A lot of people think they’re training shoulders… but they’re really just training traps.
If your delts refuse to grow, or your shoulders look “flat” from the front, there’s a good chance your traps are taking over the movement. It’s common — especially if you’re strong, you shrug naturally under effort, or you’ve built years of tension in your upper back from stress, posture, or heavy pulling.
The fix isn’t just changing exercises. It’s changing what your body does when it gets tired.
The problem
When you press, raise, or row, your body wants to help you. And the traps are always ready to help — they lift the shoulder up, stabilize the neck, and take stress away from the delts. That’s great for survival… but terrible for building round shoulders.
If your shoulders rise toward your ears on every rep, you’re giving the trap a job it doesn’t need.
The cue that changes everything
Before you start the rep, think:
“Shoulders down. Neck long. Delts work.”
Not forced. Not stiff. Just a light “down and away” feeling — like you’re keeping space between your ears and your shoulders.
If you keep that position, the delt stays loaded. If you lose it, the trap steals the rep.

Three quick fixes I use
First: lower the weight.
Heavy weight makes you recruit whatever muscle can survive. If you want delts, use a load you can control without shrugging.
Second: slow down the top.
Most trap takeover happens at the top of lateral raises and pressing. Add a small pause or slow the last third of the rep — it forces the delt to finish the movement.
Third: choose shoulder movements that punish cheating.
I like machines or cables for this, because the tension stays consistent and you can’t hide behind momentum.
The goal
You’re not trying to “avoid traps” completely — traps will always be involved. But you are trying to stop them from becoming the main mover.
The next time you train shoulders, don’t ask: “How heavy can I go?”
Ask: “Did my delts actually do the work?”
That’s how shoulders start looking 3D.


































