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zakruti.com » Sport, fitness, workout » Jeff Cavalier
Home Chest Exercises (UPPER, MID, LOWER CHEST)

Home Chest Exercises (UPPER, MID, LOWER CHEST)

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
no equipment Home chest exercises can often be seen as not as effective as their gym chest workout alternatives. That doesn-t have to be the case if you understand how the chest muscle works and how to position your body in space to take advantage of that. In this video, I show you home chest exercises that target each of the primary areas of the chest; upper, middle and lower chest. If you look at the classic incline bench press, you will see that your upper arms are aligned not directly in front of your torso but at an angle upwards from that position. This shifts the focus to the clavicular fibers of the pecs and helps you to build a bigger upper chest. If you want to recreate this with a bodyweight chest exercise you can do at home you simply have to change the way you do normal pushups. By doing a decline push up, you will recreate the same position of your arms and therefore hit the same area of your chest. The flat bench press is an exercise that targets the sternal fibers of your chest, more commonly known as the middle chest region. You can keep the upper arm oriented like this by doing a classic pushup exercise. The arm will follow the same path as it does on the bench press as it will on the pushup with feet flat on the floor. Finally, to hit more of the lower chest and prevent that saggy chest and pecs, you want to perform incline pushups. The incline pushup angles your body upwards but your arms downwards (similar to the position they will be in when doing the decline pushup. Regardless of which area of your chest you want to develop or which home chest exercises you decide to do, you will want to be sure that you load them heavy enough to create change and growth. Now that doesn-t have to come in the form of weight. After all, if you are doing your workouts at home you may not have access to equipment. You can increase the load felt by the muscles in your chest by simply slowing down the exercise and making sure to keep the contraction on the chest with every rep. Finally, I show you one way to combine all three movements to get the ultimate home chest exercise that targets the upper, middle and lower chest. Follow the sequence shown and you will quickly see that this one can become a killer chest building exercise in no time. If you are looking for a complete workout program that requires no equipment at all and helps you build muscle in just 6 weeks, be sure to head to and get the ATHLEAN XERO program. Build muscle with nothing but your own bodyweight at home
Date: 2022-04-22

Comments and reviews: 7


I found this video too late. Perhaps I would have killer pecs by now, but better late than never. I've never liked my chest. Arms and abs are fine but I've always found that my chest lacks behind and doesn't progress as much while other muscles noticably improve. I do a lot of standard, diamond, and wide push ups so I'm not sure if the lack of chest development is normal but I'll give decline and inclined a go and hope for the best. Motivation restored.
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Now I never comment, but I felt compelled to comment on such a great presentation. Thank you for the clear content, along with the visual aids. By you drawing the targeted muscle activation on your body in other videos, brings the audience comprehension to the next level!
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I am trying to build muscles without gym, just doing work outs at home and no whey proteins. Will I make it? I doubt it. But I gave it 4 months. 20 days have gone already. Let's see what happens. I was only doing decline push-ups, now I'll try all 3. Thanks!
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How is the chest affected if do triangle push-ups and utilise the incline and decline position. Is it the same principle, if so it the effect greater as opposites to a normal push-up
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I wonder how high your feet need to be for the upper chest? Can't you just put your feet on the bench, if you don't have a wall handy or don't want to mark up your wall?
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Great workout. Tried it for the first time a few days ago. Do you recommend doing it as part of a full body workout? And how many circuits should I do?
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Great vid, helped a lot, and I can finally see more results in my lower chest and over all lower upper body. Keep it up -----
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