and killing interest. These series of technique videos are definitely some of the best on YT.
this is probably the best lateral raise video I've ever watched.
Regarding thumbs up, I find that I have to.
The internal Rotation caused from pinkys up causing my left shoulder to hurt and click.
But thumbs up (externally rotated shoulder) doesn't hurt at all.
So I compensate by leaning forward 20 odd degrees till I feel my side delta take over.
Jeff Cavaliere has a good video about that.
I don’t know why everyone doesn’t do that. Slight external rotation might shift the focus to your front delts, but it also opens your shoulder joint up so that the head of your humerus isn’t crushing all the tendons above it into the acromion process. By bending forward a bit you change the angle of pull to put the focus back on your middle delts even with the slight external rotation. There is ZERO downside. It’s safer, and you’re perfectly isolating the muscle your after.
Granted, not everyone will develop shoulder problems from doing standard lateral raises, or upright rows. However, just because some people do them with no pain now doesn’t mean they won’t feel horrible after years of doing them. If you can accomplish the same thing in a safer way with no extra effort at all... why wouldn’t you?
I have proximal biceps tendinitis and I highly recommend this, virtually no pain, and I can actually feel my medial delts contract even more...thanks Jeff Cavaliere
@@jasonabercrombie7869 Agree completely. To me, you just want the muscle you're working to be facing to the ceiling. I have also found that leaning forward allows you to stay in the scapular plane more easily.
I use this same principle when doing barbell shrugs. It's amazing how a little forward lean allows you to squeeze the traps and rotate the scapula.
I'm glad someone else said that as I was gonna say the same. Internal rotation+elevation, no thanka
Mike is an amazing person for doing this type of video series.
Cable row would be nice, I see soooo many variations in the gym, people who lean forward to stretch the lats and come back with the rowing motion, some people have a much more strict torso position, some pull low, some pull high. I usually advise to just "do what feels right for you, gives you a pump and makes you sore and stick to it" but I'd love to hear your take on it!
There is not one way to skin the cat
rudy rich but there is a better than the others way
Your method is the “right” way. You seem to realize that there’s no universally “perfect form” for everybody. We all require slight tweaks to exercises :)
First time iv’e scene this series. After lifting for so many years much of this is lot of common sense, but I love how u pick apart these exercises. Always something new to learn or incorporate. Look forward to watching the rest of your videos! Thankyou!
Thank you so much. Can't believe these videos are free...
Can’t believe this was put out for free - real valuable information (that you would think would be common sense for most folks) I’d love to see calves or lats covered next! Go through the whole body!
Perfect video for literally anyone looking to learn how to lift. Yes, amazing tips for lateral raise, but every bit of this is golden advice.
man you're the absolute best at providing information. I agree with literally everything you have ever said.
great info and forma, the questions about side delts is closed for good
On your tip #5, you call for pinkies up on the side raise. I've also heard that is indeed harder and more stressful for the side delts but putting weight on that movement with internal rotation also puts the rotator cuff in vulnerable position. I am older and have had shoulder impingement and rotator cuff pain so I am worried about doing all pinkies up. Should I stick to safer thumbs up and just be disciplined in the movement?
Warm up your rotator cuffs before any lifts that place your shoulders in internal rotation. I like to superset side laterals with face pulls and my shoulders feel good with a lot of blood flow
Stick to neutral to thumbs up just in case.
I love the extremely informative and useful content, the way you talk, the jokes, everything! Best bodybuilding video channel ever! 👏👏👏
I naturally like 30 reps with 10lbs dropped to 5 half way through. Some friends thought my weight was too light and i did too many reps. It's the only way I feel the burn and hit a stimulus point..plus I tore my shoulder cuffs and it's not worth the ego gains. On top of that I do alot of handstands because they feel amazing and I want to save my shoulders for the fun stuff. I cut down my front raises or push and I increase rear delts by a small bit to help stabilize my handstands. So glad to no I was listening to the right sensations and made the right choice.
I am a fairly skinny runner and I have no business here in general, but I watched to learn and I did learn. Thank you for the information and good video. Even runners need some upper body strength.
I was always worrying about isolating the delts without activating the traps, which led to poor gains. Thanks a lot for the clarification!!!
Both Mike and Jeff are right. just different takes on it.But yes i developed big delts when i dont mind my traps. And i also fixed my shoulder pain when i dont engage my traps. so i combine their takes and i fix both hehehe. Thanks Mike MD. You are my idol!
Please, do Stiff Legged Deadlift !!
