The shrimps knew all along what the ultimate form looks like. Ancient creatures of the deep, dark sea. Wisdom grows in the dark.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@uniktbrukernavn 🤣🤣
@limmy74116 ай бұрын
I for one, welcome our new shrimp overlords.
@jtbigbear31586 ай бұрын
Shrimps don’t have to learn a proper hollow hold after being stuck in extension lol.😢
@daveyvane5 ай бұрын
So do perverts
@UltraFunky500005 ай бұрын
this is a very lovecraft thing to say❤
@penguinista6 ай бұрын
Exercises start at 8:45
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@penguinista I’ll make time stamps 👍🏼
@pennykennedy18245 ай бұрын
But the prior talk was beneficial! Thank you!
@doomngloom965 ай бұрын
Thank you so much
@theusualsuspect90764 ай бұрын
No it wasn't.@@pennykennedy1824
@SingularityMedia4 ай бұрын
Thank you, the cyclic waffling was tedious
@HappilyAnonymousGirl5 ай бұрын
I learned in physical therapy to shift back onto my heels before relaxing my back, lifting my chest, and then tilting my pelvis forward while contracting my lower core. That little shift to the heels helps tremendously, and I still follow the other cues for this posture alignment exercise. Strengthening the core was also always the first thing we would do, and I’ve come to fully understand why after learning from videos like this. It leads literally everything.
@antonmaier22633 ай бұрын
Bruce Lee is proud
@alexwinters63564 ай бұрын
i just tried and it was magic having more mobility on right side. will keep doing this daily
@waughfit4 ай бұрын
@@alexwinters6356 happy to hear it helped!
@D_Moore6 ай бұрын
I noticed my posture was bad due to over developed and underdeveloped muscles that were not synchronized. Some are tight due to weakness and lack of proprioception, some are the go-to’s which take over for a group and make a less ideal movement. By being aware of what was less ideal structurally I was able to strengthen latent muscles and bring balance to the groups, over a period of time my center of mass changes. I’m actually 1” 1/4 taller than I was when you gave me a posture assessment years ago. These things can be complicated and even things like stress or if a person is hyper mobile can affect posture, building awareness is the key, finding those little things that raise our potential and make improvements is the way. Always stoked on your work man, you’re always moving forward with creativity and gusto! 💪
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@D_Moore it’s great to hear you’ve seen such awesome results. Happy to be a part of your journey.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@ButConsiderThis my free program is a good start
@alisonderrick10674 ай бұрын
Thank you ❤ so much. “Mr. Upright Default Posture” ;) you’re my hero. This is beautiful! This is work that is truly helpful to reach the upward goal. 1) Look up! Look forward. 2) Go after localized tension. “poke your sibling in the eye ;) at a 45° angle w/o limitations” This one video has been more helpful and more effective than eight months of physical therapy.. just sayin. Thank you. You teach us, Psoas to help us stand up straight. Fantastique!
@kandul33726 ай бұрын
Probably best video i have ever seen about correcting posture
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@kandul3372 thanks! I hope it helps people out 👍🏼
@suziekrugcastle84514 ай бұрын
Thank you!!! I’ve had two surgeries within 3 years ( broken sacrum and l4&l5 microdiscectomy) and put on weight, lost flexibility and muscle strength and these work outs are incredible and I believe are helping my stamina as well!!! Best videos ever I’m 51. And going through perimenopause so my body aches everyday… love these!!Thank you 🙏🏻♥️🌷
@ssscenery2 ай бұрын
thank you man, your videos are so dedicated, knowing you can help others with your own progress, i tend to see ppl teaching these topics from a far away perspective, with already perfect posture and making it look easy. the truth is that with already 30 years old of living with bad posture, there´s not a magic treatment that will make my back and shoulders aligned in 6 months or a couple of years. i have to relax about the improvement and think about simply creating a new me, day by day, untill i notice with time that the forced changes im pushing becomes an habit. that alone should feel a huge success. maybe ill never reach a 100% aligned back but if i can improve what i already have, i should celebrate it. I´ll start with your exercises, and tons of others, wish me luck!
@waughfit2 ай бұрын
@@ssscenery that’s a great perspective. We’re not looking for perfect - just better. Also lifting helps soooo much. I cannot recommend full range of motion lifting enough. These exercises are only the start 👍🏼
@DP.4965 ай бұрын
I had struggled with forward posture for years because of a tight immobile thoracic spine. Very long story short, I discovered the yoga-wheel (i use it for spinal extension.). It was truly life changing. Cheap, too. Tons of companies make them. Can't believe I had never heard of it. I'm only posting this as it might help someone. People worry about variety in their diet, but we need variety of movement to stay healthy.
@tubopezzato5 ай бұрын
THANK YOU!!!
@gabrielleg.13475 ай бұрын
How long would you use it and how often to see a change? I have chirp wheels but only use it for a few minutes each day.
