Posture Tips to Keep Your Spine Healthy During Long Work Hours

Good posture:

Good posture:

Distributes body weight evenly

Keeps spinal curves in alignment

Reduces strain on muscles and joints

Prevents fatigue, stiffness, and long-term injury

?? Your posture determines how your body feels during and after work.

? Top Posture Tips for a Healthy Spine

1. ?? Sit All the Way Back in Your Chair

Keep your back fully supported by the chair’s backrest

Use a lumbar roll or small cushion to support the lower back curve

Avoid perching on the edge of your seat

?? A supported spine is a happy spine.

2. ?? Plant Your Feet Flat

Keep both feet flat on the floor or a footrest

Avoid crossing your legs, which twists your pelvis

Knees should be level with or slightly below hips

?? Stable legs = stable spine.

3. ??? Align Your Screen with Eye Level

Top of monitor should be at or just below eye level

Screen about arm’s length away to avoid hunching

Use books or a laptop stand to raise the screen if needed

?? Looking down = neck strain. Looking straight = relief.

4. ?? Keep Your Keyboard and Mouse Close

Elbows bent at 90°, wrists straight

Shoulders relaxed—not hunched

Use a wrist support if needed to avoid cocking wrists upward

?? Good wrist position supports the upper spine and reduces shoulder tension.

5. ? Move Every 30–60 Minutes

Stand up, walk around, or stretch for 1–2 minutes

Movement resets your posture and improves circulation

Set reminders or use a timer

?? The best posture is your next one—keep moving.

6. ????? Engage Your Core Gently

Lightly activate your abdominal muscles to support your spine

Avoid slumping into the chair or over-arching the lower back

?? Your core is your spine’s natural brace.

7. ?? Watch Your Phone Posture

Hold your phone at eye level to avoid tech neck

Avoid long texting sessions with head bent forward

?? Forward head posture puts up to 60 lbs. of pressure on your neck!

? Bonus Desk Exercises to Reinforce Good Posture

Do these 1–2x per day:

?? Chin Tucks (10 reps)

Pull your chin straight back to align ears with shoulders

?? Shoulder Blade Squeezes (2 sets of 15)

Squeeze shoulder blades together, hold 3–5 seconds

?? Wall Angels (1–2 sets of 10)

Stand with back flat to the wall, slide arms up and down

?? Seated Cat-Cow

Alternate arching and rounding your spine while seated

?? These exercises strengthen postural muscles and counteract sitting stiffness.

?? Posture-Friendly Workstation Checklist

Item Good Setup

Chair Adjustable with lumbar support

Feet Flat on floor or footrest

Monitor Top of screen at eye level

Keyboard/Mouse Elbows at 90°, wrists neutral

Phone Held at eye level

Breaks 1–2 minutes every 30–60 minutes

?? Final Thought

Spending long hours working doesn’t have to mean ending the day in pain. With intentional posture, regular movement, and a spine-supportive setup, you can work smarter and feel better.

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