Brother GG yes! I think it’d be awesome to do it alongside good mornings as a general hip hinge technique video.
Single Leg DL...never feels like I'm doing them right 😭
you do a deadlift...with stiffer legs. typically in a normal deadlift you would bend your knees until they are flush with your elbows with the bar over your mid foot, in a stiff leg deadlift you only bend your knees to the extent that is nessecary to get your hands on the bar without rounding your lower back. the thing with these kinds of variations like stiff leg deadlift/close grip bench press is that words like stiff/close are relative. how flexible your hamstrings are will determine to what level of knee bend you need. how much low back/thoracic flexion can you tolerate will also determine that. dan green is well known for doing very stiff leg beltless deadlifts off a 3.5 inch deficit which sounds amazing but i'm sure he works for many years building up that tolerance and hamstring flexibility and didn't get to those overnight.
This was reaaally helpful. Praise RP!
I'm really suffering hard from Trapeziooverhypertrophia and I'm so glad that Dr. Mike doesn't mind...
What got me into the channel and made me a subscriber was, apart from all the knowledge that Mike has, he seems like a genuine nice guy =)
I cant believe ive veen working out for over a year now and just discovered this channel. Woooow so much to learn from here. Looks like my yt watch list is full for the next 5yrs 😂
Really enjoy mike's commentary. Really brainy guy but super down to earth and really funny. It's especially entertaining when he and menno henselmans are going back and forth- they're both on the same level intellectually but polar opposites in terms of delivery.
Excellent video. Next: barbell rows, lat pulldowns or face pulls. I almost never feel like i'm doing this correctly.
Jeff cavalier has great videos on face pulls as well, if you want to check him out.
Hi Mike, great video! Definitely gonna be making sure I'm sticking to these points to get the most out of this movement.
I am curious as to your thoughts in regards to people talking about potential shoulder impingement from "Pinkies up" during this exercise. Obviously the goal here is hypertrophy but for some one who is also quite focused with lengevitiy could it be possibly a good idea to have the thumbs slightly higher or is it really not an issue at all?
Any research into this topic would be greatly appreciated if anyone has anything, I haven't been able to find much on either side of the fence.
Athlean-X has a video on this I believe but the gist of it is to lean forward then have your thumbs facing up. Doing this has the force now perpendicular to your medial delt rather your anterior delt if you were to stand upright
Just go thumb slightly up while tilting forward just a tiny bit.
I would love too see an episode on OHP form. Sorry if its already been done.
not only is this great advice but Dr Mike's delivery is impeccable. Idk how many takes they're doing, but based on the sit down style videos I"m convinced this man is nailing these monologues in one take, perfectly executed.
“Your hips are not your side delts”. Damn, if only I knew 5 years ago.
me too :-)
Lolllll best statement
3 questions, what's your opinion on, after failure,(& logging only good reps): 1/Continuing w/best possible partial reps? 2/ Flexing elbows, (pulling back to line up weight w/torso), to enable more full reps? (This can continue incrementally until it becomes rows.) or 3: Swing up, control down, unitl weight falls on its own.
I love your videos, content and delivery are always spot on. A few questions about lateral raises.
1. Does doing them seatted make any difference? Especially in regards to cheating.
2. are you better off to do them on cables to better match the strength/ resistance curves?
3. what path should your hands take? At the bottom of the movement should they be at your sides or in front of you?
Preface by saying I am not a trainer...
1. Seated reps will eliminate nearly all of your body movement influence. However, this is not always a good thing. Minor body movements are natural and can be beneficial to your training. As he mentioned in the video, you know (feel) when you are cheating the movement.
2. I think this is personal preference. Bands, cables, dumbbells; whatever works best for the health of your shoulder. I had a pretty severe shoulder injury and the mechanics of using cables hurts my joint. Maybe it's psychological, but dumbbells do not cause any discomfort.
3. Just in front of your hip works best for me, as long as the weight maintains tension. Keep your delts engaged, if you cannot, then shorten your range of motion on the bottom.
Would love to see a video about the correct way to do an OHP. I can’t seem to get a comfortable position for my shoulders. They just love to click and clack and I have tried different hand positions too.
Any help would be awesome.
P.s. I have been using Dumbbells instead but don’t want to miss out on any benefits I may get from OHP
I found some on the ohp that worked for me. About grip width. When the bar is at its lowest position your forearms should be parallel to the floor. Lift the bar straight up moving your head back and out of the way and once the bar is passed your head, poke it through your arms. Most importantly, shoulders back and down at all times.
Can't remember the name of the guy who made that video though.
