5 Quick Exercises to Help Correct Poor Posture

Look
Familiar?

We all know that we should all sit up
straight with our shoulders back and our feet under our knees, so why don’t we?
The effects of poor posture can include
but are not limited to:
  • Muscle
    spasms
  • Arthritis
  • Decreased
    Range of Motion
  • Nerve
    Entrapment
  • Spinal
    Disease/Dysfunction
  • Inability
    to Perform Daily Functions

Here are 5 quick exercises to strengthen
the core and help correct poor posture.

Pelvic Tilt

This exercise helps to flatten your
lumbar spine to help keep you from hyperextending your back while strengthening
your lower abdominal muscles.



Supine (Glute) Bridge

This exercise practiced with a pelvic
tilt, keeping a flat back, will ensure that you feel this in your gluteal
muscles rather than in your back from hyperextension.



1/2 Roll Thoracic Mobilizations

This exercise is used with deep
breathing so when you bring your elbows down and toward the table, exhale and
get as much stretch across the front of your chest and try to flatten your
upper back. This is where most individuals have rounded shoulders.



Back to Wall Breathing

Stand 8″ away from
wall. Set your core by doing a pelvic tilt then hinge your butt back to the
wall, flatten back up the wall from pelvis to shoulders one back bone at a
time, take a big breath in through the nose then exhale as if you were blowing
up a balloon in one try. You should feel a good contraction of you core muscle
if you maintain a flat back against the wall. 



Scapular Squeezes

By squeezing your shoulder blades
straight across this will help flatten out the rounder shoulders and help
improve the forward head posture that is caused by it.





Blog post by Craig Moody.