@DP.4965 ай бұрын
@gabrielleg.1347 For me, only a couple of minutes a day. The first 2-3 weeks were painful, lots of pressure on protruding spinous processes until I experienced a cavitation "crack". I immediately felt dramatically improved range of motion and was able to achieve better posture with less effort. No pain at all using the wheel after that. Every day, it would re-crack (but less) on the wheel reverse a day of bad posture. Finally, it stabilized (back exercises help accelerate stability). Now, it rarely "cracks" unless I go over 2 weeks without using the wheel. In other words, the wheel went from necessary daily to eventually maintenence. Be careful on carpet as the wheel is less stable. I looked at the chirp wheel. It looks very similar but with a spinal groove. For me, I needed the extra pressure (no groove). Best wishes!
@swetachowdary5 ай бұрын
Thankyou
@ronald74825 ай бұрын
Thank you for your information. I just ordered one because of you. Hope it will help me too
@Gonz-o8j6 ай бұрын
I remember a time I was doing of rowing my posture felt really streghent. Also a time where I was doing a lot of crosstraining. Overall good muscular tone helped me a lot (of course I always made mobility excersices) thanks for the video🙏
@szymonbaranowski81846 ай бұрын
rowing is pushing shoulders and arms forward while keeping head in line with torso, plus going back expanding shoulders to sides instead of pushing them to back thats the key to all of this
@LeontiusInvictus5 ай бұрын
This has helped me see what I couldn't for over a decade. Thank you!
@ianstover6 ай бұрын
I had nerd neck, forward turned shoulders, and beggining of a hunch. Ring back flies, pullups, max ROM pushups off paralletes, and holding yourself up against a wall with you neck on back side were the main exercises i used to fix posture. Strengthening your back will pull everythimg toward it. I can no longer slouch.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
Glad that worked for you. I did a lot of upper back strengthening but it never changed my relaxed posture. My upper back was jacked AF though lol.
@ianstover6 ай бұрын
@@waughfit your exercises focus on stretching. I was always flexible. I wonder if that might make the difference. I also wasn't doing anything too hard on chest or front delt like bench press. Mostly calisthenics.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@ianstover yes, these exercises in the video are stretching focused. I strength training and focused a ton on my upper back with traditional posture strengthening moves as well as pull up. I believe flexibility and mobility of the joints is key. It’s about being objective with what is limited through testing like I showed with the shoulder extension. I think we’re saying the same thing though lol
@ianstover6 ай бұрын
@@waughfit I think we are as well. My question then is prior to fixing your posture did you have much upper body flexibility. I had the flexibility initially but little strength. I very rapidly saw posture improvement from exercise. Which might support the idea that the flexibility moreso than strength allows the muscles to pull into good posture.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@ianstover I didn’t! My shoulder extension was bad along with my apley’s scratch test. No one tested my mobility. Just gave me general exercises to “strengthen” my posture. I got stronger but they never improved my mobility. After improving my mobility it super charged my training and my posture improved.
@BuellersBack5 ай бұрын
Doing various pull-up and pushup exercises fixed everything for me.
@peter-53544 ай бұрын
How bad was you posture beforehand? And what routine did you use to fix your posture?
@BuellersBack4 ай бұрын
@@peter-5354 Medium bad. I did P90X program.
@mrnice00Ай бұрын
@@peter-5354 Pull ups wont fix it - I have forward head posture and I do 450 Pull ups a week
@peter-5354Ай бұрын
@@mrnice00 So you do 60 pull-ups per day? That's impressive. What has helped your posture the most so far?
@mrnice00Ай бұрын
@@peter-5354 I do them 3 times a week 150 pull ups on each day. I think the solution is a combination between stretching and building muscle (building muscle alone 100% won't help). Last year I did neck training (look up youtube on building a strong neck) + stretching and I saw improvement in a month - but I wasn't consistent and now I am back to bad posture - so I start again now at the beginning -_- Key = Stretching, building muscle glutes/core/upper back/neck + consistency
@CodingForPeace5 ай бұрын
Very good and thorough instruction for a problem haunting many of us screenes, thanks
@dudejoe83906 ай бұрын
Maximizing my mobility allowed me to comfortably be in all kinds "bad" postures without drawbacks. I can sleep on hard surfaces comfortably (assuming I'm not pressing on a nerve). I don't have sharp pains when I slightly bang my knees or elbows on things like walls, doors, tables, especially when I stub my toe. It doesnt hurt. In fact the number of times I do bang or stub something decreased significantly because I have better coordination and the scope of my ability to react has increased.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@dudejoe8390 exactly! I’ve had a very similar experience. My wife and I have a 4 week old and I’ve been hunched over with bad posture the entire time but I’m not getting stuck like I used to. Coordination and accessing more muscle with the increased mobility I believe is a huge component. Happy to hear you’re doing well 👍🏼
@sids0275 ай бұрын
How did you improve your mobility?
