Poor posture can make you look shorter over time by compressing your spine and weakening important muscles. Fortunately, a few easy exercises can help get your body back in alignment, correct posture, and return you to your natural height.
Poor posture can make you look shorter over time by compressing your spine and weakening important muscles. Fortunately, a few easy exercises can help get your body back in alignment, correct posture, and return you to your natural height
Place your back against a wall, arms bent at 90 degrees. Gradually lift and lower your arms, maintaining contact with the wall. This opens the chest and engages upper back muscles, correcting posture.
Start on hands and knees. Exhale rounding spine (cat), inhale arching back (cow). Repeat slowly. This dynamic stretch loosens up the spine and reduces tension, promoting a natural upright position.
Sit or stand upright. Slowly tuck chin in toward your chest, as if creating a double chin. Hold for several seconds and repeat. This stabilizes neck muscles and reverses forward head posture due to screen use.
Lie on stomach, hands under shoulders. Press into hands to press chest up, keeping hips down. Hold briefly. This opens up the spine and strengthens back, combating slouching.
Sit or stand up straight. Squeeze shoulder blades together, hold five seconds, then release. Repeat several times. This tightens upper back muscles, causes you to stand straighter, and aligns shoulders better over time.
Lie on your back, knees bent, feet hip-width apart. Lift your hips while squeezing glutes. Hold and lower slowly. This exercise strengthens lower back and glutes, supporting spine alignment and reducing posture-related height loss.
Stand in a doorway, arms on the frame at shoulder height. Step forward slightly to feel a chest stretch. Hold for 20�?0 seconds. This releases tight chest muscles that pull the shoulders forward.