The ache that won't leave.
Your back wasn't made for
stillness.
The lower back that grumbles when you stand. The neck that's stiff by 11 a.m. The body that resists getting up from a chair. None of this is age — most of it is a spine built for movement, held in one position for eight hours.
A spine designed for use
The lumbar spine has five vertebrae stacked like blocks, with discs between them. Discs are spongy — they need movement to draw fluid in and push waste out. When you sit for hours, the discs in the lower back stay compressed. They dry, they harden, they stop cushioning. The muscles around them tighten to hold the structure up.
Add a forward head, a tilted pelvis, and weak abdominals, and the lower back ends up holding the whole skeleton in a position it was never asked to hold.
the yogic understandingThe spine as the central channel
In the lineage, the spine is the home of सुषुम्ना — the central channel through which life moves. When the spine is stiff, energy stops flowing freely. The body knows this. The yogic posture of tadasana — standing in stillness, the spine long — is the foundation of every other practice for a reason.
what helps, and whyRestore the discs · strengthen the core · open the hips
Discs love gentle, repeated movement — not crunches, not deep backbends, just steady articulation. The cat-cow (मार्जरीआसन) does this beautifully. The supine knee-to-chest (पवनमुक्तासन) decompresses. Tadasana retrains the standing line. A gentle bhujangasana strengthens the back muscles without strain.
None of this is exercise. It is the body remembering how to move the way it was made to.
The body is not asking to be stretched. It is asking to be moved.
For a tired back
A note: if you have a diagnosed disc issue, a recent injury, or pain that travels down the leg, talk to your doctor before you start. This practice should never hurt — if it does, stop, and we'll find a gentler way.
Come move with me
this Saturday.
I run a gentle practice for tired spines every week. Online, free, no commitment.
Reserve your place — Saturday 7:30 PM