Body & Care

Yoga for a Desk-Bound Back

A short, practical sequence for the spine that spends its days folded into a chair.

Yoga for a Desk-Bound Back

A desk shortens the front of the body and lengthens the back into a slump. The antidote is not a single stretch but a small daily habit of opening the chest, freeing the spine, and reminding the hips how to move.

How to practise it

  1. Start with cat–cow to bring the spine through its full range in both directions.
  2. Open the chest with a gentle supported backbend over a rolled blanket for a minute.
  3. Take a seated twist each side, growing tall before you turn.
  4. Stretch the hip flexors with a low lunge, since a tight front hip drags on the low back.
  5. Finish with a few minutes of legs up the wall to let the whole back settle.
Body & Care practice
Tide Aura — body & care

Common mistakes

The back does not need a heroic fix; it needs a small, regular reminder that it can still move in every direction.

In the studio, and at home

This is the practice for anyone who earns a living in a chair — a few minutes at lunchtime or after work, aimed squarely at the ordinary ache of modern posture.

The back does not need a heroic fix; it needs a small, regular reminder that it can still move in every direction. Give it that, most days, and it tends to quieten down.

Questions we hear

Will yoga fix my back pain?

It helps many everyday, posture-related aches by restoring movement and easing tension. Sharp, radiating, or persistent pain needs a doctor first, not a mat.

How often should I practise for my back?

A little daily beats a lot occasionally. Even five minutes of spinal movement most days makes a noticeable difference over a few weeks.