Fitness

6 Exercises to Do After Sitting All Day

Stretch and strengthen where you need it most.
singleleg glute bridge
Katie Thompson

Also, after sitting all day, doing some exercises—especially ones that focus on strengthening the posterior (back) part of your body, like your back, glutes, and hamstrings, while stretching the anterior (front) muscles, such as your hip flexors, pelvis, and chest—can make a huge difference. Doing such moves can help counteract the tightness that ensues when you're in a seated position, plus strengthen the muscles that we need for good posture.

We asked Tamir to put together a great workout you can do when you’re off the clock to help undo some of the negative effects of sitting all day. “These exercises are designed to strengthen the core, work the posterior muscles of the body, engage the legs, and help with proper pelvic and spinal alignment,” he says. “Together these moves help to offset the imbalances associated with long periods of sitting.”

If you're itching to work some extra movement after a day full of sitting, try the below routine.

The Workout

What you need: One medium-to-heavy weight, like a kettlebell or dumbbell; an exercise mat

Exercises

  • Dead Bug
  • Single-Leg Bridge
  • Deadlift
  • Single-Arm Bent-Over Row
  • Goblet Squat
  • Plank

Directions

  • Do 12–15 reps of the first five moves, and hold the plank for 30 seconds. Rest for 20 seconds in between each move, or more if you feel you need it. Complete three total rounds of this circuit.

Demoing the moves below are Cookie Janee (GIFs 1 and 6), a background investigator and security forces specialist in the Air Force Reserve; Grace Pulliam (GIF 2), aerial and vinyasa yoga teacher; Sarah Taylor (GIF 3), personal trainer and founder of plus-size virtual fitness program Fitness by Sarah Taylor; Nathalie Huerta (GIF 4), coach at the Queer Gym in Oakland; and Rachel Denis (GIF 5), a powerlifter who competes with USA Powerlifting and holds multiple New York State powerlifting records.