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Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much
#1

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

The sitting lifestyle has caught up to me in 2016 with bad lower back pain that usually started as soon as I woke up. From doing some research, the problem was linked to years of sitting down, which tightened some muscles and caused other to weaken.

Step 1: Stretch the psoas muscle. This muscle attaches to your lower back and wraps around to the front of your thigh. If you sit too much, it will be constantly contracted, shrinking in length and then pulling on your spine, causing pain. What helped me with doing doorway stretches every day (image C)

[Image: doorwaystretch.jpg]

Within a week I noticed a big difference. After roughly two months, the normal pain is completely gone. I also do short bridges, which is supposed to strengthen unused muscles.

[Image: 20141103070355-How-to-Perform-a-Bridge-E...1414998232]

Step 2: Fix anterior pelvic tilt. While my daily pain was gone, I noticed that I've have lower back pain if I stand for at least 2 hours. This is due to my lower back doing all the work while my glutes and abs take a rest thanks having a deformed tilt of the hip that is caused by excessive sitting. From looking at my profile, I can see how my hip tilts down to the front, causing my butt to stick out slightly.

[Image: Anterior%20Pelvic%20Tilt%20Guide%20and%20Treatment.jpg]

This is the most helpful video I found on fixing it:




Sitting for most of the day will definitely catch up with you eventually, but thankfully there are ways to fix it. Hope this helps anyone who has unexplained back pain.
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#2

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Get a motorized stand up desk and sit on a yoga ball when you get tired of standing. Feet planted firm as hell on the floor.


1) hanging from pull up bar or doorway frame make sure lower back is arched correctly, hips in place, 1 arm side hangs also good

2) stand flush against a wall, shoulders, hips, skull all in line, really let gravity align you and plant your feet firm as hell

3) layback on a large yoga ball, side stretches each way to loosen hip muscles, use hands and feet on floor as leverage to force MUCH a greater stretch

4) wall handstands, like reverse of hangs have perfect military push up form, really plant your hands firm as hell on ground under your shoulders let skull rest so gravity realigns. Do with toes on wall so your front faces wall while upside down, do at an angle where you can easily save yourself with your elbows if you fuck up or get tired - be careful with this one, helps alot though.

Lots of people have that anterior hip tilt. You really have to stand and sit like you are a male model or bodybuilder doing an ab show for people. Push your lower back in like you are sucking in your abs for Chip N Dales. This uses those huge vertebrae to stabilize you.

SENS Foundation - help stop age-related diseases

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#3

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Roosh, for a second I thought that was you in the video in the Calvin Klein boxers [Image: lol.gif]

[Image: gay.gif]
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#4

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Read up on the Mckenzie Method, and find a practitioner. Literally fixed my back. McKenzie is a self practiced physical therapy routine, designed to give the patient the ability to perform their own physical therapy, on their own, without the need of a doctor or supervised PT setting. Initially you would have a McKenzie PT look at you, give you the exercises you need, then you take it from there. Its typically 1-2 visits. I did mine with a PT doc in Hawaii, over Skype, over 7 years ago. Now when my herniated disk flares up, I do the exercises, and it goes away very quickly. Its really the only method which blends science and self reliance; you get diagnosed, and then do the exercises when your back acts up.

Also, do back bridges every day. This is for general maintenance and strengthening the back. Bridges will build a bullet proof back that can withstand heavy squats and deadlifts, and blogging. Lately I have been doing them about 4x per week after my workout. I can hold a bridge for about 2 minutes. Your goal should be 3 - 3 minute bridge holds, a few times per week or more.

Bar hangs - Travesty explains this well, but hanging from a pull up bar several times a week is basically traction. You are putting your spine in traction, which relieves the pressure in the spine, and resets the back naturally. Its a pretty widely prescribed fix now for back issues. I do pullups ups several times a week and just hang if my back is tight.

