Why does how you sit affect how you feel?
Humans evolved to move, not to sit for 8+ hours staring at screens. "Text neck," back pain, and tension headaches are increasingly common. But posture affects more than just pain—it influences breathing, digestion, mood, and even how others perceive you. How?
Your head weighs about 5kg. Tilted forward 45° (typical phone posture), it exerts 22kg of force on your neck. Slouching compresses discs, strains muscles, and misaligns joints. Hours daily = chronic strain → pain.
• BREATHING: Hunched posture compresses lungs, reducing oxygen intake
• DIGESTION: Compressed abdomen slows digestion
• ENERGY: Poor alignment = muscles working harder constantly
• MOOD: Slumped posture correlates with lower mood (body affects mind)
The best posture is your NEXT posture. No single position is healthy for hours. Movement is key: stand, sit, stretch, walk. Regular position changes prevent any one posture from becoming problematic. Bodies need variety.
• Screen at eye level (not looking down)
• Stand/walk breaks every 30-60 minutes
• Strengthen back muscles (counteract forward pull)
• Stretch chest and hip flexors (they tighten from sitting)
• Phone at eye level, not in lap
Poor posture creates strain, limits breathing, and affects mood—but movement variety matters most!
Key insight: There's no "perfect" static posture—the goal is movement variety. Your body evolved for motion, not for freezing in one position. Change positions frequently and counteract modern life's forward pull.
🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?
Select all the lenses you used:
🌱 A Small Everyday Story
Hours at the desk. Neck aching. Shoulders rounded.
Stand up. Stretch back. Deep breath—suddenly easier.
Shoulders back. Head up. Mood... lighter?
The body was just asking for movement.
It got stuck; now it's free.
See more guidance →
Key concepts: Ergonomics, kyphosis, text neck, embodied cognition, movement variability, desk ergonomics.