
Kneeling Modified Hindu Push-up
- Músculo objetivo
- —
- Equipamiento
- Body weight
- Parte del cuerpo
- Waist
- Tipo
- Strength
The Kneeling Modified Hindu Push-up is a bodyweight movement that traces a flowing arc from a raised-hip starting position down through a low point and up into a back-extended finish, working the shoulders, chest, triceps, and core in a single continuous motion. Performing it from the knees reduces the load compared to the full Hindu push-up, making the movement pattern more accessible while still developing upper-body pushing strength and spinal mobility. It is a practical choice for building toward the full version or for adding variety to a bodyweight training routine.
Cómo hacer el Kneeling Modified Hindu Push-up
- 1Start on all fours, then lift your knees off the floor and push your hips up and back so your body forms an inverted-V shape, similar to a downward-dog position but with your knees resting on the ground.
- 2Place your hands shoulder-width apart with fingers spread, and keep your arms and legs straight enough that you feel tension through the shoulders and core.
- 3Take a breath in and begin the sweep by bending your elbows and lowering your chest toward the floor in a forward arc, keeping your hips high for as long as possible.
- 4As your chest approaches the floor, shift your weight forward so your hips drop and your torso skims just above the ground.
- 5Continue the arc by pressing through your hands, straightening your arms, and lifting your chest upward while allowing your hips to lower toward the floor.
- 6At the top of the press, your arms should be nearly straight, your chest open, and your back gently extended — this is the cobra-like finish position.
- 7Reverse the movement by pushing your hips back up and returning to the starting inverted-V position, or lower your knees back to the floor between reps if needed.
- 8Perform the desired number of repetitions, moving smoothly through the arc rather than pausing at any single point.
Consejos de técnica
- Think of the movement as one continuous circular arc rather than a standard push-up with a top and bottom — the fluid path is what makes it effective.
- Keep your core lightly engaged throughout the sweep so your lower back is supported when you reach the extended finish position.
- Allow your hips to lead the transition from the downward-dog start into the forward sweep — rushing the elbows before the hips shift reduces the range of motion.
- Look slightly forward rather than down at the floor when you reach the extended top position, which helps open the chest and maintain a natural neck position.
- Move at a controlled, deliberate tempo so you feel tension in the working muscles rather than relying on momentum to swing through the arc.
Errores comunes
- Collapsing the lower back sharply at the finish position: forcing extreme lumbar extension without core support compresses the lower spine and reduces the benefit to the shoulders and chest.
- Rushing through the arc with momentum: swinging the hips forward quickly instead of sweeping in a controlled arc bypasses muscular effort and reduces the range of motion through which the shoulders and chest are loaded.
- Letting the elbows flare wide during the descent: flaring the elbows to 90° places excess strain on the shoulder joints and shortens the effective range of the push-up portion.
- Skipping the hip-raised starting position: starting with flat hips removes the downward-dog component and turns the movement into a standard push-up, losing the shoulder and core loading that makes the Hindu pattern distinct.
- Holding the breath through the arc: breath-holding increases tension unnecessarily — inhale as you lower and sweep forward, exhale as you press up through the finish.
Preguntas frecuentes
What muscles does the kneeling modified Hindu push-up work?
The movement works the shoulders, chest, and triceps through the push-up arc, and engages the core and waist muscles during both the hip-raised starting position and the transition through the sweep. Because it passes through a wide range of motion rather than a fixed plane, it distributes the load across these muscles at different angles throughout each rep.
What is the difference between the kneeling modified Hindu push-up and a regular Hindu push-up?
The full Hindu push-up is performed with straight legs and the balls of the feet on the floor, which substantially increases the load on the shoulders and requires greater upper-body strength and hamstring flexibility. The kneeling version uses the knees as a pivot point, reducing the overall load and making the movement pattern more manageable for beginners or those still building the prerequisite strength for the full version.
How is a Hindu push-up different from a regular push-up?
A standard push-up moves in a single flat plane — straight down and straight up. A Hindu push-up follows a curved arc that begins with hips raised high, sweeps the chest forward and low, then finishes with the hips dropped and the chest elevated in a back-extended position. This arc pattern engages the shoulders through a greater range of motion and adds a spinal mobility component that standard push-ups lack.
Can beginners do the kneeling modified Hindu push-up?
Yes. The kneeling modification exists specifically to make the Hindu push-up pattern accessible to beginners. If the full arc feels awkward at first, practice the two endpoints separately — hold a downward-dog position for a few seconds, then move to the cobra position — before combining them into the flowing sweep.
How many reps and sets should I do?
For most beginners, 2 to 3 sets of 5 to 10 controlled reps is a reasonable starting point. Because the movement is continuous and flows through a long arc, quality of motion matters more than rep count. Once you can complete 10 reps per set with smooth, controlled arcs and no lower-back discomfort, you can progress toward the full Hindu push-up.