Its a combination of McKenzie and Bridges that has made my back healthy and strong. When my herniated disk flares up I can barely walk. Those days are gone now, and I know what to do to make the pain go away.
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#5

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Thanks, Roosh.
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#6

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Good post Roosh I will add some of those to my routine. I hit the roman chair for hyperextensions before every leg day/deadlift... another good stretch is the Cat Camel. I saw somewhere to never foam roll the low back so I stick with those two mainly.
[Image: catttt.jpeg]
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#7

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

An inversion table do miracle too a couple of minutes a day!
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#8

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Quote: (03-30-2017 09:09 PM)komatiite Wrote:  

I saw somewhere to never foam roll the low back so I stick with those two mainly.

Can you or someone else elaborate? I love foam rolling my lower back, but don't want to mess it up if there is a solid reason against it. Thanks!
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#9

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

from sitting on my ass the whole day i had severe hip pain, imagine a rotator cuff problem but for the hips. Shifting positions at night would wake me up from pain.

This had happened before as well but I could usually "pop" my hip back into its place and become better. This time though I couldnt, so I started doing 10 mins of yoga in the morning and 10 mins at night for like a week and it finally healed.
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#10

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

I avoided this issue by working out daily. At least an hour plus of heavy lifting seemed to mitigate the worst aspects of sitting for too long.
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#11

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

I had this issue in the past, particularly APT. I even wrote a thread about it then: thread-22465.html

I don't have perfect posture, so I still have it a little bit. But I mostly solved it. It's no longer as bad as it used to be.

One big component of APT and lower back pain is tight hip flexors. While psoas is part of the category, the quads are also involved in hip flexion, particularly the belly that runs down the centre of the thigh. A great way to get them loosened up and relieve the tension that results in APT is to foam roll... Directly on the upper thighs.

If it hurts a lot, it's because it's especially tight. It shouldn't hurt much at all. Take it slow. While different from stretching, the principle remains the same. It's not how much tension you apply, but the amount of time under tension that matters.
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#12

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

I'd like to recommend the following - which have helped immensely since I sit in a chair alot AND do leg days twice a week.

For guys sitting in chairs try the following:

Probably my favorite stretch in a chair

[Image: exercise-for-low-back-pain-mayo-clinic-8...1339561701]

Same kind of stretch but no turning (be sure to pull your knee into your body with both hands) You'll feel you glutes getting a good stretch:

[Image: 40c7b319d4866ab6fc7e2aadf7e9be9c.jpg]

Here is another to try as well:

[Image: SeatedBentover.jpg]

Foam rolling your lower back IS NOT recommended - it can actually aggravate lower back issues.

A good read here:

http://blog.nasm.org/ces/foam-roll-low-back/

HOWEVER:

I roll my glutes out to lower backside of my hip

I do 2 versions:

Straight Leg Roll:

[Image: Hamstrings-Roll.jpg]

The leg crossover (This gets DEEP into your glutes and stretches it out)

[Image: foam-rolling.png]



These alone have helped alleviate lower back pain - there's so much more you can do to help.

I'd also like to check out the inversion table:

[Image: Inversion-Table.jpg]
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#13

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Strength training with Med-X and Kieser machines really helped me . The lumbar extension they have is excellent .
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#14

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Quote: (03-31-2017 10:47 AM)Engineer Wrote:  

Quote: (03-30-2017 09:09 PM)komatiite Wrote:  

I saw somewhere to never foam roll the low back so I stick with those two mainly.

Can you or someone else elaborate? I love foam rolling my lower back, but don't want to mess it up if there is a solid reason against it. Thanks!

I had to dig deep into the recesses of my memory to find this! I saw it pretty recently luckily.

