Bad posture. We’ve all experienced it – whether we’re popping a hip out to hold our favourite little kid, slouching on the couch in front of the TV, or hunched over our phone or computer. All of us practice lousy posture at least some of the time, if not all of the time. At first, not standing up straight feels more comfortable, right? But here’s the thing. Stooped posture can be part of why your back hurts. Improving your posture can be a matter of just a few simple steps. Here are some tips for correcting it.
Some signs of bad posture you may be able to see include rounded, sloped shoulders, a hunched neck, a potbelly or a tendency to jut your head forward. Others you can feel include back pain, body aches and pains, muscle fatigue or headache.
What Is Posture Anyway?
When we were younger, we were often told to sit or stand up straight. In those days, this may have been mostly a matter of good etiquette. However, good posture is not just a matter of good manners. It is much more than that.
Posture refers to how your body is positioned when you are sitting, moving or standing. As well as being vital for our movement and comfort, having good posture means that muscles and ligaments are not working harder than they should.
Posture helps keep your body erect. It can also, to some degree, ensure proper breathing, muscle growth, and movement. Additionally, it can help alleviate some body pain. On the other hand, poor posture can affect your health overall and set you up for neck and shoulder strain, back pain and even joint damage. This is why practising good posture is important.
There is an aesthetic aspect to good posture, as well. For example, that hunch neck and potbelly may just go away once you start sitting and standing up straight and stop slouching.
What Does Posture Have To Do With Back Pain?
Back pain can be brought on by trauma – like from a sports-related injury or an accident – or an inherited condition like scoliosis. However, back pain often can be due to normal wear and tear on the body that develops over everyday activities. This is where posture plays a part in back pain.
Stooped posture can cause the weight load on your back to be unevenly dispersed, thus pushing your back’s muscles, ligaments, and discs beyond their capacity, causing pain.
Sitting incorrectly at a makeshift home office desk can also put a lot of strain on movement muscles. This is because leaning down hunched over a laptop uses groups of muscles designed for movement, rather than your postural muscles (as the name suggests), your core group of muscles that hold you together and upright with little effort!
Hunching while standing or sitting can cause your back and abdominal muscles to become strained as the weight of your body is improperly distributed. This can also reduce the blood supply to these muscles, leaving them stiff and sore over time. Likewise, working on your laptop or reading on your stomach can cause strain on your neck, shoulders, and lower back.
Lifting heavy objects or other weight-bearing activity with improper posture can cause a herniated disc. This can send sharp pains from your spinal nerves to your legs.
How To Fix Your Posture And Back Pain
Improving your posture is not an overnight fix. Good posture is an acquired habit. Fixing your posture involves training your body to sit, stand, lift heavy objects, and lie down in a manner that imposes a minor strain on your muscles and ligaments. This activity can go a long way in alleviating back pain.
Here are some tips on how to fix your posture:
Exercise
Exercises that strengthen your core muscles – the muscles in your abdomen and lower back that provide stability and balance – can go a long way in improving posture. Additionally, exercises that strengthen your shoulders can help you keep from rolling your shoulders forward (say goodbye, sloped shoulders!).
Here are some to try. How many repetitions you try and how many of the exercises you can do in one session will depend on your fitness level. Whilst it’s good to feel a little out of your comfort zone, don’t strain yourself and if you ever feel pain, stop. If you’re unsure, please ask an expert!
Supermans
Lie on your stomach. Extend your arms out over your head (kind of like you’re Superman flying through the air). Simultaneously raise your arms and legs just a few centimetres off the ground. Hold, relax, and repeat.
Bird Dog
Standing on all fours, reach away from your body with the opposite arm and leg whilst engaging your muscles in the standing limbs and stomach. Hold this position for a second before bringing the limbs slowly back down to rest. Do the same with the opposite arm/leg. Repeat this sequence.
Shoulder Extensions
Hold an exercise band in front of you at shoulder height. Stretch the band across your chest, bending your arms slightly. Ensure to keep your shoulder blades engaged and pulling down your back, so your shoulders don’t hunch. Return to starting position, and repeat.
Crunches
Lie on your back with your knees bent, and feet planted firmly on the floor. Cross your arms over your chest or place them gently behind your head for support. Keeping your neck straight and in alignment with your back, lift your shoulders off the floor and then back down in a controlled manner. Repeat.
