In most gyms, it’s rare to find someone using perfect technique on every exercise. Yes, even you. It’s impossible to see ourselves on every rep and every set, and a mirror only shows you one angle.

While I love heavy barbell exercises like deadlifts, bench presses, and Olympic lifts, if you do them wrong, you’ll hurt yourself—maybe not today or tomorrow, but eventually it’ll strike.

Bad technique also goes beyond injuries: it kills performance. You’ll never lift the weight you can truly lift, and you’ll shortchange your muscle growth. You’ll use the wrong muscles, worsen your posture, and never achieve great results.

But besides hiring a coach to inspect every single rep, how will you make sure you’re doing the right thing every time?

Use an exercise that’s almost impossible to do wrong.

How Do Self-Limiting Exercises Work?

Self-limiting exercises rely on the correctness of your posture, movement, balance, and coordination; if something goes wrong, it’ll stop you.

They also make brute strength useless. Maybe you can rip the gym off the ground, but if you get on one knee to do an exercise like the bottoms-up kettlebell press, you’ll sweat bullets because you’re one light breeze away from falling over.

This requires a different kind of concentration. Instead of psyching yourself to set a new squat record, focus inward on your body’s movement and alignment. Are your knees buckling? Is your chest collapsing? Are you low enough?

As you improve in these self-limiting exercises, your overall strength will increase: not only because you added more muscle (although you certainly will), but also because you unlocked your full potential.

All the things that were previously holding you back—poor muscular control, balance, posture, and coordination—will disappear. Over time, you’ll build a stronger and healthier body.

Farmers Carry

Farmer’s Carries

The farmer’s carry is a staple for massive core strength, grip strength, and conditioning.

Why is it self-limiting?

You’ll only go as far as your body will allow. Once your grip fatigues or your posture deteriorates, you’ll drop the weights.

How to do it:

Grab two heavy dumbbells or kettlebells, stand tall with your chest up and shoulders back, and walk.

Try using just one arm for extra core work or varying your grip. For example, wrap a towel around each dumbbell and hold the towels instead of the handles.

Single Leg Squat to Box

Single-Leg Squats to a Box

This is a foolproof exercise to build stronger legs and bigger quads without the injury risks of a traditional back squat.

How to do it:

Stand facing away from a box or bench and lift up one leg. Sit down and stand back up while keeping that leg up.

If it’s too hard, use a higher surface; if it’s too easy, use a lower surface and add weight.

Why is it self-limiting?

It’s hard to do wrong: you just sit down and stand up. If you lose balance, you’ll stop and put both legs down; if it’s too hard or heavy, you’ll get stuck at the bottom.

Aside from targeting the lower body, single-leg squats build symmetrical strength because they train each leg independently. Imagine doing 10 single-leg squats with one leg but only 3 with the other (which I’ve seen): this limits your overall strength, creates compensations, and leads to injury.

Waiters Walk

Waiter’s Walks

Waiter’s walks build tremendous core strength and shoulder stability.

How to do it:

Grab a dumbbell or kettlebell and hold it over your head with your arm straight. Keep your shoulders down and back, tighten your core, and walk forward. Repeat on the other side.

Why is it self-limiting?

You must use good posture and core activation to carry the weight and walk. Once your technique fails, your arms will give out and the weight will crash on your head. (Kidding.) Actually, you’ll just lower the weight when your body tires.

Single Leg Romanian Deadlift

Single-Leg Romanian Deadlifts

The single-leg Romanian deadlift hammers your glutes, hamstrings, and back muscles. It also develops great balance and stability.

How to do it:

Grab a dumbbell or kettlebell in your right hand. With your right leg, reach back as far as you can while sitting into your left hip. Keep your shoulders pulled back and imagine crushing your right armpit. Go down as far as you can while maintaining the natural arch in your lower back. Perform all your reps and switch sides.

Why is it self-limiting?

If you do it incorrectly, you’ll lose balance and stop. If it’s too heavy, you’ll stop and set the weight down.

Goblet Squat

Goblet Squat

The goblet squat teaches excellent technique and builds the rigidity in your core and upper-back to lift huge weights.

How to do it:

Grab a dumbbell or kettlebell in the “goblet” position with the weight in your hands and your elbows directly underneath. Stand shoulder-width apart with your toes slightly out. Sit back with your hips and bend your knees. Keep the weight on your heels and spread your knees apart. At the bottom, try to touch your elbows to the insides of your thighs. Drive back up and maintain a neutral arch in your lower back at all times.

Why is it self-limiting?

By holding the weight in a goblet position, you will activate your core and maintain a great torso angle throughout the squat. Lean too far forward and you’ll drop the weight. Use too heavy of a weight and your upper back and grip will exhaust before your legs will.

Bottoms Up Kettlebell Press

Bottoms-Up Kettlebell Press

Here’s one simple trick that exposes any disconnection in your body: hold a kettlebell handle with the large part above your hand (called the “bottoms-up” position). If the kettlebell balances, you’re connected — if it falls, you’re not.

How to do it:

Stand and hold a kettlebell in the bottoms-up position by your shoulder. Press up the kettlebell without it falling and squeeze your glutes and tighten your abs throughout. Don’t think about pushing the kettlebell away from you; think about driving yourself into the ground.

You probably need to use a lighter weight than normal until you get used to the motion.

Why is it self-limiting?

When you hold a kettlebell bottoms-up, your entire body must work in harmony; if you lose your posture, coordination, or core activation, the kettlebell will fall.

Also, avoid using only your grip. Instead, create total-body tension so you don’t have to squeeze so hard.