Life Kit - How to improve your posture
Episode Date: January 21, 2025Posture doesn't mean standing up straight or gliding across a room with a book on your head. This episode, a physical therapist and a biomechanist break down the meaning of healthy posture and how you... can nurture it.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey everybody, it's Marielle.
Have you ever seen that meme of a shrimp in a desk chair?
Normally, I try not to explain memes or jokes, but this one's pretty straightforward.
You know how shrimpies get curled up into sort of a hook shape?
Imagine that, but sitting in a desk chair, trying to fill out an Excel spreadsheet.
A lot of us sit like this or in equally tortured positions. And that's bad, right?
I always laugh as a physical therapist because people send it to me all the time. But the reality
is it's not so much the posture in itself, but the time and the amount of movement that we actually
get throughout the day to interrupt those stagnant positions. That's Leta Malik. She's a physical therapist and author of the book Science of Stretch.
And she says if you hold your body in a shrimp-like shape for a short amount of time,
probably not a huge deal. If you do it all day, every day, that's when you start hurting.
Katie Bowman is a biomechanist, which means she studies the effects that physical forces have on the body.
She says you may have felt this effect after a long time in transit when everything in your body feels stiff.
Usually if you're on a plane or a car, you don't get to have any movement breaks whatsoever.
You're really really stuck in a position.
So what do you do in those moments? You shake out your muscles, stretch, and move your body into other positions.
Take out your muscles, stretch, and move your body into other positions. Katie, who wrote a book called Rethink Your Position, says doing that throughout your
life is what leads to good posture.
We've got so many parts, and I don't think we're really fluent in all the options that
we have for positions, despite the number of joints and hinges and levers that really
allow us to assume many
different shapes, we're kind of stuck in the same set of shapes.
On this episode of Life Kit, how to improve your posture.
We'll talk about what posture is exactly, how to know if yours is serving your body,
and what you can do throughout the day to mix up the shapes your body is making.
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I used to think good posture was determined by whether you could glide
across a room with a book on your head. Lita Malik, the physical therapist, says
it's not that and it's not as simple as saying sit up straight.
In reality, that posture, it may not be right for everyone and every single body.
So really, the best posture is one that's fit for the things that you need to be doing
and one that is adaptive and dynamic and one that you can change in and out of.
Good posture isn't about how you look. It's not about being graceful or ladylike. It's about
how your body feels. So good posture is one that is dynamic, one that is not
susceptible to pain as often as possible, and one that is best fit for what you
need to get done. And bad posture is a set of patterns that cause you pain or make you prone to injury over time.
The way you hunch over when you're washing the dishes, or bend down to do your laundry,
or strain your neck reading in bed at night.
Take away one. The first step in fixing your posture and eliminating posture-induced pain
is to drill down into your habits.
What shapes are you making all the time?
And what do you never do?
Take a moment right now and check in with your body.
Does anything hurt or ache?
Have you noticed the pain before?
Any idea when it started or what triggers it?
Here's an exercise I can help you go
a little deeper on that.
Imagine a star placed at every one of your joints on your wrist, your elbow, your shoulders, or what triggers it, here's an exercise that can help you go a little deeper on that.
Imagine a star placed at every one of your joints on your wrist, your elbow, your shoulders,
one on your head and one on each vertebrae of the spine and your hips and your knees.
And then ask yourself, what constellation am I making the bulk of the day?
And you start to recognize that there's probably
some repetition around the way that particular area
that's alerting you or flaring up for you is positioned.
Maybe you feel tightness in your shoulder blade.
If you feel that most when you wake up,
the problem could be your sleeping postures.
You might notice like, oh, that shoulder that, yes,
gets sort of folded underneath me when I'm sleeping sleeping that it makes this particular arm constellation at night.
I notice that's really similar to the same arm constellation that I'm making at work.
And that arm constellation is also showing up when I'm driving.
And you start to see yourself as a collection of shapes.
You might also realize, huh, I've been carrying a heavy tote bag on that shoulder.
That's probably not helping.
Looking at the constellations your body
makes throughout the day will reveal your habits.
And we have a lot of asymmetrical habits.
And so over time, you feel the effects
of not having movement really distributed throughout the body.
Your body adapts to you repeatedly making these shapes. Now your bone mass
is slightly adapted to the way you load your leg bones you know throughout the
day and you've got just a little bit more tension in the parts that have to
shorten you know to accommodate the fact
that you slouch in one particular direction and they get more etched into the body and
then over time that becomes our physical experience.
Katie has another tip to help you check on your body's alignment and what shapes you're
repeatedly making.
It's called the wall test.
You can use this one if you're able to stand.
Put a wall behind you and let your hips sit against the wall.
Your heels don't need to touch the wall.
They can be a few inches out to give your butt some space.
Bring your middle back against the wall
and then try to bring your head back there at the same time.
And what many people will find is their upper back has become so stiff.