@theshellest4 ай бұрын
This has nothing to do with your video, but you have a great voice
@kylebanks135 ай бұрын
Just out here supporting my fellow kyle 💪
@Avispa-3696 ай бұрын
Thanks, I'll start tomorrow.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@Avispa-369 I hope it helps
@IlIIIl5 ай бұрын
Did you?
@somethingintheair53735 ай бұрын
Always start today!
@federicocl31645 ай бұрын
Legend says he's still waiting for tomorrow to start 😂
@Afflictamine5 ай бұрын
There is no tomorrow!
@NELA_Realtor4 ай бұрын
Great video! What really worked for me was diaphragmatic breathing and focusing on breathing through my nose throughout the day. It's helped me avoid slouching and has significantly reduced my stress levels overall.
@JoeKristoff6 ай бұрын
I have bad posture and a little bit of arthritis in my back and my neck is off a little also anything that can help my posture I am all for it thanks for your video
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
I hope the movements help 🙏🏻
@channel1channelone5 ай бұрын
Video started so interesting and exciting, scientific and full of promises and then kinda went downhill.. with injecting this Program Lead magnet making feel like the video is incomplete and then jumping into some exercises and stretches without explaining any logic on why they make sense (b/c they do not seem to and not sure why those stretches would actually fix the posture… so looks like one creator started the video and then somebody else did the second half… :)
@Ruktiet24 күн бұрын
That’s because they don’t make sense. All this does is work on shoulder mobility , which has NOTHING tocdo with hyperyphosis, which is the real cause of forward head posture.
@microwaveson21 күн бұрын
@@Ruktiet could you recommend something to fix that?
@albertnelson28686 ай бұрын
Thanks! I just gave it a try and going to include in my routines.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@albertnelson2868 I hope it helps!
@Earl_Grey_7585 ай бұрын
"Pull your shoulders back, tuck your chin, and sit up nice and tall." I find it odd that the most common posture-correction advice is pretty much "If you have bad posture, stop having bad posture!"
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@Earl_Grey_758 Right? It’s crazy how in everything else-sports, playing music, work, etc.-we strive for unconscious competence or ‘flow.’ We expect to get so good at something that we don’t even have to think about it anymore… except when it comes to posture 😂. It’s funny how that’s the one thing were told to have to constantly think about.
@Earl_Grey_7585 ай бұрын
@@waughfit Wow, that was fast! Thank you for the answer and the video :) I suppose the same is the general idea of the keep-good-posture-throughout-the-day advice as well, the goal is just more elusive in this case. It was such a huge red herring when people (including a doctor) kept telling me to "just pay attention to my posture"; I experienced progress only after I started to exercise, too. After all these years, I am still slightly salty about it, a lot of time and effort spent inefficiently xd
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@Earl_Grey_758 same experience for me. It honestly just came down to improving my mobility then all the strength work really started to kick in. Way better use of time than focusing on staying upright.
@Mrssarandy3 ай бұрын
What if there's a degree of hyper mobility? The shoulder test at 6:50 specifically
@viorelgheorghe97725 ай бұрын
I was doing as an exercise at home push-ups for decades, and my posture was exactly that, and apparently was because pushups was not a very complete exercise for the upper body. I didn’t do anything intentionally to correct these but I decided to be god at pull-ups to. The unexpected side effect was that the muscles for my back gotten stronger and compensated the much stronger front and my posture corrected.
@StarApe18966 ай бұрын
So the algorithm is reading my mind..
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@StarApe1896 don’t let it know you know 👀
@ryozaki965 ай бұрын
You may have figured out our methods of tracking you, watching you and listening to you through your smartphone, but you will never escape us. We hear your thoughts now.
@konchy3 ай бұрын
Pecs that are too tight will also pull the shoulders forward. Consider trigger point therapy for pecs, stretches for upper, mid and lower pecs, avoid strengthening the pecs further, and strengthen the rhomboids instead
@thedjoker35215 ай бұрын
great intro buddy
@NowIknowCh3 ай бұрын
On iron cross rolling I can’t get my leg to touch the floor, not even close actually. Feels like my lower back just too stiff. Will it improve with time?
@frankiebluej69025 ай бұрын
Thank you!! I will start this immediately. Prayers that it helps my constant pain. ❤❤ The explanation was quite helpful. Much appreciated.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@frankiebluej6902 I hope the moves help you 🤝
@user-yy3sx1ec2s3 күн бұрын
How long have you guys did it before seeing a noticeable improvement?
@toliveischrist9505 ай бұрын
So excited to try these exercises! One thing I changed that helped my forward neck was to change my pillow. It was too high and when I changed to a flat memory foam pillow my neck straightened :) Took a year or two though.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@toliveischrist950 I’ve actually had some clients use pregnancy pillows and it’s been helpful. Maybe something to try if you’re a side sleeper
@Anne_Onymous5 ай бұрын
My issue was caused by posterior pelvic tilt with tight hamstrings.