It's apparently controversial, some people say its ok. But here is a great reddit comment i saw:
https://www.reddit.com/r/Fitness/comment...h=2c2c41a2

Quote:Quote:

One of the main ones is that your lower back doesn't have ribs connected to them and when you roll over the lower back, you put your entire bodyweight over the vertebrea and they will be moved anteriorly in a direction they were not meant to really go.
If someone has a history of lower back pain (especially due to a herniated disk), this can be extremely bad and cause a flare up, especially if one is overweight. (OTOH, some people will say they roll over their lower back all the time, but ask any physical therapist and they will tell you to not do it as well.)
Alternatives for your lower back pain:
Relax in a child's pose position,
Do some cat/cow movements and..
Stretch your hip flexors in a lunge because the HF's connect to the lower back and are often THE culprit for lower back pain due to their tightness.
Rolling over the GLUTES with a ball also provides excellent lower back pain relief as well.

Click the link for the follow up discussion and the links to other excersises.
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#15

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Sitting on yoga ball helped me a lot.

[Image: yoga-ball-office-chair-desk-photo-99.jpg]
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#16

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Kneeling chair.

[Image: kneeling-BLOG1.png]

There are a lot of pictures of these things but I chose this one because the toes are pointed forward rather than what I see in a lot of photos where people just let their feet hang loose.

I posted about these a few months ago. Mine really helped me after I injured my lower back lifting logs. Not a substitute for corrective exercises, but an aid in any case.

The public will judge a man by what he lifts, but those close to him will judge him by what he carries.
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#17

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

I can't comment on sitting necessarily, but I recently went to physical therapy and can confirm Roosh's point that stretching can do incredible things for the back. I've been doing them every day and I'm back in the weight room etc.

edit: I got the pain similar to Leonard D Neubache, I did a couple moving gigs for some extra pocket money and the 2 man team should have been 4. I should have said "screw this" but my ego got the better of me.
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#18

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

I've tried kneeling chairs, but they aren't for everyone. I found they made my knees super sore. What's helped me is moving to a standing desk at work. It's adjustable, so I can stand for 20 min, sit for an hour, then stand for 20 etc. Helps me out a lot.
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#19

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Quote: (03-30-2017 08:06 PM)Travesty Wrote:  

Get a motorized stand up desk....




Quote: (03-30-2017 08:06 PM)Travesty Wrote:  

....and sit on a yoga ball when you get tired of standing. Feet planted firm as hell on the floor.



I'm the King of Beijing!
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#20

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

I used to have regular pain in the back.
Three things that helped me:
1. Yoga
2. Swimming
3. Walking a lot

Not necessarily all at once. At the moment I am just walking a lot and I am fine.

You can combine few hours of walking every day with daygame.

By yoga I don't mean yoga classes. You don't even need a mat. All you need is on youtube. I have been using one video only for last few years, but it is in Russian.
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#21

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

These yoga wheels are pretty damn good for stretching your back when sitting. I love it
[Image: What-in-the-World-is-a-Yoga-Wheel-.png]
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#22

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Quote: (03-30-2017 08:28 PM)Vaun Wrote:  

Read up on the Mckenzie Method, and find a practitioner. Literally fixed my back. McKenzie is a self practiced physical therapy routine, designed to give the patient the ability to perform their own physical therapy, on their own, without the need of a doctor or supervised PT setting. Initially you would have a McKenzie PT look at you, give you the exercises you need, then you take it from there. Its typically 1-2 visits. I did mine with a PT doc in Hawaii, over Skype, over 7 years ago. Now when my herniated disk flares up, I do the exercises, and it goes away very quickly. Its really the only method which blends science and self reliance; you get diagnosed, and then do the exercises when your back acts up.

Also, do back bridges every day. This is for general maintenance and strengthening the back. Bridges will build a bullet proof back that can withstand heavy squats and deadlifts, and blogging. Lately I have been doing them about 4x per week after my workout. I can hold a bridge for about 2 minutes. Your goal should be 3 - 3 minute bridge holds, a few times per week or more.

