How different ages do a handstand. #tiktok #differentages #comedy -------------------- New website live now! www.daniellabelle.com New merch available now! shop.daniellabelle.com/
I'm 50 years old and I can still do a decent handstand, and walk on my hands. It's something I try to do a couple times a week to remind myself that I still can. 😏
My grandad used to do headstands up until he was 90. I push his legs up at the start and then he was good. Then my Gran died and he basically aged like 10 years every year after that. He passed away last year at 101. Miss the dude.
@@Izabela-ek5nh Idc that this comment was a year ago, but as a 30-year old woman right now is the *exact* reason why I'm trying my best to get into exercise routines even if they are small. I actually want to be able to practice doing handstands-no joke, but unfortunately, I have no space ☹. Technically I have 1 small idea, but I'd def. need my mom's help with it & I need to build more strength lol. I'm slowly getting there w/my strength though b/c I'm actually carrying slightly more items at work than I used to be able to carry. I also learned lifting wise, Good Posture HELPS. For those who have good posture, I feel like they're able to do a whole lot more things as opposed to those who have poor posture like myself. It's not extremely bad thankfully, but keeping a more mindful eye on it. Yes, standing up straight can hurt like crazy esp. if/when one rarely stands up straight, but I believe it's normal-and we all gotta learn how to power thru the pain and tingling sensation that it's capable of having. Idk if the tingling sensation in one's back when working on better posture is actually normal or not though-and if it is normal to have the tingling sensation wouldn't surprise me. Another thing too: Everyone needs to learn how to Lift with their *LEGS* more and Not their backs-I've struggled with strength and heavy items for a long time now. And no one really taught me how to properly lift things with my legs, but I've been learning. The main downside: The soreness one's body can endure from this lol, but I'm learning how to deal with that.
+Thinkaboutit897 Super true. A bit different, but this reminds me when I smiling and saying "Hi," to maybe a toddler & he'd only smile when I believe his mom wasn't looking. Every time his mom turned around, he just gave me a blank stare like: "I don't trust you." This tiny back-and-forth went on for a good solid 30 secs to a potential minute. Basically, every time his mom say turned her back on him, he'd smile at me, then when she came "to" (for lack of a better word)-back to blank stare. Idk if she was w/her sister or her cousin or just a friend, but whoever she was with even noticed it too where we both looked at each other and how the kid was reacting. We were both just smiling and trying our best not to bust up into laughter. This literally happened abt. 3x 🤣-I will never forget that. In terms of the double-checking to see if someone is watching or not...more like when they act like they're hurt and fake cry instead of real cry & some parents can see the difference from their child's fake and real cry from over a mile away. I think I remember 1 mom literally calling her child out on it in public and the minute the child was called out, they got their act together big time. I personally adore little kids in general where some give me a smile back while others give me a true blank stare like: "should I trust you?" And very rarely, I get some toddlers to giggle. Not sure how, but I once got a toddler to stop crying in 30 secs. just by smiling and waving "hi."-My coworker was shocked by it. This occasionally works, I'll do this, the kid will stop crying for abt. a minute and then go back to crying afterwards.
I used to do handstands as a kid for fun as if it was nothing. About 5-20 years passed and I attempted again with an instant regret and an immense sharp pain on my hands. I didn't know I was that ludicrously beefed up as a kid.
@@Slipknockout eaxctly,in 6.3 and 77 kgs,i can do clapping pushuos,one handed ones yk what,its difficult as fuck with this height and eeight to do handstand pushups
2 year old: fallstand 6 year old: handstand 12 year old: walkstand 18 year old: workoutstand Boomer: 1sec stand 80 year old: nothingstand Very old: headstand
maybe it s because the fear . u " just " have " to launch ur legs the more higher u can and more straight as possible and u ll see , all ur weight ll be between ur hands , ur wrist and ur forearm . U ll not understand but one day , u ll suceed and u ll not know why cause u won t thinking make someting different than usual but in the fact , it s just because u re less scary than before . master the handstand ll offer u a lot of possibillity , specially if like me , u re breaking . Hope one part of my generally message ll able to help u a few ( sorry for my english , i m french haha )