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6 Partner Exercises for Couple’s Fit Fun

Fancy dinners, boxes of chocolate, shared bottles of wine – for many of us, Valentine’s Day means celebrating our love by filling our stomachs. It’s not that it’s bad to indulge for special occasions – in fact, science says that sharing food with your loved one may actually improve your bond! But that heavy, bloated feeling you’re often left with the next day? Yeah, no one likes that. Besides, building healthy habits with your partner can be just as romantic as sharing food or giving gifts.

If you’re thinking of adding some fitness fun to your V-Day plans, check out this partner workout by Premier Personal Trainer Jen Besten. For exercises where each partner is performing a different movement, be sure to switch roles so that both partners perform both parts of each exercise.

Wheelbarrow Push-Ups with Squats

Plank with Jump-Over Burpees

Squat with Rotational Pass

You’ll need a medicine ball for this exercise (or a pillow, or a book – really, it can be anything you like). Both partners should stand facing away from each other, with about a foot of space in between. The person that kicks off this exercise will start by rotating through the torso to turn to one side, lifting the ball over the corresponding shoulder. Their partner will rotate in the opposite direction to receive the ball then rotate to the other side, guiding the ball across their body in a downward diagonal motion. As the receiving partner turns, they will sink into a squat, bringing the ball down to pass at or below knee-level. Imagine there is a tilted ellipse surrounding both you and your partner with the high and low ends aligning with your shoulders – this is the path on which the ball will travel as it is passed back and forth. Be sure to switch your high and low sides for a balanced workout!

Leg Lift Throw

Pistol Squats

Both partners will start in a standing position facing each other but with feet slightly offset. Grab your partner’s inside hand or forearm, raise your inside leg off the ground, and bend at the knee to lower into a single-leg squat. Don’t sink down so far that you cannot boost yourself back up to standing using only your planted leg. Keeping your inside leg elevated off the ground challenges your balance, so use your partner and your free arm to steady yourself.

Wall Sit with Tricep Dips

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