Bar hangs - Travesty explains this well, but hanging from a pull up bar several times a week is basically traction. You are putting your spine in traction, which relieves the pressure in the spine, and resets the back naturally. Its a pretty widely prescribed fix now for back issues. I do pullups ups several times a week and just hang if my back is tight.

Its a combination of McKenzie and Bridges that has made my back healthy and strong. When my herniated disk flares up I can barely walk. Those days are gone now, and I know what to do to make the pain go away.

Thanks for this. I have lower back pain which causes me to sweat like crazy when doing squats, deadlifts and even overhead press.

I just accepted it's the nature of heavy lifting.

Yesterday, I tried the first bridge exercise at the link above for 2 sets 25 reps each in the morning.

I went to the gym in the afternoon for deadlifts. After my deadlift sessions, 10-minute walk from the gym to my house would be a torture because of the pain I feel on my lower back. It was so bad that I had to pause for a while after each 1-2 minutes of walking so that the pain subsides and I can walk 1-2 minutes more again.

Yesterday, the walk from the gym to home was painless. I still felt pain when I was deadlifting but not like before. I am convinced that if I keep on doing bridges, my lower back pain will disappear. I already did 2 more sets of bridges this morning and my lower back feels good.
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#23

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Quote:Quote:

One of the main ones is that your lower back doesn't have ribs connected to them and when you roll over the lower back, you put your entire bodyweight over the vertebrea and they will be moved anteriorly in a direction they were not meant to really go.
If someone has a history of lower back pain (especially due to a herniated disk), this can be extremely bad and cause a flare up, especially if one is overweight. (OTOH, some people will say they roll over their lower back all the time, but ask any physical therapist and they will tell you to not do it as well.)
Alternatives for your lower back pain:
Relax in a child's pose position,
Do some cat/cow movements and..
Stretch your hip flexors in a lunge because the HF's connect to the lower back and are often THE culprit for lower back pain due to their tightness.
Rolling over the GLUTES with a ball also provides excellent lower back pain relief as well

There's some good advice in this post - however you can foam roll your lower back, just not in the fashion most people do. I see people in the gym rolling up and down their spine, which is potentially bad for you.

If rolling up and down you should never go lower than the lowest rib, however the proper way to do it is to lie on the foam roller and roll your body side to side, the roller doesn't actually move, your body should move left to right across the roller.

You should be rolling over your spinal erectors one at a time, when you've done your lower back (3 minutes done slowly is enough), you should reposition your body on the roller so that you roll your mid back, where you'll hit the spinal erectors and also catch both your lats in one roll, 3 minutes is enough again, when done reposition your body again to hit your upper back.

Some people need head support for this, in which case you can use a power bag, place it under your head and off you go.

You can also use a swiss ball for the stretch below, I do it often.

One last point is that for people with lower back problems hanging off a pull up bar is often not a good idea. It's a good stretch for a healthy back but can otherwise be too much, sometimes causing pain and momentary instability in a weak lower back.

Quote: (04-01-2017 08:38 PM)monster Wrote:  

These yoga wheels are pretty damn good for stretching your back when sitting. I love it
[Image: What-in-the-World-is-a-Yoga-Wheel-.png]
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#24

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

Switching to a standing desk around seven or eight years or so ago, after back problems getting increasingly frequent through my twenties and early thirties, pretty much cured all issues within a few months. And that was without changing any other habits, including exercise (I walk a fair amount almost every day, but I also did that when I had back problems. No changes to lifting regiment until the last couple of years). I also threw out my back once or twice a year through the last half of my thirties, I can't remember that happening since.
While my shoulders, elbows and knees complain a hell of a lot more the last five years - mostly from lifting where I've had to modify a lot of habits and have now switched partially to bodyweight exercises - my back is much better at 40 than it was at 25 and 30.
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#25

Fixing lower back problems from sitting too much

I want to touch my toes but I can't, so I've been doing all sorts of stretches in the last two months or so, and I haven't made a lot of progress. I'm going to start this now, and I'll say what happens in one month's time.
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