Exercises & Lessons

Posture Exercises: A Gentle Daily Set

A simple set of gentle posture exercises you can do anywhere. Slow, gentle movements that invite more ease and length into your everyday standing and sitting.

5-10 minutes· beginner
posturebody awarenessgentle movementdaily routine

The lesson

About 5-10 minutes. Move slowly, do less than you can, and stay well below any pain. Rest whenever you need to.

  1. 1

    Stand and sense. Stand with your feet about hip-width apart and let your arms hang. Close your eyes for a moment and feel how your weight spreads across both feet. Notice whether you lean a little forward, back, or to one side, with no need to change it.

  2. 2

    Rock the weight. Very slowly shift your weight a small amount forward toward the balls of your feet, then back toward the heels, like a gentle sway. Make the motion smooth and small. Let it quiet down until you rest near the middle.

  3. 3

    Grow a little taller. Imagine the crown of your head floating up toward the ceiling on a soft string. Let your spine lengthen with the image rather than by stiffening. Take one easy breath, then let the effort go and notice what stays.

  4. 4

    Roll the shoulders home. Let both shoulders drift slowly up toward your ears, then float back and down, as if setting them gently in place. Repeat two or three times, light and unhurried, then let your arms hang.

  5. 5

    Sit and reset. Sit toward the front of a chair with both feet flat. Slowly rock your pelvis forward and back a few times, feeling how the spine follows. Settle where sitting feels easiest and notice the new sense of support.

  6. 6

    Carry it with you. Stand again and take a few slow steps. Notice how standing and walking feel after the set. Return to it once or twice through the day whenever you remember to pause.

These posture exercises give you a simple set of gentle movements you can do almost anywhere, then return to whenever you remember to pause. They are not about forcing yourself into a rigid, upright shape and holding it all day. Instead, they invite a little more length and ease into how you already sit and stand, so your body can find comfortable options on its own. The approach borrows from the Feldenkrais Method®, which uses slow, attentive movement rather than effort to help posture settle.

The need is common. Surveys suggest that office workers spend the majority of their day seated, often more than eight hours, and long stretches in one position leave many people feeling stiff and slumped by evening. A short set you can return to through the day is a kind antidote to all that stillness.

How these posture exercises help

Posture is not a single position you achieve and lock in place. It is something your body organizes moment to moment, mostly below conscious awareness. When you move slowly enough to feel how you are sitting or standing, your brain gets clear information and can let a tired holding pattern soften. That is why these exercises ask you to notice first and move gently second, rather than yanking your shoulders back or bracing your spine.

Returning to the movements often matters more than it sounds. The hardest part of any posture habit is simply remembering, so a couple of easy check-ins through the day become a quiet, friendly nudge to pause, sense, and move.

Using these posture exercises through the day

Treat the set as a series of small invitations, not a drill. Run through it once in the morning to set an easy tone, then return to a movement or two whenever you have been still for a while. Keep everything slow, light, and well below any pinch or pull. If a step does not feel good on a given day, skip it. There is no streak to keep, only different things to notice.

The Feldy program grows from this same gentle root, with guided lessons that help the whole body find more comfortable support. For a wider path, explore the body awareness program. If your stiffness gathers in the neck and shoulders, the companion lesson on Feldenkrais for neck tension is a good place to look next.

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Before you begin

Find a few quiet minutes and a little floor space near a chair. Read through the steps once, then move through them slowly, treating each as something to feel rather than perform. Ease off at the first hint of strain, breathe freely, and rest whenever you like. Keep the set in mind as something to return to, so the gentle reminders become part of an ordinary day.

FAQ about posture exercises

What are posture exercises? They are a short set of gentle movements designed to invite more ease and length into how you sit and stand. The aim is to notice and explore your posture rather than force it into a fixed shape.

How often should I do these posture exercises? A few minutes once or twice a day works well, and even a single round after long sitting can help. Short, frequent practice helps your body remember the easier options more than one long session.

Can these exercises improve my posture over time? Gentle, regular movement helps your body discover more comfortable ways to organize itself, which many people experience as easier, more upright posture. There is no single ideal posture to reach, only more freedom to move and rest.

Do I need any equipment? No. You only need a little floor space and a chair. Nothing else is required, and the set works just as well in an office or a living room.

Are these safe if I have back or neck discomfort? The movements stay small, slow, and below any strain, which suits most people. If you have an injury, ongoing pain, dizziness, or a diagnosed condition, please check with a doctor or physical therapist before starting.

Is there one correct posture I should hold all day? No. Research suggests that frequent movement and changes of position matter more than holding any single posture. The healthiest posture is often the next one, so these exercises invite easy variety rather than a rigid hold.

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