eHow launches Android app: Get the best of eHow on the go.

How to Improve Bad Posture

Video Preview

Summary: Improving bad posture, which can either be hunched-over posture or arched-back posture, requires strengthening the back muscles and the core abdomen. Create better posture through proper exercise with helpful tips from a certified personal trainer in this free video on physical fitness.

Views:
1,103
Presenter
By Amy McCauley
eHow Presenter

Amy McCauley has been a certified personal fitness trainer since 1995. She specializes in Pilates, combat cardio, core conditioning and overall strength training. She works with...read more

Click Here

Post a Comment

Post a Comment

Video Transcript

"My name is Tanya Batts and I'm with Physique Designs and today I'm just going to talk how to improve bad posture. There are two types of bad posture, Kyphosis, which is the rounding of the shoulders. You might see that more in elderly people, so what I'm going to show you is how to strengthen these back muscles, and be able to pull that posture back up. Another bad posture, known as Lordosis . That's where you see the back arched, you might see this in pregnant women, or men that kind of got a heavier load. What they need to do is strengthen the abdominal muscles, and pull that right back in and they've got the perfect posture. The way to work the back muscles, to strengthen those back muscles, for people with Kyphosis it's a simple move, palms straight down, you just want to look at the mat, lift up, and lower down, and even another way, finger tips on the head, lift up and down. That is going to strengthen the lower back. Now, for Lordosis, that's for people with weak abdominal muscles, you want to work the core. So, you want to come up and just start doing some abdominal exercises. That ones kind of advanced, you can keep it here, just to strengthen those muscles. What that's going to do is improve your posture. So, that's an overview on how to improve bad posture."

eHow Article: How to Improve Bad Posture

Related Ads

  • Have you done this? Click here to let us know.
Get Free Sports & Fitness Newsletters

Copyright © 1999-2009 eHow, Inc. Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the eHow Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.   en-US Portions of this page are modifications based on work created and shared by Google and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 3.0 Attribution License.

eHow Sports and Fitness
eHow_eHow Sports and Fitness