Tbh you're better off with DB's.
It's always felt best to me to do lateral raises quite high up despite people's advice about traps taking over too much. Thanks for validating what my body has been telling me.
Best advice EVER for Side Deltoids. Put into action today and they were on fire by the 3rd set. I was only ising 10 lb dumbbells, reps 30, 25, 20 on 1 minute rest between sets. Thanks Dr. Mike
This is now the absolute Bible for me...Doctor Mike brakes it down and wastes no time. I'm on a mission and this dude is getting me there.
Where are they? I saw a fast train blow by the window behind them at about the 1/3 point...pretty cool view for a city gym
5:23 i found standardized range of motion for training particularly helpful when training completely alone in the gym and not having anyone around to save me if I failed. Instead of lifting the weight untill I couldn't lift it anymore at all, I lifted it until my technique or form failed me, which in 90% of cases would happen before actualy failing to move the weight from A to B position, so I didn't have to risk killing myself on a squat or benchpress.
I really enjoy this because I’ve been consistently working out for about 2 almost 3 years now and the one muscle group I wish was bigger and more round is my shoulders. My front and rear delts look amazing but my side delts are lacking and when I don’t have a pump and can’t help but feel smaller in a sense. I take all the tips I can take and I hope 6 months from now I’ll have the boulder shoulders I’ve been working for.
I'm glad I saw this because ive been keeping those traps in timeout during my lateral raises.
Great tips I always stress control of weight in both motions thank you for teaching proper techniques.
This video was great! Please do more like this, specially for quads.
I now watch 4 UA-cam channels that offer great great advice. 👍 love this channel
Such amazing info brother! Thanks!
I love the “pinky’s up, thumbs down” example. It really helps getting the mind muscle connection 👎🏼🔥
Great video! Only one thing I'd like to point out... Light-years are a unit of distance, not time. It's the distance light travels unimpeded in one year.
Thanks for the great content Mike. Been following for years and really appreciate this series. The bread and butter lunge pls pls pls fix that for us
Great vid...I'm glad I bought a lateral raise machine. But sometimes I need dumbbells and a good lesson on technique. Thanks....😊
Love the channel brother! Excellent advice on every video I've watched, possibly the best on youtube.
i have been lifting for 50 years and still always trying to do perfect lat raises for best results... i think for many years i just over did them for sure...good form and amount of time under tension and not over doing them is the key...
Cable face pulls next please!
The surprising results of long-length partials changed the whole full ROM thing quite a bit, though.
You crack me up. I really appreciate your sense of humor as much or more than your valuable lessons! : )
Great tip on shoulder lateral raises DR mike
Thank you so much for these videos!!! They are great for making sure I have not lost focus and getting me back into where I need to be
Absolutely brilliant content here Mike I'm very grateful!
I'd love to see a barbell row tutorial that's something that I'm not really sure that I'm doing right.
Jeff Cavaliere: inaudible screeching
Catbus Driver ahahahahhaha fax, not too much internal rotation but it’s def not external rotation colour me disappointed
@@willmoffat2979 tbf most people who internally rotate when doing them keep their elbow stupidly higher than their wrist instead of putting their pinky slightly up
He might learn something
Yeah always thought the was strange
Yeah. That pinky up instruction is the antithesis of what Jeff Cavaliere would've instructed. Internal rotation of the gleno-humeral joint.
Great video! You're at Iron Sport Gym in Glenolden, PA in this video, right? I trained there for about a decade. Great gym!
finally the soon to be goto channel for everything hypertrophy related
Please keep these coming Mike, have learned a lot. Many Thanks.
Mike did it. He landed Versa Grips. Every time I run across it on a video I'm going to comment. YOU DID IT!
one of the biggest, leanest dudes i knew about 20 years ago, a trainer with massive highly striated delts with perfectly defined heads, never used more than 20lbs for his lateral raises. he gave everyone one of these tips and followed them. he did his squat working sets in the 400s for bodybuilding rep ranges, but 20 lbs was enough to get the right stimulus for his shoulders with sufficient control.
Holy shit, I wish this video had been around 15 years ago. I've got a congenital tear in one of my upper biceps tendons that has made delt exercises really painful. Tweaking the exercise and dropping the weight has made lat delt raises actually work without crippling me. Only got into your channel recently and just started dipping into your older stuff. Will defo check the rest out now, absolute legend.
I love it, real world advice and technique without bro speech that works ... Thanks
Hey Mike I got an exercisse I'd love to see : All of them! Thanks.
