What area would you like to focus on?” a fitness professional asks her client.

“My hips, thighs and butt!” the woman replies with desperation. As personal-fitness professionals ourselves, we hear this reply from our clients, expectantly and almost without exception. No wonder: Most women gain weight and store bodyfat easily in these areas. Which also means these are the areas where most women lose weight last, making the hips, thighs and glutes the most challenging areas to firm and shape.

If your butt is a problem area, you’re at the right place at the right time. Two top IFBB pro fitness competitors, Cynthia Bridges and Stacy Simons, have helped us compile a listing of the 10 best glute exercises, with tips and suggestions on how you can shape and tone yours. You’ll also learn how to perform them correctly (and most effectively), and the best way to integrate them into your regular workout routine. If you’re ready to improve your own “bottom line,” you need to take action and stick with a plan. Soon enough, your glutes will be one of your best assets!

Developing great glutes requires performing mostly compound, multijoint exercises that involve hip extension (straightening your body from a bent-hip position). You most likely include some compound exercises like squats, leg presses or lunges in your current workout. To shift their focus from quads to glutes, you just need to adjust the way you perform them. We’ve included exercises you’re probably used to doing (plus some new ones), but incorporated some subtle variations to help emphasize your glutes. Try incorporating one or all of our three sample workouts into your routine to start shaping up your rear view today.

Jiu jitsu can be scary, exciting, nerve-racking, joyful, and bunch of other emotions all rolled into one. It’s not uncommon for this to happen when diving into a male-dominated sport.

Despite women still being out-numbered in this martial art, Easton BJJ is showing their progressive side by introducing more women to the mat and allowing them to have women-only training sessions with guest coaches and professors.

“Training with women provides a unique opportunity to be on a more equal level with your training partners — from a weight and strength perspective,” says Becky Knott, one of the founders of the women’s training program and a purple belt out of the Boulder school. “Women tend to be a collective group and are willing to support, share, coach and mentor each other for the sake of advancing their sister jiu-jitsu practitioners. All women’s training is a place where girls can be free to ask questions, express anxieties, concerns, successes, and frustrations they might not entrust to a male training partner. Easton’s women-only program provides an awesome estrogen-laced environment for women to blossom in the sport of Brazilian jiu jitsu.”

© 2011 Maryland Fitness for Women Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha