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Pulse Squat: How-to, Benefits & Variations

Pulse squats keep constant tension on quads and glutes. Squat to parallel, pulse small movements. Burns deeply, builds endurance.

Pulse Squat: How-to, Benefits & Variations

strengthmultiple muscle groups·medium intensity·mat·2 variations

Every woman I work with has the same pattern: strong in some directions, weak in others. The pulse squat addresses the weak direction. The one that daily life never trains.

Sophie Jones programs this exercise because the muscles it targets are precisely the ones that deteriorate fastest during perimenopause. Desk work accelerates the problem. This exercise reverses it.

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Sophie Jones

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How to Do Pulse Squats

1

Stand with feet shoulder-width apart or slightly wider. Toes turned out 15-30 degrees.

2

Lower into a squat until your thighs are parallel to the floor. This is your working position. You stay here.

3

From the parallel position, pulse up about 3-4 inches, then back down to parallel. Do not stand all the way up.

4

Keep pulsing with small, controlled movements. Your quads should burn within 10-15 seconds. That is the point.

5

Maintain an upright chest and keep your weight in your heels. If your knees push past your toes significantly, sit your hips further back.

Muscles Worked

Primary

Primary muscles

The main muscles targeted by the pulse squat, responsible for producing the movement force.

Secondary

Stabilizer muscles

Support the primary movers and maintain proper joint alignment throughout the movement.

Why this matters in perimenopause

Women lose lean muscle mass progressively from their 30s, and the decline accelerates during perimenopause as estrogen levels drop. Regular resistance training directly counteracts this decline by stimulating muscle protein synthesis and providing mechanical loading for bone health.

Coach's Tips

"Keeping it nice and low for me." That's Sophie Jones's cue. This detail makes the difference between an effective rep and a wasted one.

Sophie Jones

"Keep it nice and low, dropping it straight in." That's Sophie Jones's cue. This detail makes the difference between an effective rep and a wasted one.

Sophie Jones

If anything feels sharp rather than challenging, stop immediately. Drop the weight and check your form. Discomfort is fine. Pain is a message.

Start with bodyweight only until the movement feels natural. Add resistance gradually.

Why This Matters for You

The pulse squat directly addresses three perimenopause priorities: muscle preservation, bone loading, and metabolic health. Estrogen decline after 40 accelerates sarcopenia, the age-related loss of lean muscle that changes body composition, weakens joints, and slows metabolism. Resistance training is the strongest evidence-backed countermeasure.

A 2023 network meta-analysis of 19 RCTs involving 919 postmenopausal women found moderate-intensity resistance training 3 days per week significantly improved lumbar spine and femoral neck bone mineral density. The effect was most pronounced during the first 48 weeks, meaning early adoption matters. The pulse squat loads the exact skeletal sites and muscle groups that perimenopause targets first.

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Variations & Modifications

Pulse Squats (Round 1)

medium

Variation of the pulse squat that modifies the standard movement pattern for different training emphasis.

Banded Pulse Squats

medium

Variation of the pulse squat that adds band resistance for increased muscle activation.

Benefits

Builds muscle where it matters most

The pulse squat targets muscles that daily life either neglects or actively weakens. Desk work, driving, and couch sitting all create specific weakness patterns that this exercise reverses.

Strengthens bones at critical sites

Resistance training is the single most effective non-pharmaceutical intervention for bone density. A 2023 meta-analysis of 17 RCTs confirmed significant BMD improvements at the lumbar spine and femoral neck with regular strength training.

Fights perimenopause muscle loss

Women lose 3-5% of lean muscle mass per decade after 30. During perimenopause, estrogen decline accelerates the process. Resistance exercises directly counteract this by stimulating muscle protein synthesis.

No gym required

This exercise needs minimal or no equipment. A dumbbell, a resistance band, or nothing at all. The barrier to entry is low, which means the consistency of doing it stays high.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Using momentum instead of muscle control

If you need to swing or jerk the weight, it is too heavy. Drop 20% and control every inch of the movement.

Inconsistent range of motion

Every rep should look the same. Full range from start to finish. Partial reps build partial strength.

Holding your breath throughout

Exhale on the exertion phase, inhale on the return. Breath-holding spikes blood pressure and reduces core stability.

Ignoring the eccentric (lowering) phase

The lowering phase builds more muscle than the lifting phase. Take 2-3 seconds to lower. Do not let gravity do the work.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Medical Disclaimer: This exercise information is educational, not medical advice. If you have specific health conditions, consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting. Women with osteoporosis, joint replacements, or pelvic floor conditions should work with a physiotherapist or exercise physiologist to determine appropriate modifications.