That constellation of the upper back is really curved forward,
and that shape has become more etched in than they realize,
that the only way they can get their head back against the wall
or their shoulders back against the wall is by really arching their lower back.
And so the wall is just a really great tool
to help you get an objective measure for how
your body parts are able to articulate.
I did this in the studio during our interview and Katie also had me reach my arms out to
the side against the wall.
And your arm, can your wrists touch while all those other pieces stay on the wall?
Yeah.
And then you can go overhead.
Do my hands go above my head?
Can my wrists touch the wall there without?
Not that needs some work. Do we find one? Do we find a spot? Yeah
There's not well one of them can but the other one can't quite right and that's a big part of that asymmetry, too
You know, there's just injuries. There's hobbies or habits that we all have that will
etch in these just different ways of using
our body.
But without checking in with your ranges of motion and the way things are stacking and
able to articulate relative to each other, you just miss out that things are declining.
You start to go, wow, I don't know when my hips got so tight.
I don't know when I stopped being able to get my arms overhead.
And then it becomes, I didn't know when I lost the ability to get up and down off the
floor.
And a lot of that is being set now just in the fact that we're not utilizing a large
number of shapes, we're kind of stuck in
these same repetitive shapes and those shapes are leaving, they're leaving their mark.
This isn't to say that we always need to move perfectly evenly or symmetrically, but
we want to start giving our bodies more options.
Takeaway two, create moments of posture counter programming.
Let's say you're a desk worker and you spend most of the day sitting in the same position. Just stepping away and doing a three-minute workout,
walking, doing lunges up and down your room or whatever it might be.
That could help a lot. Now if you have mobility restrictions or you can't do standing exercises,
LIDAR recommends a seated cat-cow stretch, a seated hamstring stretch, a cross-body arm stretch,
or some rotations in your chair.
Basically, you wanna put your body
in as many different shapes as possible
in that one-minute break.
Here's Katie.
Just shake up your hands, reach them over the head,
bend to the right, bend to the left.
Now, if you work on your feet in retail
or at a warehouse,
for instance, your posture breaks are gonna look different.
Typical movement breaks for that person
might include actually sitting down for a bit,
again, stretching the hip rotators, the hip flexors,
standing up, stretching the calves,
maybe even doing some calf raises.
Lida recommends stretching your back too,
especially if you're lifting heavy trays or boxes.
And Katie says you can create natural cues so these movement breaks become second nature. recommend stretching your back too, especially if you're lifting heavy trays or boxes.
And Katie says you can create natural cues so these movement breaks become second nature,
like changing positions every time you cross something off your to-do list or touching
the top of the doorframe each time you leave a room.
Create these little environmental cues that just remind me that these parts need movement.
Then my shoulder position, when I go back to
sitting at a desk and you know writing a book or working on a piece doesn't
really bother me because I've nourished my shoulder and all these other
positions just for minutes here or there sprinkled throughout the day. Here's
another fun idea. Try a game of solo charades. You're gonna
contort your body to look like an animal or a fruit or a vegetable or a letter of the alphabet. I find bananas are a good
starting point. Elephant works well for me too. And giraffe is good if you really
want to stretch your neck. The whole point is you're just trying to not do
what you've just done for the hour leading up to that or the three hours or
the six hours or the 16 years.
But movement breaks are only part of the equation.
Takeaway three, adjust your environment.
If you're constantly feeling pain in a part of your body, these body resets do help, but
it's possible something's just wonky with your work setup or your sleep setup. That pain could vanish with some small tweaks. Think about the body constellations you made earlier.
If you figured out that your arm is being pinned in a certain way when you're sleeping, then you
might want to place pillows in a way that make it so that you're not pressing on certain areas.
Or consider how you're sitting in your chair at the office. Do you slump back a lot or perch at the top of it?
Put more weight on one leg or the other?
Do you have to crane your neck up to look at your monitor?
Or reach your arms out really far to type on your keyboard?
Lita says when it comes to your desk setup,
everything that you need to reach repetitively
should be comfortable.
Make sure that whatever it is you're looking at most,
maybe that's your monitor.
That the top of that screen is at or about eye level with you, give or take a few degrees.
Another aspect is bringing it close enough to you so you don't have to peer forward.
Next let's adjust your keyboard. Keeping the keyboard at or it's, we suggest
around 90 degrees at the elbows with some support for your wrist so that you're not reaching
too far and your wrist isn't flexed too far up because that's a sustained posture that
might aggravate, for example, the carpal tunnel.
Now let's do your desk chair.
Do you feel comfortable and supported in the one you have?
Are your feet swinging off the ground or resting firmly on the floor?
You want something that allows your thigh to sit in the depth of the chair comfortably.
The seat cushion should be about a couple inches behind your knee.
So if your leg is going off of the seat, you should have a couple inches before you feel
your knee.
Feet flat on the ground, some support for your elbows and your shoulders.
If your pain doesn't go away with these kinds of tweaks
or if it's getting worse,
there is professional help out there.