@zerokool25756 ай бұрын
I’ve been trying to work on my shoulder external rotation for a long time. What is the best workout exercise to fix bad external rotation?
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@zerokool2575 I made this post over on my IG that had a lot of moves I used for shoulder ER. instagram.com/p/C55ttcVLI16/?igsh=c3lvb20zdGh6N2lt
@sajra82075 ай бұрын
What should i do with an arched back and a neck hump?
@rizwanbasha30972 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot for this video!! I tried to do the first exercise - lying down flat and crossing one leg over to the other side. I am not able to do it at all. When I try to do it, my palm and the shoulder lifts off of the floor. Is it possible to one day do it right if I continue doing this everyday? Thanks!
@waughfit2 ай бұрын
@@rizwanbasha3097 correct! Another thing to try is put some pillows under where your leg is going across the body. That way to can reach the leg more comfortably without struggling as hard or overly tensing up. Hope this helps.
@louiseglaser33825 ай бұрын
Very wise words😌
@llusory_World3 ай бұрын
❤ 8:45 exercise starts. 10:25 2nd Ex
@anjelapatnaik4 ай бұрын
Can this correct a cervical kyphosis
@jonnyeom5 ай бұрын
Did you combine these stretches with other strengthening exercises?
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
Oh yeah, I have a program in the description with a full weight lifting routine in combination of even more mobility work. These exercises get some quick changes but strengthening is a must.
@velocitygirl85515 ай бұрын
Awesome… thank you 😊
@brettrichardson79245 ай бұрын
Thank you, i struggled a lot with atrophied gamer glutes and am working the pain out now. Is there a concensus on whether popping a tight spot is bad?
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@brettrichardson7924 tough to say and probably depends on the area. I pop my neck and stuff and it’s fine. Chiropractics can give people increased mobility so maybe that’s happening for you. But it’s important to use and load that new mobility.
@MemoryPallace6 ай бұрын
Feel like tai chi, qigong, and yoga are way above modern doctors advice, I love qigong!
@raph1515155 ай бұрын
chin tuck is only useful as a quick stretch sporadically, if you abuse it, it can be detrimental because the back of the lower cervical get bunched up which isn't good and overall, the neck stay straight instead of curved. the solution is a lot of walking to strengthen the back muscles
@toliveischrist9505 ай бұрын
Walking is amazing!
@AaronGonzalez-f4y5 ай бұрын
I notice when I walk with my backpack I have like upper back/trap pain
@sergiocarreteroruiz10756 ай бұрын
Hi! I'm 23 yrs old and I have Kyphosis. Is kyphosis something reversible or can it be improved? Thank you!
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@sergiocarreteroruiz1075 it can be improved! There’s a normal amount of kyphosis that should be present but it can be increased by the factors I state in the video. A mobility tests I look to improve is shoulder ER, extension, and thoracic rotation. I hope that helps.
@lindseymyers6074 ай бұрын
seems like the link to the free program isn't working?
@_winston_smith_5 ай бұрын
Swimming freestyle regularly is great for this issue.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@_winston_smith_ love some swimming 🤝
@DarkOps174 ай бұрын
Focus is my forte
@ranadiaa63355 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video it provides so much information.i also suffer from forward head for yeasr but Can i do these exercises if i have bicipital tendinitis for 2 years now ?
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@ranadiaa6335 hard to say. Judge this off your tests and you own pain symptoms.
@ranadiaa63355 ай бұрын
@@waughfit it is not painful as before but I will try this thanks for your reply 🙂
@fintanmcgee49036 ай бұрын
Have you looked at at C2-C7 hyperflexion and OA hyperextension? I'd loosen SCM and anterior scalene to reduce C2-C7 flexion. Afterwards, I'd check extension in the OA joint. Then, might need to increase flexion in capitis muscles. I wouldn't move to muscles that rotate/side-bend until I'd addressed the above.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
Oh yes, I’ve done a lot of chiropractic work-it’s all they talk about. I still have the pillow! 😂 That said, all of the muscles you mentioned are relaxing or gently stretching with the exercises. It’s just that you’re using the ribcage and spine attachments versus stretching with the neck and head. Also, simply placing the head and neck in a more favorable position (I cue open airway like with CPR) and then moving the shoulders, spine, and ribs, like with the upper body banded traction, can relax the neck a lot. It’s not that I don’t think what you suggest doesn’t work, it’s just going after it a little differently. Work from the center of mass out which is why I mention swayback so much. I hope that all makes sense 😅 it’s early here.
@6tuf85dyfu5 ай бұрын
My shoulder right where my clavicle meets pops every time i twist my thumb backwards and return it forwards. Is that bad?
@notoriouscraggle9323 ай бұрын
How often should these exercises be performed every week?