Bridges
Lie on your back with your knees bent, your feet hip-width apart, and your arms flat on the ground, almost touching your ankles. Push your hips up into the air by squeezing your buttocks together. Use the support of your arms on the floor to avoid any pressure on the lower back, and keep your legs in line with your body. Hold this position for a second before lowering.
Planks
Get into plank position – forearms on the floor, with your elbows positioned directly under your shoulders and toes on the floor (a little like you’re about to do a pushup but on your forearms). Keep your back straight without letting your hips sag toward the floor. Hold for 30 seconds. Rest. Repeat.
Neck extensions
Sit comfortably with your shoulders back and your hands clasped gently behind your head. Press your head firmly back into your hands. Hold for 30 seconds and release. Perform multiple times to build strength.
You can also vary this by moving your head side to side, or up and down, slowly, pausing and slightly stretching at the end of the movement arc.
Pay Attention To Your Desk Setup
Adjusting how you sit at your desk can help improve your posture. Stooped posture is often a result of hunching over to look at a computer screen or mobile phone. Set up a home office where your screen is eye-level, so you’re not looking down all day. In addition, your hands and keyboard should be at elbow height, and your chair should encourage you to sit up straight and support your lower back.
All this is easier said than done, but if it looks like you’ll be working from home long term, investing in a keyboard, mouse, and chair could help your body cope with all that sitting down in the long run. And that brings us to…
1. Sit well
2. Lift well
3. Sleep well
With improved posture and a stronger core, you’ll be helping hold your body in a way that isn’t so likely to induce back pain.
If you’re experiencing an aching back from sore muscles or ligaments, Voltarol 2% gel can help you get back on your feet faster. With a potent anti-inflammatory ingredient, it fights pain, reduces inflammation, and accelerates your recovery, so you can get back to doing what’s important (like picking up that toddler with more ease!).
Home » How Good Posture Can Help Back Pain
How Good Posture Can Help Back Pain
Home » How Good Posture Can Help Back Pain
Bad posture. We’ve all experienced it – whether we’re popping a hip out to hold our favourite little kid, slouching on the couch in front of the TV, or hunched over our phone or computer. All of us practice lousy posture at least some of the time, if not all of the time. At first, not standing up straight feels more comfortable, right? But here’s the thing. Stooped posture can be part of why your back hurts. Improving your posture can be a matter of just a few simple steps. Here are some tips for correcting it.
Some signs of bad posture you may be able to see include rounded, sloped shoulders, a hunched neck, a potbelly or a tendency to jut your head forward. Others you can feel include back pain, body aches and pains, muscle fatigue or headache.
What Is Posture Anyway?
When we were younger, we were often told to sit or stand up straight. In those days, this may have been mostly a matter of good etiquette. However, good posture is not just a matter of good manners. It is much more than that.
Posture refers to how your body is positioned when you are sitting, moving or standing. As well as being vital for our movement and comfort, having good posture means that muscles and ligaments are not working harder than they should.
Posture helps keep your body erect. It can also, to some degree, ensure proper breathing, muscle growth, and movement. Additionally, it can help alleviate some body pain. On the other hand, poor posture can affect your health overall and set you up for neck and shoulder strain, back pain and even joint damage. This is why practising good posture is important.
There is an aesthetic aspect to good posture, as well. For example, that hunch neck and potbelly may just go away once you start sitting and standing up straight and stop slouching.
What Does Posture Have To Do With Back Pain?
Back pain can be brought on by trauma – like from a sports-related injury or an accident – or an inherited condition like scoliosis. However, back pain often can be due to normal wear and tear on the body that develops over everyday activities. This is where posture plays a part in back pain.
Stooped posture can cause the weight load on your back to be unevenly dispersed, thus pushing your back’s muscles, ligaments, and discs beyond their capacity, causing pain.
Sitting incorrectly at a makeshift home office desk can also put a lot of strain on movement muscles. This is because leaning down hunched over a laptop uses groups of muscles designed for movement, rather than your postural muscles (as the name suggests), your core group of muscles that hold you together and upright with little effort!
