The Alignment Setup (2 minutes)
Before you start work, take two minutes to prepare your body and workspace. This sets the tone for the entire day and prevents the slow creep of poor positioning.
Four simple practices—morning, midday, afternoon, evening—that fit naturally into your workday and support sustained alignment.
These practices work together to build awareness and support alignment throughout your day.
Before you start work, take two minutes to prepare your body and workspace. This sets the tone for the entire day and prevents the slow creep of poor positioning.
Around midday, take a intentional break. Movement counteracts the accumulated tension from morning sitting and resets your nervous system.
Fatigue and tension accumulate through the day. A quick afternoon practice helps you notice and release patterns before they solidify.
After work, gentle movement helps your body transition and prevents carrying tension into your personal time.
Before you open your email, take 2 minutes to prepare.
Sit down at your desk. Feet flat on floor. Adjust your chair height so hips are level with knees. Feel your back touching the backrest. This is your baseline.
Look at your monitor. It should be at eye level when you sit upright. If not, adjust using books or a stand. Your eyes should be looking slightly downward, not up.
Take three slow breaths. Inhale for 4 counts, hold for 4, exhale for 4. This signals your nervous system that you're present and ready. Notice how your body feels.
Tell yourself: "I will notice tension and adjust as needed today." This simple reminder keeps alignment in your awareness throughout the day.
Around 11–1 PM, take 3 minutes. Stand up.
Stand with feet hip-width apart. Reach both arms overhead and stretch upward. Breathe. Feel your whole spine lengthen. Hold for 15 seconds, release, repeat.
Let your arms hang at your sides. Roll your shoulders backward in a circular motion, 10 times slowly. Then roll forward, 10 times. Feel the release of accumulated tension.
Slowly turn your head to look over each shoulder, holding 5 seconds each side. Then slowly drop your chin toward your chest, breathing gently. This releases neck tension.
Place your hands on your lower back and gently lean slightly backward, pressing your hips forward. Hold briefly. This counters the forward slouch of sitting.
Around 3–4 PM, fatigue builds. A 2-minute practice helps you notice where tension has crept in.
This 2-minute check prevents small asymmetries from becoming major patterns.
After work, 3–5 minutes to decompress and release accumulated tension.
Walk slowly around your home or outside. Pay attention to how your feet contact the ground. Feel your hips moving freely. This simple practice releases tension and signals the end of your workday.
Sit on a mat or carpet. Gently reach toward your toes (don't force it). Twist your torso gently left and right. Lie on your back and hug your knees to your chest. These passive stretches release sustained tension.
If you have a foam roller or tennis ball, use it on your upper back or legs. Self-massage your forearms and neck with gentle pressure. This active release supports recovery.
Regardless of which decompression you choose, end with conscious breathing. Take 5 slow breaths. Notice how your body feels now compared to when you started work. This reinforces the connection between practice and relief.
Adjust practices based on your specific work setup.
Once weekly, pause and notice patterns. This helps you refine what works.
Double down on this one. Do it more consistently. It's your entry point to the whole framework.
That's your signal practice. Return to it when tension builds.
Add a cue (phone reminder, calendar event, post-it note). Small reminders prevent habit decay.
Even subtle shifts (slightly less stiff, slightly more aware) are progress. Celebrate them.
Pick one practice to start with this week. Morning is often the easiest entry point. Small, consistent practice builds lasting change.
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