Practical movement ideas for cubicles, open-plan floors, and home offices. Educational content only — not a substitute for assessment by a qualified exercise or health professional.
These exercises target areas that commonly stiffen during keyboard and mouse work.
Sit or stand tall. Draw shoulder blades together as if holding a pencil between them. Hold for five seconds, release. Repeat ten times. This may counteract the forward-rounded posture that develops from prolonged screen focus. Perform every two hours during intensive typing sessions.
Gently tilt your right ear toward your right shoulder without raising the shoulder. Hold fifteen seconds, return to centre, repeat left. Avoid forcing the stretch — the goal is gentle tissue lengthening, not maximum range. Useful after long video calls.
Place hands on the edge of a stable desk, walk feet forward, and lower body by bending elbows. Push back up. Eight to ten repetitions. Use a desk that does not roll. This activates the back of the upper arms — an area that receives little stimulation during desk work.
Sitting compresses hip flexors and reduces blood flow to the lower limbs. These exercises address both issues without leaving your floor.
Listed sessions are free educational webinars. They are not medical consultations, fitness certifications, or paid training unless clearly labelled.
Thirty-minute guided session covering shoulder, neck, and arm exercises suitable for open offices. 1:00 PM AEST via video link.
Focus on hip and leg exercises that may support circulation during long sitting periods. Includes printable exercise cards.
Interactive session where participants design a personalised five-exercise rotation for their specific workspace and role.
A stable core supports comfortable sitting and may reduce compensatory tension in the neck and shoulders.
Sit tall and alternately arch and flatten your lower back by tilting the pelvis forward and backward. Ten slow repetitions. This mobilises the lumbar spine and reminds your body that the seated position can vary — a foundation of dynamic sitting practice.
Cross arms over chest, rotate torso left and right. Ten repetitions each direction. The mid-back often stiffens from forward-leaning screen posture; rotation may maintain mobility in this frequently neglected spinal segment.
Stand, reach one arm overhead and lean to the opposite side. Hold fifteen seconds each side. Lateral flexion stretches the side body and provides a postural change after extended forward-focused work.
Combine one exercise from each category into a three-minute daily routine.
Pick one upper body, one lower body, and one core exercise. Perform each for forty-five seconds with fifteen seconds transition. Rotate your selections weekly to maintain variety. This approach delivers a balanced mini-session that addresses the main areas affected by desk work — without requiring a dedicated workout block in your calendar.