Hunching while standing or sitting can cause your back and abdominal muscles to become strained as the weight of your body is improperly distributed. This can also reduce the blood supply to these muscles, leaving them stiff and sore over time. Likewise, working on your laptop or reading on your stomach can cause strain on your neck, shoulders, and lower back.
Lifting heavy objects or other weight-bearing activity with improper posture can cause a herniated disc. This can send sharp pains from your spinal nerves to your legs.
How To Fix Your Posture And Back Pain
Improving your posture is not an overnight fix. Good posture is an acquired habit. Fixing your posture involves training your body to sit, stand, lift heavy objects, and lie down in a manner that imposes a minor strain on your muscles and ligaments. This activity can go a long way in alleviating back pain.
Here are some tips on how to fix your posture:
Exercise
Exercises that strengthen your core muscles – the muscles in your abdomen and lower back that provide stability and balance – can go a long way in improving posture. Additionally, exercises that strengthen your shoulders can help you keep from rolling your shoulders forward (say goodbye, sloped shoulders!).
Here are some to try. How many repetitions you try and how many of the exercises you can do in one session will depend on your fitness level. Whilst it’s good to feel a little out of your comfort zone, don’t strain yourself and if you ever feel pain, stop. If you’re unsure, please ask an expert!
Supermans
Lie on your stomach. Extend your arms out over your head (kind of like you’re Superman flying through the air). Simultaneously raise your arms and legs just a few centimetres off the ground. Hold, relax, and repeat.
Bird Dog
Standing on all fours, reach away from your body with the opposite arm and leg whilst engaging your muscles in the standing limbs and stomach. Hold this position for a second before bringing the limbs slowly back down to rest. Do the same with the opposite arm/leg. Repeat this sequence.
Shoulder Extensions
Hold an exercise band in front of you at shoulder height. Stretch the band across your chest, bending your arms slightly. Ensure to keep your shoulder blades engaged and pulling down your back, so your shoulders don’t hunch. Return to starting position, and repeat.
Crunches
Lie on your back with your knees bent, and feet planted firmly on the floor. Cross your arms over your chest or place them gently behind your head for support. Keeping your neck straight and in alignment with your back, lift your shoulders off the floor and then back down in a controlled manner. Repeat.
Bridges
Lie on your back with your knees bent, your feet hip-width apart, and your arms flat on the ground, almost touching your ankles. Push your hips up into the air by squeezing your buttocks together. Use the support of your arms on the floor to avoid any pressure on the lower back, and keep your legs in line with your body. Hold this position for a second before lowering.
Planks
Get into plank position – forearms on the floor, with your elbows positioned directly under your shoulders and toes on the floor (a little like you’re about to do a pushup but on your forearms). Keep your back straight without letting your hips sag toward the floor. Hold for 30 seconds. Rest. Repeat.
Neck extensions
Sit comfortably with your shoulders back and your hands clasped gently behind your head. Press your head firmly back into your hands. Hold for 30 seconds and release. Perform multiple times to build strength.
You can also vary this by moving your head side to side, or up and down, slowly, pausing and slightly stretching at the end of the movement arc.
Pay Attention To Your Desk Setup
Adjusting how you sit at your desk can help improve your posture. Stooped posture is often a result of hunching over to look at a computer screen or mobile phone. Set up a home office where your screen is eye-level, so you’re not looking down all day. In addition, your hands and keyboard should be at elbow height, and your chair should encourage you to sit up straight and support your lower back.
All this is easier said than done, but if it looks like you’ll be working from home long term, investing in a keyboard, mouse, and chair could help your body cope with all that sitting down in the long run. And that brings us to…
1. Sit well
2. Lift well
3. Sleep well
With improved posture and a stronger core, you’ll be helping hold your body in a way that isn’t so likely to induce back pain.
If you’re experiencing an aching back from sore muscles or ligaments, Voltarol 2% gel can help you get back on your feet faster. With a potent anti-inflammatory ingredient, it fights pain, reduces inflammation, and accelerates your recovery, so you can get back to doing what’s important (like picking up that toddler with more ease!).
Don’t Miss Our Latest Wellness Articles!
8 top health trends for 2024
6 fitness & beauty myths – busted!
Understand cold symptoms and how to relieve them