Here's What Sitting All Day Does to You (and What to Do About It)

2021-07-30
Health
Health & Wellness By Karla
Community Voice

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If you find yourself reaching for your lower back and craving for a neck massage after a long day of sitting down, you're not alone. Prolonged sitting can have long-term consequences on your spine and surrounding muscles, and it's your job to do everything in your power to prevent it and reverse it.

The Human Body

With over 360 joints and 700 muscles, our bodies are designed to move. Our lymphatic, nervous, and cardiovascular systems depend on it in order for everything to run smoothly. Staying still for long periods of time slows all of our systems down and makes it unable for fresh oxygen and nutrients to reach every cell in the body and repair and optimize their functions.

Our entire skeleton depends on proper alignment, and not just for the sake of our spine, but for all other mechanisms as well. Our spine is the centerfield of nerves that travel to the farthest points in our body, communicating, triggering, and sending signals for which hormones need to be released, which muscle healed, which tissue repaired, and which area more nourished.

When that system is damaged, so is the communication and signaling between the nerves. This causes delays in response and missing hints your body is giving you, making the healing process that much harder and longer.

Slouching and Wrong Sitting Posture

Sitting down creates a downward force that puts all pressure on your spinal disks and sitting bones, and slowly, over time, creates a compression that diminishes the space in between each vertebra, leaving less and less room for nerves to shoot signals through. And that's just something that happens even if your back is completely straight and you're paying an insane amount of attention to your posture.

Add the inevitable slouching, curving your upper back and bringing your neck forward, transferring the weight onto one hip by crossing your legs and leaning on one arm more than the other, and voilà, you got yourself a recipe for disaster.Your body is working really hard to adapt to this new position, causing strain and tension in some muscles in order to allow it. And sure, in the beginning, you might be feeling totally fine, but after a few hours, you'll be reaching for your neck or rolling your shoulders back to find some sort of relief.

In addition to all that, sitting can also cause leg muscle atrophy and shortening of the hip flexor muscles, leading to severe issues with hip joints and your pelvic girdle.Now if these reasons alone don't make you jump out of your chair and go for a walk, it's hard to imagine what would.

How To Prevent It or Counteract It At Work?

Is it even possible to prevent this from happening if your job requires you to sit in front of your computer all day long without any other option? Yes, yes it is, and here's exactly what you can do.

How To Prevent It or Counteract It Outside Work?

In addition to paying more attention to your sitting habits at work, there are plenty of things you can do outside your office to help prevent or counteract the issues caused by prolonged time in the L-shaped position.

A wide-spread sedentary lifestyle is threatening with some serious and long-term damage to everyone's health. Take the matters into your own hands and beat the odds!

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Health
Health & Wellness By Karla
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