@waughfit3 ай бұрын
@@notoriouscraggle932 if they improve your mobility, then I would do them every day till your body adapts and you can pass the mobility test without having done the movements in 24-48 hours
@ComeAlongKay4 ай бұрын
How are TMJ issues related to cervical kyphosis?
@waughfit4 ай бұрын
@@ComeAlongKay I think it just depends on the person. Pain, mobility, beliefs, stress, and strength all can have an effect on symptoms. I would say go after what is most limited in the body. If you shoulder extension or cervical rotation (moves we would expect to see limited with hyperkyphosis) are poor, then improve them and see if that helps. You can also look at how the jaw moves and strength there. At the end of the day we need to assess the body, create a plan, and test what works and what doesn’t work.
@GeraldPierce-b2n3 ай бұрын
To those with this condition: FIX THIS AS IF YOUR KIFE DEPENDS ON IT: I have had this bad posture for 10+years, developed kyphosis and then it resulted in cervical spondylosis- Now my spine has a tear that will never get fixed or treated. The best I could do now is not to let it get worse: PLEASE, fix your posture !
@ShadowPilled6 ай бұрын
Resting posture is a tricky animal to tackle. There's usually a list of variable that contribute to bad posture but ultimately i've noticed running with good cadance and planking the best. Daily stretching is a must
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
Completely agree. It’s got a lot of variable but there’s a genetic baseline you should rest at. I’ve found full mobility at each joint helps you achieve this potential. Then strength training, run, etc with the mobility to cement the gains.
@rachelwidman22314 ай бұрын
My son is so tight, he wouldn’t be able to do these. Anything we can do to slowly work into this? He also has rib flare too
@waughfit4 ай бұрын
@@rachelwidman2231 upper body banded traction. Well within most people’s range of motion and the band is doing the work. I would at least try the moves and see. You maybe surprised as these are some of the lowest level moves I give besides manual techniques
@windyearle4 ай бұрын
I suspect I really need to fix this as I have hand tingling when using the mouse...it seems to go away when I shove my head back but this isn't comfortable to hold.
@waughfit4 ай бұрын
@@windyearle it’s worth a shot!
@gonkong56385 ай бұрын
Thank man.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@gonkong5638 happy to help
@stoney6062 ай бұрын
Its as simple as "look up". There you have it folks. Literally, i think this is the best and most valuable advise. "Posture" is mostly bs, and noone will do the shit boring exercises anyway.
@ahahaahaha76176 ай бұрын
I don’t understand why some people never stretch, don’t really pay attention on how they sit/lay and still have a good posture, while other people have a bad if they don’t stretch everyday for an hour
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@ahahaahaha7617 I believe it’s all about joint mobility and coordination. When there are restrictions, your body tries to move as best as it can, leading to compensations, which are simply survival mechanisms. For example, in caveman times, hip hiking might have kept you moving to escape a tiger, even without perfect hip mobility. In my opinion, our posture is an adaptation to these compensations to save energy. So, if you improve joint mobility, you won’t need to hike the hip, which can prevent postural specializations. That’s just my theory on how it all works 🤷🏻♂️ I could be wrong.
@mariahw56385 ай бұрын
I was out of my body my whole life and didn’t know until I was 37. It’s called dissociation. I felt like a floating head and my body signals were off /muted.
@edmundsishange36082 ай бұрын
@mariahw5638 I'm 42 with kyphosis and I think that's what's happening to me
@head855 ай бұрын
2:03 anything wrong?
@TheJunky2286 ай бұрын
my posture was excellent until I fell and nearly broke my back. now I slouch and have to keep trying to remember to straighten my back, usually hearing a few pops/clicks from the back of my neck when doing so
@-The-Golden-God-5 ай бұрын
I have chronic bursitis in both shoulders that plays absolute havoc with my postural chain. I've tried stretching and strengthening, but the bursitis always flares up and leaves me unable to use my arms. I'm deeply depressed and trapped in limbo.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@-The-Golden-God- did these exercises help?
@abhilash99186 ай бұрын
I have no shoulder pain but i cant even get my thumb to point backward wth? It's pointing a bit sideways
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@abhilash9918 being limited in the tests doesn’t mean you’ll always have pain. Just limited mobility. In this case the anterior chest wall is tight keeping you from rotating and extending the arm. Have you tried any of the exercises to see if it improves?
@abhilash99186 ай бұрын
@@waughfit thanks for the reply. No I've not tried any of those exercises cuz I didn't even know I had that mobility issue until I watched this video. Ill try and see if it helps me with it.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@abhilash9918 hope they help 🤝
@betweenearthandsky40915 ай бұрын
Could this be good for TOS ?