If you have an area that's become very acutely injured
and you're noticing other symptoms, you know,
radiating pain and things that feel nervy
or just the activities of daily living are being hindered
because you can't walk on a particular joint like then you want to go check in and have an
evaluation. You can go see a primary care doctor or an orthopedist and also look
for a physical therapist in your area. As I was talking to Katie about taking
movement breaks throughout the day and getting up to stretch my body, I thought
back on all the times in my life when that behavior was frowned upon. At my first job, working for a financial magazine,
one of the executives complained to HR that I was getting up from my desk too much to go to the
bathroom or the kitchen to chat with a colleague. It's like they expected their employees to be
robots who could sit at a desk without moving, typing away for eight hours straight.
Well, it's acting. You know, you're basically acting. You're like,
I will act like a person who doesn't need to move.
I told Katie that has never felt right in my body. I guess I would describe myself as having sort of
a restless energy in my body. And I need to like, get up and move and stand and stretch and do all
these things. Or else, I don't know,
I'll just start to fall asleep or I'll feel really, really like pent up.
And socially that wasn't really accepted for a long time.
I think a lot of that starts in school.
There's a big assumption that if people are moving and taking care of their body's physical
needs that they can't possibly address their educational
or mental productivity.
But I think that there's a lot more evidence
just to the contrary of that,
that if you are someone who needs to move,
that moving can really help regulate yourself.
It's really just the ability to fidget,
embracing your fidget,
especially if it helps you stay more focused in what you're doing.
Embrace the fidget. That's our fourth and final takeaway.
So much of life trains us to be sedentary, to unlearn all of the ways we moved our bodies as kids.
Let's push back on that.
Let the people fidget. It is a way of distributing load and it's a very easy way to meet more of the body's
needs to move.
Katie says if you're feeling self-conscious about leaving your desk to do some squats
or make the shape of a banana, remember.
You know, you can only focus and think really as much as you can based on how your body's biological needs
are met and movement is a tremendous biological need.
Also, think about all the ways your body is trying to shake itself out.
Do you bounce your knee all the time?
Drum your fingers?
She says those little movement quirks we have are impulses worth listening to.
I would teach that those fidgeting signals
are more like hunger signals.
We really need a language for,
oh, my body's telling me it needs to change shapes right now
and do a little bit of movement.
Okay, Katie has one final tip for you
to check on the alignment of your hips and lower back.
This is a problem area for a lot of folks.
She says a lot of us have this habitual standing posture where we push our pelvis and hips
forward so that your pelvis is placing more weight on the front of your foot over your
toes than it is the heels.
To see if you're doing this, take off your shoes, stand up, and see if you can lift your
toes if that feels impossible.
Back your hips up so that the pelvis is stacked more over the heel and less over the middle
or the front of the foot so that you can lift your toes all the way up.
And that simple adjustment, it changes the way your lower back is articulating.
If this feels really good, remember that posture the next time you're, for instance, washing
dishes.
If you notice your hips are resting against the counter, pull them back.
It's like an instant lower body makeover just by backing the hips up.
Do you think that this is what Juvenal was talking about when he said, back that ass
up?
I'm almost certain that's what he was talking about.
He cares about your posture. He cares about the load on
your lower back. Who doesn't? I mean, that's a community service song, ultimately.
All right, it's time for a recap. Takeaway one, you can map out your most common body constellations
to determine which parts of your body are overworked or neglected. That can help you
find the root of the pain you might be experiencing.
Takeaway two, start to fill in those gaps with little movement cues.
Do some squats or lunges or overhead reaches whenever you check an item off your daily list.
If you're on your feet a lot throughout the day, find some time to sit and rotate your back muscles.
This can also be less formal.
Touch the top of the doorway every time you leave the room.
Make animal poses or shape your body like letters or numbers.
Takeaway three, adjust your most common environments for maximum comfort.
Get that desk chair and monitor just right or use that body pillow while you're sleeping.
And takeaway four, embrace the fidget.
When you're feeling antsy, your body is trying to tell you something.
It's probably saying,
hey, I could really use a stretch break right now,
or this sitting position is uncomfortable.
So listen and move accordingly,
no matter what other people say.
For more Life Kit, check out our other episodes.
We've got one on the best stretches
for preventing chronic pain,
and another on how to heal from an injury. You can find those at npr.org
slash life kit. And if you love life kit and want even more, subscribe to our
newsletter at npr.org slash life kit newsletter. Also we love hearing from you
so if you have episode ideas or feedback you want to share, email us at
lifekit at npr.org. This episode of Life Kit was produced by
Margaret Serino. Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan and our digital editor is
Malika Grebe. Megan Cain is our supervising editor and Beth Donovan is
our executive producer. Our production team also includes Andy Tagel, Claire
Marie Schneider and Sylvie Douglas. Engineering support comes from Robert
Rodriguez. I'm Mariel Segarra.
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