Our bodies are highly complex, intricately integrated mechanical systems.
Their essential parts are muscle, bone, connective tissue, nerves and more.
No one element works in isolation.
Functional training starts with that and then develops around another,
equally important set of facts. Our bodies become attuned to the demands
we place upon them, no matter whether we are totally sedentary or extreme
athletes. Likewise, they adapt to the specific demands of our activities.
So, competitive swimmers develop massive upper body strength and immense
lung capacity and runners become lean and wiry while boxers develop lightning
hand speed and cat-like agility.
Each is functionally trained. That is, each has trained his or
her entire physical system to meet the most extreme demands of their activity.
Consider, for example, a pitcher or golfer. Both require a blend
of powerful arms and shoulder and exquisite coordination. Endless dumbell
reps might build strength in isolated arm muscles, but would not boost the
pitcher’s fastball or add yardage to a tee shot.
Functional training builds strength via resistance training that
replicates the golfer’s swing or the pitcher’s motion on a cable
system. That strengthens arm muscles while tuning each athlete’s shoulders,
back, abdominal and leg muscles, connective tissue and skeletal system and
reinforcing the coordinated motion a pitch or swing. In brief, a complete,
demanding and realistic workout.
More simply, think of the difference between a bench press and
a pushup. In a bench press, you work chest muscles, the front of the shoulders
and the triceps from a prone bench position. You do the same in a pushup
while your entire physical system works to attain balance and stability – to
hold itself still while doing the exercise.
All that movement starts, at the core – in the stomach, or the abdominal
muscles. It’s the integration of all of the muscles of the midsection
that enable us to hold still at the center, and then transfer movement to
the other parts of the body. With a pushup, you are working the muscles
around the shoulder while the upper body, hips, and legs are working hard
to stay still and in control as you move. It is functional because your
body has “learned” to do more than push weight around and learned
it in the way the body naturally works.
That’s functional training as defined by ACCUA Advanced Fitness Training.



