If you are an office worker you probably spend at least six
or seven hours a day sitting on the job. Add more time sitting in the car, at
dinner and lounging with some late night TV and the total hours of sitting
rockets up to somewhere around ten hours.
When is the last time
you thought about how you sit?
Probably never or a
long, long time ago.
Promise yourself that you’ll take a critical look at how you
sit after you read this article. If you are sitting and reading this online, go
ahead and freeze right now and really think about how you are sitting. Compare
your sitting position to this checklist:
Proper Sitting Posture Checklist
·
Sit with your legs uncrossed with ankles in
front of the knees.
·
Place both feet firmly on the floor. Get
yourself a footrest if your feet don’t reach.
·
Your knees should be lower than your hips and
the back of your knees should not touch the seat.
·
If your chair has an adjustable backrest, move
it to support the arch in your low back. If you don’t have a backrest, ask your
employer about getting one or invest in it yourself.
·
Get up and move around every hour. Take a break
from sitting even if you cannot stop working. Make a phone call standing up or
close your office door and lie down for a few minutes on your stomach. At the very
least, shift your sitting position occasionally.
Why Sitting Posture is Important
Good posture is important for long term health and disease
prevention just like daily tooth brushing. And, similar to tooth brushing,
habits are formed early and can be hard to break later in life.
Good sitting posture reduces the stress and strain on
ligaments. Ligaments are responsible for holding the joints together, so
ligament stresses can make you prone to joint injuries. Proper posture also
reduces muscle fatigue. When muscles are able to work efficiently they use less
energy and don’t get tired as easily. Abnormal motions or positions that are
repeated over and over again on a daily basis are contributors to degenerative
arthritis and joint pain.
Most adults would readily agree that posture is important.
Most of that group would also admit that they don’t actively think about
posture…it just happens. For the next 30 days, make an effort to really think
about your posture and pause a couple times per day to compare your current
position to the checklist provided above. It takes about 30 days of focus to
break an old habit or develop a new one, so if you concentrate on your sitting
posture for 30 days, you’ll be well on your way to a lifetime of better
musculoskeletal health.
As always, if you need a recommendation for a good chair or
back rest, ask any member of our team.
grt
ReplyDelete