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Fit & Well
Fit & Well
Health
Alice Porter

This four-move Pilates for posture routine strengthens your muscles and reduces back pain

Hollie Grant doing a diving Pilates pose

If you've ever found yourself slouched over the dinner table or experiencing back pain after a day of sitting down at your desk, your then a Pilates for posture routine could make all the difference. 

Having bad posture is common, especially with so many of us spending most of our time sitting down. But aside from the everyday effects, poor posture can lead to damaged joints and ligaments, and cause to muscle tension, pain, and fatigue.

Fortunately, setting some time to roll out one of the best yoga mats and take on this short Pilates for posture session, designed by Hollie Grant, founder of Pilates PT strengthens key muscles and works your core in just four moves. 

Our bodies aren't designed for sitting down all day, which ends up weakening some essential muscles. And when we do need them, "they fail to meet demand and either prevent us doing what we love, or cause discomfort as they fatigue," Grant says.

But you can undo some of these effects with this quick routine that you can do wherever you are and even when you're short on time, much like some of the best yoga stretches for beginners

Four-move Pilates for posture routine

If you sit down a lot, then you'll need to focus on the muscles in your postural chain. "These muscles run up the length of the back of the body and help support our posture as we move. They include the glutes, hamstrings, and spine extensors," says Grant.

The exercises below target these muscles, strengthening and stretching them. Grant recommends trying to perform them as often as possible, ideally every day or a few times a week at least.

As you get used to doing these exercises, they might become easier, so she also recommends adding resistance in the form of resistance bands or weights to increase the load as you get stronger, in line with the progressive overload technique.

1. Hip hinges

(Image credit: Hollie Grant)

Grant says: "I would give this exercise to every human being if I could! Hip hinges activate the hamstrings and glutes, which given our modern-day lifestyles (that include too much sitting down) can become weak."

Reps: 10-12

  • Find your neutral standing position and bring your hands to prayer at your chest. Make sure your knees are soft and then imagine that you are bowing, pushing your bum back and hinge at the hips until you can go no further and hold here. 
  • Keep your back neutral and you’ll get to a point where you feel a hamstring and a glute stretch. Ensure your knees are soft and you feet are entirely in contact with the ground. 
  • As you exhale, return to a natural standing position and then repeat.

2. Diving

(Image credit: Hollie Grant)

Grants says: "Here we are taking hip hinges up a notch and adding an extra load/demand to the postural chain by taking the arms overhead. This also requires activation of the upper-back muscles to prevent the arms slumping forwards."

Reps: 10-12

  • Start in a neutral standing position and bring your arms to cactus pose, with your shoulders and elbows at 90 degrees. Hinge at the hips to about 45 degrees and hold. 
  • As you exhale, reach your arms overhead as though you're diving into a pool. Return your arms to the cactus position as you inhale and return to your starting position. That's one repetition. 

3. Thoracic extension

(Image credit: Hollie Grant)

"Our thoracic spine is the upper portion of our spine around our shoulder blades/ribcage and it curves forwards. However, during our daily lives, we start to deepen the curve here as we look down at our devices," explains Grant. 

"So, we need to ensure we are balancing this out and putting our bodies into thoracic extension as well. This exercise may feel tough, and range of movement may be limited at first, but persevere so long as it feels safe to do so."

Reps: 10-12

  • Start in a standing position and bring your fingers to your temples with your elbows out to the side. As you inhale, raise your eye line, chin, and chest towards the ceiling, creating thoracic extension.
  • Keep your pelvis still and imagine lifting up and out of your waist, rather than allowing all the weight to fall into your lower back.
  • Exhale to slowly come back to the start position. That's one repetition. Repeat for 10-12 reps. 

4. Breaststroke prep

(Image credit: Hollie Grant)

Grant says: "This is another amazing exercise for encouraging thoracic extension and building strength in the upper back. This will hopefully help counter the effects of modern life, which tends to weaken the back extensors instead."

Reps: 10-12

  • Start lying on your front with your legs hip-width apart and your hands stacked one on top of the other underneath your forehead like a little pillow. Gently press your pubic bone into the floor — this will help to bring the pelvis to neutral.
  • Inhale as you start to gently lift your head, chest, and arms away from the floor, lifting the upper-body into a straight line. Aim to lengthen your spine rather than bend your back to lift from the ground. 
  • Exhale to gently release back down to the floor to complete the repetition and repeat 10-12 times. 

This Pilates for posture routine targets the muscles along the back of your body to help even things out after a long bout of sitting. But they're not the only muscles involved in your posture — your core muscle also plays a role. 

This section of mid-body muscle, which includes your abdominals, helps connect your upper and lower-body and helps you balance. If you enjoy Pilates, but want something to target this area, then give this Pilates abs workout a try. 

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