READY?




Two minutes is not a long time until the abdominals are on fire and there is still a minute left. Six exercises run back to back with no rest, each lasting 20 seconds, covering every major function the core performs. Knee-to-elbows open the sequence by combining hip flexion with spinal flexion, pulling the lower body and upper body toward each other to load the full length of the rectus abdominis from both ends simultaneously. Flutter kicks follow and strip the movement back to just the legs, holding the lower abs under continuous tension as the feet alternate in small, rapid arcs just above the floor. Scissors shift that same lower-ab load into a slower, wider range, crossing the legs over each other and increasing the demand on the hip flexors and the stabilizing muscles that keep the lumbar spine from arching off the ground.
Hundreds move the sequence into a Pilates-derived hold - legs raised and slightly lowered, upper body lifted, arms pumping in short controlled pulses - that builds endurance across the entire anterior chain simultaneously. Reverse crunches flip the direction of effort, lifting the hips off the floor by curling the pelvis upward rather than the shoulders, which isolates the lower abdominal fibers more directly than any forward crunch can. Sitting twists close the two minutes with rotation, pulling the obliques and the deep spinal stabilizers into the effort and finishing the core map that the sequence has been drawing since the first exercise.
Move from one exercise to the next without pausing. Keep the lower back connected to the floor during the leg work. The two minutes will pass - the question is how much of it was genuine effort.