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@betweenearthandsky4091 I’ve used these moves for TOS 👍🏼 but it depends on what you’re mobility, strength, and symptoms look like to truly know if these would help you
@betweenearthandsky40915 ай бұрын
@@waughfit thank you for your answer 🙏🏻 I got diagnosed with subclavian DVT a month and a half ago 😌 hoping to heal without surgery,
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@betweenearthandsky4091 in my experience, surgery for TOS is not necessary and has never lead to major changes in symptoms. I wish they would outlaw that intervention 🤦🏻♂️
@betweenearthandsky40915 ай бұрын
@@waughfit Wow I'm very surprised to hear! It indeed seems quite controversial. It seems like it's the go to treatment for venous TOS these days. It's quite crazy and radical. By the way, do you think there's a connection between rib flare and TOS? If so, it would make a nice video.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@betweenearthandsky4091 yeah I think it’s just very invasive. Especially when it’s something newer, like that rib didn’t cause issues for how long and then all of a sudden we need to remove it? To me that’s an indication it’s probably more muscle tightness. Again, just my opinion and experience. There might be a connection for some people. I think it’s more about testing you movement. What are you limited in? Cool, go after it and see what happens to your symptoms. More mobility typically means less muscle tightness 👍🏼
@Kearnage16 ай бұрын
Thanks for this.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@Kearnage1 happy to help
@Mrworlwad5 ай бұрын
Skip to 8:45
@thedailyremedy9685 ай бұрын
Interesting timing watching your video-i just set up stretch bands outside around a tree with a pulley system using weights for resistance, doing a similar shoulder rotation to the one you show-felt like i was following the way the fascia wrapped around the muscles of the shoulder. Could feel relief in my neck and shoulders. In fact there is a whole bunch of movements you can do working this way to open up compression around the neck and shoulders, rotating with the fascia through the rib cage and hips.
@sulye42774 ай бұрын
I had bad posture until i have to work for security and have to stand still for 12 hs a day, thats when i noticed that my bad posture can be fixed by just standing and walking.😅
@DoozyyTV4 ай бұрын
that's interesting
@vytas55845 ай бұрын
Forcing any position will just hurt you more. You need weights to build strong structures than align you naturally.
@andersjensen73486 ай бұрын
What if i cant even point my thumb backwards before extending the shoulder lol
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@andersjensen7348 something to work on! Hopefully the exercises will help you at least start to turn the thumb back. If they don’t I can send you some other resources that might help.
@leapmonth21646 ай бұрын
Hi Kyle! Loved the shrimp analogy! We emailed you a video message! Did you get a chance to see it?
@dingoo96805 ай бұрын
I want to understand this but I never get these exercices. You say "you should feel a stretch" but I dont. No matter how much I try to do this correctly, I feel nothing. I could do this for 24 hours straight, I would still feel nothing.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
Sounds like you're doing them wrong... Best to film yourself and check your form. It can make a big difference.
@pcenero5 ай бұрын
Try hanging vertically with your arms outstretched and gripping a tree branch, or rings or pull up bar. Farmer's carry or jogging/walking at a comfortable pace for an extended period can work as an indirect method as well. Basically, you want to do what our bodies were originally designed to do throughout our primate lineage.
@TheHadMatters5 ай бұрын
Most of the time this would be because you're allowing the part of your body that's supposed to stay stationary to bend or get pulled along with the part of the body that's supposed to move. In the case of the body cross exercise on the floor, this would mean allowing your stationary knee to bend, or your stationary leg to turn along with your moving leg.
@darioxbrow92236 ай бұрын
Whats your take on dead hangs? Do they help?
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
I love them. I almost used a dead hang exercise in this video instead of the lat stretch. I just thought the lat stretch would be more accessible for people.
@angelolife3 ай бұрын
The tumb pointing back test - I cant even point my thumbs back with straight arms without pushing my shoulders forward.... So, I guess that's a fail...
@waughfit3 ай бұрын
We'll say there's room for improvement lol. Try the moves and see if it gets better. If it doesn't, try something else 👍
@angelolife3 ай бұрын
@@waughfit as per usual, I might have been a bit too hard on myself when thinking I should be able to do it, not only with my thumbs pointing backwards, but also the rest of the hand in perfect alignment.... I guess that wasn't the point? Although, I do feel like there's some room for improvement either way.
@mabe25514 ай бұрын
I need some amphetamine for my posture to fit my bomber jacket 😂
@robertdewilde197029 күн бұрын
I can't even turn my thumb backwards 😢
@waughfit29 күн бұрын
@@robertdewilde1970 room for improvement 🤝
@Kakanulla6 ай бұрын
Don’t behave as all the „shoulder back, stand upright“ things didn’t help you in the long run. It’s what helped. It helps. There are endless studies that tell it helps. It’s maybe not the best. But it helps.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@Kakanulla I talked about how it helped me fake having good posture but it didn’t changed my relaxed posture when I wasn’t thinking about it. I’m sorry if this upsets you…
@le_boucher6 ай бұрын
@Kakanulla Would love to see the quality of those studies, honestly. I've never met anyone who corrected this problem by just putting their shoulders back and standing upright. But if you prefer to be upset because reality does not fit your ideas or vision, I guess you are entitled to it.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@le_boucher that’s my experience as well. I’ve posted a lot over on r/posture and there’s so many people asking for advice and how to fix their posture… but I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone post their real results. I did 2 years of functional patterns but all their results were people consciously standing taller… PRI was the only system I saw some relaxed before and afters from.
