Hands remain on the keyboard or notebook while the pelvis and ribs glide minutely. Imagine a wave traveling from tail to crown during inhalation, then reverse during exhalation, keeping small enough that colleagues barely notice. The diaphragm and deep spinal muscles respond quickly, releasing stiffness without drama. Sprinkle five cycles between paragraphs. If clothing restricts, reduce range further, focusing on smooth breathing and the sensation of vertebrae making friendly space for nerves and connective tissue.
Slide one heel forward under the desk, flex the ankle, and gently hinge at the hips until you feel a pleasant back‑of‑thigh stretch, keeping your spine long. Hold three slow breaths, then point and flex the ankle to floss the sciatic pathway. Switch legs. This refresh restores circulation after long sits, softens lower‑back pull, and makes standing later feel effortless. Keep it subtle; even in a meeting, no one needs to know you’re restoring length and glide.
Without leaving the chair, interlace fingers behind the back or hold the seat’s rear edge. Inhale to lift the collarbones while keeping ribs gently down; exhale to draw shoulder blades together and slightly downward. Imagine widening the front of the shoulders as the upper back broadens. Two rounds release hunching, counteracting phone posture. Keep the neck long and jaw free. If shoulders resist, shorten the grip, or simply visualize the motion while breathing—neural rehearsal still helps.