Side lateral raise is a variable resistance exercise... that means the bottom two-thirds of the rep is low resistance... the top 1/3 of the exercise is high resistance.... also the traps and rhomboids serves as a stabilizer for the shoulder joint!
6:21 50 light year as a measure of time, you truly are Science idd
I hope this video helps, I have not increased strength or felt even the slightest burn or soreness with this exercise, I'm doing the exact same weight since I started weight training about 6 months ago, should I do 1 arm at a time if all the other tips don't work, something else, please help it's really frustrating as I do my best but don't get any positive results back for doing so. Please can anyone help me. Great video with lots of different tips hopefully combined they should help. Great video thankyou.
Hey Dr. Mike. Great video. A light years are a unit of distance though, not time.
Love your content. Would love to see a breakdown of the upright row.
How is V-Shreds advertising on your vids?! 😂 How is it that after decades of doing lateral raises with such great coaches as Vince Gironda, Charles Glass, Mickey Goldmill, and Norman Dale we are still doing it wrong?! Great video!
Wouldn't pausing at the top mean biasing the shortened position?14:04
I have waited years to find this no bullshit channel. An encyclopaedia of meaningful information and technique instruction. I guess the downvotes are from pumped up little "fitness influencers" in their freebie Gymshark wear 🤓
Stuck at home - would love to see some squat, deadlift, flye, press variations using only dumbbells.
Light Years is a measure of distance, not time! Dr Mike just like our hero Han Solo! Cheers from Italy!
Mike’s voice has become a lot deeper in the last 4 years. And gained a lot of muscle.
Excellent content. Good advice
keep em coming mike!! This is great!!
"Be a fucking grown up and don''t swing the weights" love it.
You have amazing videos on this channel, thank you!!!
Awesome video. Please keep them coming. My suggestion would be inclined dumbbell press. My right elbow hurts after performing these and I've been trying to make adjustments to correct this. My left side gets the correct stimulus in the upper chest which is what I'm targeting. I have done these unilaterally with lighter weight and still having a hard time figuring out what I'm doing wrong.
The best thing about Jones designed equipment (Nautilus, MedX, Hammer Strength, Life Fitness) is their lateral raise machines allow for all of these technique tweaks to be made pretty much automatically by the design of the machines themselves
Please do a video on standing barbell pressing. So we can see the correct form. I see so many different styles of barbell pressing. Thanks.
good video and explanation. It's important people realize they need to think about moving up and away so that they can activate their delts more. also keeping their traps disengaged while doing it as well. as you bring up your arms to also stick your chest ur as well so that you can allow the delts to activate better.
I think having your hands in the "pitcher position" when doing lateral raises is going to increase the chances of shoulder impingement.
Having the thumbs pointing slightly up is going to avoid that as you are opening up the head of the humerus and preventing the shoulder joint tendons from banging onto the acromion
Pinkies up is old-school If it'hurts don't do it !! I personally put one foot slightly Forward it naturally gives you a tilt forward raise elbows first hands will follow arms and hands should be parallel to the floor 3 sec negatives light weight 4 Sets 15 ,12,10,10
You can do a video about Split Squats addresing all the variations, including Poliquin full ROM split squats.
I cheated on my side lateral rises just a few hours ago and this video appeared in my feed. I am starting to believe that Dr. Mike has some super powers
Thank you Dr Mike, me and my brother have had some real improvemnt at the start of our journey, instead of moving weight around, we are now calculated in our exercise plan, feel more soreness then ever and enjoying being able to handel more weight after adequite rest, its really down to me to design the fitness plan, Im going too be looking into downloading your app but im enjoying watching your videos and learning the real science behind improving the body and putting it into practice,were bothing in our 30s and very new to the gym tbh so weve got alot of work ahead of us, do you have or any plans to make a starting from scratch basics of the gym type series, I understand you have many videos that if watched in the right order can give you the basic path but its only after watching them out of order would you be able to recognise the linear path, or have a series with a client/ joe smoe thats very out of shape and working with them over a long period of time so we could watch your decision making, real time to best effectively get gains, I thank you for your time and have enjoyed your comedic stylings, I look forward to continuing to build my body like I should have been doing 10 years ago. XD Thank you again.
very informative, thx.
I just googled "not feeling side delts" between sets, and as soon as I saw that beautiful head in the results, I knew I was getting cured ❤
Yes. Versa grips are amazing!! Best gear investment ever!
Can't believe how different mike sounds now
Is anything wrong with eliminating all momentum by doing lateral raises while sitting on the end of a workout bench? Thanks Buddy...
Learnt a lot. Cheers .