@MichaelSheaAudio6 ай бұрын
Consider the surface that you're standing on. Your shoes. The shoes you're wearing in this video clearly have a heel to toe drop. Having your heels raised up will cause your body to lean forward. In order to keep yourself from falling, you have to bend backwards somewhere, like your spine. Well now you're bent backwards, so you have to bend forward somewhere else, like your shoulders and neck. Since we spend a lot of time in shoes, our bodies get used to that posture. If you get into a flat shoe, your body no longer has to compensate and should eventually return to a neutral state. If you developed anterior pelvic tilt, you may need to consciously tilt your hips back to their neutral position until it feels natural. I likely still don't have the best posture, but switching to barefoot shoes have made my feet and legs stronger and my pelvis is back where it should be, making a straighter posture easier to achieve.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
I’m glad the barefoot shoes helped you, but it’s not always the case for everyone. Ultimately, you should wear whatever suits you best. Personally, I like ON shoes because they’re comfortable and great for standing long hours on concrete floors. I hike and trail run in barefoot shoes now, but I actually wore them for six months for 10+ hour days in a gym for work and found that my posture worsened, along with developing plantar fasciitis. At the end of the day, shoes are a tool, just like a hammer or drill-it’s about picking the right ones for the job. In my experience, shoes haven’t significantly impacted my posture. They may have made me tighter or caused some injuries, but I would attribute that more to limitations in mobility. Gaining mobility based on what’s limited in your tests can help you do whatever you want with shoes or exercise. It’s about being specific to a person’s needs, and mobility tests allow us to do this.
@MichaelSheaAudio6 ай бұрын
@@waughfit Sure, but the main focus of my point was the flat shoe. You can still have a cushioned shoe that's also zero drop to help keep you upright. I would hope/assume that you didn't jump directly into barefoot shoes without transitioning or changing your gait.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@MichaelSheaAudio and my main point is that heel elevation doesn’t matter as much as someone’s mobility. I’ve helped people who wear heels all day improve their posture... if what you suggest is the main cause of bad posture then why did they see improvements? Why have I seen improvements and I’m wearing a higher heel? Again, It’s not the shoes. It’s the body wearing them. Improve the body and wear whatever you want…
@MichaelSheaAudio6 ай бұрын
@@waughfit Oh no, of course, your shoes aren't the only thing, there are still things you can do to improve yourself. I'm not disagreeing with that. However, we're just talking about physics and gravity. A shoe with a lifted heel is actively working against you. Wearing them in moderation is one thing, but most regular shoes these days have a drop, even shoes people think are flat. Stretching and exercising should make great improvements, but you can't deny the effects that regular shoes have on our body. Well I mean, you could, Vibram lawsuit and all that, but those effects do make sense and simple changes to footwear can make a noticeable difference without taking the extra time to do exercises.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@MichaelSheaAudio fair point. We’re on the same page. I will say using a shoe with more heel life for someone very forward in the toes has been helpful and then grade them down to less of a heel drop as they get used to sensing their heels. Combining physic and neuromuscular coordination gets weird lol.
@mashka50503 ай бұрын
8:45
@SKALIVE_5 ай бұрын
Do you have evidence that this helps? I dont think you can change posture by doing random exercises since the brain is the one controlling the muscle tone and posture, I think its more relevant to work on that part
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@SKALIVE_ I have personal improvements that I’ve also repeated on multiple clients over the last 5 years by improving mobility tests. You improve mobility by influencing muscle tone which is connected to the nervous system. These exercises are not random… like did you even watch the video?
@Baron_Red5 ай бұрын
If you lift it could be a muscle imbalance. Work the rear delts to counter the rounding at the shoulder and do overhead dumbbell tricep extensions on a decline or flat bench to open up the chest.
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@Baron_Red did you watch the full video before commenting?
@JD-mm7ur5 ай бұрын
dang, i wish my life was like that. if only my fd up posture was the biggest problem i always think about
@Vmoose5 ай бұрын
I mean, if you had shoulder and neck pain so bad that you can’t sit normally for more than a few minutes (which is the case for lots of people) then you’d be researching anything that could help
@JD-mm7ur5 ай бұрын
@@Vmoose i have AS so it's too late for any research or posture correction for me
@cindyjohnson64443 ай бұрын
Not much help
@CelphTitled73 ай бұрын
it was for me
@CatLoverx9004 ай бұрын
I feel like an Ancient krustacion 🦐
@CmcVG5 ай бұрын
Any idea why I feel tightness in my left bicep when doing the first exercise? Only on the left side
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@CmcVG is your left shoulder extension worse than the right?
