Conor Harris Profile picture
Aug 6 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
95% of people with “weak” or “underactive” glutes just simply don’t know how to train them properly.

So they do endless glute activation drills to try to fix it, when in reality they just need the right cues.

Here’s a fool-proof guide to feel your glutes properly engage 🍑💪🏼 Image
To get a muscle to contract powerfully, it first needs to be fully lengthened.

For the glutes, this means getting a deep stretch through hip flexion, such as a hinge:
Let’s break it down:

Your glutes attach to the back of your pelvis.

As you descend into hip flexion (like during a deadlift), they lengthen.

That stretch, especially with internal rotation of the hip, primes them for activation.
This is why exercises like:

✅ Bilateral deadlifts
✅ Single-leg RDLs
✅ Split stance hinging drills

…are far more effective for glute activation than banded side steps or clamshells.

Because they load the glutes in a lengthened position.
So the key is to get a nice stretch in the glutes to create:

✅ Hip Internal Rotation
✅ Hip Flexion

So that way you can use the glutes in their role to contract and create:

✅ Hip External Rotation
✅ Hip Extension
Here’s my all-time favorite glute activation drill that uses this exact principle 👇

Split-Stance RDL with Rotation

It’s highly effective AND adjustable to your hip mobility.

Start with just body weight - you’ll feel it immediately.Image
✅ How to do it:

•Slight split stance: 90% weight on front leg
•Back toes lightly touching for balance
•Knees bent ~15–20%
•Slight torso rotation toward front leg (zipper line toward stance leg)
•3-point (tripod) foot contact
Now, slowly hinge forward over that front leg

👉 Keep the same knee bend and heavy on front leg
👉 Stop when you feel a 3/10 stretch in the glute. Don’t go down more than this
👉 Push your foot through the earth to come up rather than trying to just stand up or lock out your knee
🔁 Repeat.

Done right, this will light up your glute like few other exercises.
Even just bodyweight is enough if your mechanics are dialed in.

I have never had someone not feel their glutes a lot if they do this properly.
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More from @Conor_Harris_

Aug 5
Your “tight” hip flexors probably aren’t too strong and overactive.

In fact, tightness is often a sign of weakness.

Here’s why stretching alone won’t fix it, and what to do instead (with specific drills at the end):👇 Image
Most people feel their hip flexors (like the psoas) are tight, so they stretch them constantly…

…but the tension doesn’t go away for more than a few minutes.

Why?

Because the muscle isn’t just tight, it’s weak and dysfunctional. Image
Let’s get clear on one thing:

A chronically “tight” muscle is often a muscle that isn’t working properly through a full range of motion. It’s guarding or stuck.

The solution isn’t endless stretching.

It’s restoring function. Image
Read 11 tweets
Aug 1
🧵 Most people are not training their Glute Med properly.

Those banded lateral walks?

Side-lying leg raises?

They’re only hitting half the equation.

Here’s what 95% of people are missing when it comes to glute med function (and how to fix it): 👇 Image
Yes, those typical glute med exercises do activate it.

But they mainly target the back fibers, which help abduct and externally rotate the hip. Image
This is only part of what the glute med is built to do. Image
Read 8 tweets
Oct 4, 2024
This is a key missing piece to many people’s hip mobility work.
There are two primary phases to muscles: Concentric (shortening) actions and eccentric (elongation) actions.
It’s common to see concentric hip mobility-focused work where people are doing exercises actively working against resistance to get into a given range of motion.
Read 8 tweets
Jul 18, 2024
There's lots of information on what to do if you have tight hip flexors, but what a lot of it misses is the difference when issues are only on one side: Image
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Read 12 tweets
Jul 17, 2024
It took me 10 years to learn about posture that I'll teach you in one minute: Image
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Read 8 tweets
Jul 16, 2024
Bunions aren't genetics, they are just misunderstood. Here's how they really develop and what you can do to fix them: Image
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Read 11 tweets

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