@billbauer97955 ай бұрын
So, it's impossible.
@descai105 ай бұрын
with that attitude yeah
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@billbauer9795 I mean just try the exercises and see if it helps your shoulder extension. If it does then you probably have a good shot at improving your posture…
@ComeAlongKay4 ай бұрын
It does seem like each video I’ve seen on this says that the last guys video was wrong and that it won’t work and then says it’s even harder to fix than the other guy said. It’s like the difficulty level keeps leveling up the more I’ve studied it.
@ComeAlongKay4 ай бұрын
Though is something didn’t work it would be better to know now and get the best possible option of what to do. It’s harder to do the wrong stuff than the right stuff.
@waughfit4 ай бұрын
@@ComeAlongKay that’s why testing your mobility is so important. You can rule out if something works, doesn’t work, or need troubleshooting. Just gives you a road map to try and see improvements.
@ver0gloria5 ай бұрын
It is also called nerd neck.
@koettfaers5 ай бұрын
O...k
@tomtownsend42105 ай бұрын
Folks also might want to look at the Alexander Technique. You will need lessons but it will actually address the root holding that causes this.
@sacredcowyoga76725 ай бұрын
Posterior tounge tie also is a cause.
@naturalississimo5 ай бұрын
The best way towards a real posture change is the 100 year old Alexander Technique. It is releasing compressions in your body ultimately free your neck, lengthen your spinal muscles and widen your back. It IS Fantastic!!
@waughfit5 ай бұрын
@@naturalississimo 🤖
@Jiraiyasama116 ай бұрын
I wonder how many people with good posture sleep on their side
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@Jiraiyasama11 I sleep on my sides and belly
@JackieMB926 ай бұрын
For me problem is partly in psychology i feel like robot or to proud of himself frat boy type of brat when i wallk straight also i been so used to looking down im afraid i will fall if my eyes are not scaning the ground.
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@JackieMB92 confidence is a huge piece to this. I had a client that improved all his mobility but posture was still bad. We chalked it up to his genetics, but then he quit his horrible job and felt “lighter.” Guy was standing tall without thinking about it! Like the weight of the world was lifted lol
@chrismolloy1315 ай бұрын
I found foundation training fixed my posture best
@tyrantmind7112 ай бұрын
Just sleep on the floor lol
@xpost924 ай бұрын
No, muscle tension doesn’t “hold” you in that posture that is nonsense. Rotator cuff health, upward rotation and NO upper thoracic cervical neck “hinging” is key.
@peter-53544 ай бұрын
What do we do to correct that then?
@szymonbaranowski81846 ай бұрын
2:04 this is still a really bad posture, you want a fully straight back, without shoulders at back of spine axis, the curve is the problem, head forward is much less of a problem and more of a solution, because you dont really have if forward on these pictures - if you look at back line its always at back with shoulders LOL also you need to orient pelvis right, butt going forward and pelvis forward and up is solution not problem, when you keep it at back you curve your back deforming straight posture causing these compensations you discovered way forward but its far far longer way to understand the problem
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@szymonbaranowski8184 we’re looking for better. Not perfect as that will never exist. The lines are drawn from the ear down whereas the other photos were drawn up from the lateral malleolus. I’m not sure what you’re getting at with this comment or critique of the lines. The photo you time stamped clearly shows that she has pulled her ribcage back toward her center of mass, her neck is longer, and hips are in better alignment with the ear… I’m happy to discuss my approach or answer questions but please work on your clarity with your critique. It’s very hard to follow.
@Noah-ir3os6 ай бұрын
The shrimp is crazy
@waughfit6 ай бұрын
@@Noah-ir3os it definitely stands out lol
@Shaunmcdonogh-shaunsurfing4 ай бұрын
Best thing to fix my posture was running up a hill whilst holding a car tyre above my head. In fact it sorted a lot of issues for me.
@RAP4EVERMRC963 ай бұрын
9:00 thats way too much rotation. No spine can rotate as much. Other parts of the body have to compensate to allow for further rotation and additionally you have the weight of your legs pulling, potentially dangerous if tension releases suddenly (especially older people with spine issues). I learned from 2-3 years pilates to never overrotate. Focus on specific muscles and joints and go near their maximum extensions, rotiation, contraction and hold it there.
@waughfit3 ай бұрын
I completely disagree. This perspective promotes a fragile mindset that unnecessarily instills fear of movement. Our bodies are designed to bend, rotate, and adapt to the demands we place on them. If you believe the weight of your own leg could seriously damage your spine, I’d encourage you to reconsider your understanding of body mechanics. People can always adjust their exposure and tolerance to any movement or activity. It's about managing that process, not demonizing movement.
@RAP4EVERMRC963 ай бұрын
@@waughfit well then we must agree to disagree. Awareness of motion is key for me. Moving only some specific joints and not combining multiple at once help to notice which joint allows for which movement. Still a great video