Postural Shifts
Changing your sitting position, standing briefly, or adjusting in your chair. These require no special movement and work in any environment. Can be done every 15–20 minutes.
Regular movement pauses throughout your workday support circulation, reduce fatigue, and build awareness of your body. This guide explores micro-break strategies, stretching patterns, and ways to integrate movement into your routine.
Different breaks serve different purposes. Explore these options and discover what feels sustainable for your work style.
Changing your sitting position, standing briefly, or adjusting in your chair. These require no special movement and work in any environment. Can be done every 15–20 minutes.
Gentle stretches targeting areas that tighten during desk work: neck, shoulders, wrists, hips, lower back. 2–3 minutes, 2–3 times per day, can significantly shift how you feel.
Stand while reading emails, during phone calls, or between tasks. No special technique needed—just changing from sitting. 5–10 minutes at a time supports circulation.
A brief walk around your office, home, or outside. Even 2–3 minutes of walking provides physical and mental reset. Ideal between focus sessions or before/after meetings.
Use getting water or tea as a natural break trigger. Combining movement (walking to the kitchen) with a pause creates a built-in routine.
Intentional breathing, sometimes with gentle movement or head rolls. 1–2 minutes can reset focus and awareness. No special space or clothing needed.
Here's an illustrative framework. Your own rhythm will depend on your work flow, environment, and preferences.
| Time | Recommended | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start of Day | Workspace setup + stretch | 3–5 min | Orient yourself to your desk before settling into focus |
| Mid-Morning | Standing pause or walk | 5 min | After 60–90 minutes of continuous sitting |
| Mid-Day | Walking break or longer pause | 10–15 min | Can combine with lunch or outdoor time |
| Afternoon | Stretching + postural shifts | 3–5 min | Combat afternoon fatigue with regular micro-pauses |
| End of Day | Cool-down stretch or walk | 5 min | Transition from work mode before leaving |
This is illustrative only. Your ideal break frequency and timing depend on your work, body, preferences, and environmental factors. Experiment to find what sustains your energy and focus.
The most effective movement practice is one you'll actually do. Small, consistent breaks beat occasional intense effort.
Pick one type of break—perhaps a 5-minute standing pause every 60 minutes—and make it your baseline before adding more.
Tie breaks to existing routines: after you finish a task, before or after meetings, when your water runs out, or set regular reminders if helpful.
Notice how you feel before and after a break. Over time, you may notice patterns in when you need movement most.
Your ideal break schedule will evolve. What works now may change as your work or environment changes. Stay curious and flexible.
There's no universal "right" number. Research suggests that frequent short pauses (every 30–40 minutes) support awareness and circulation. But your ideal rhythm depends on your work, body, and preferences. Start with what feels doable and adjust from there.
Absolutely. Flexibility is not a prerequisite for movement or stretching. Gentle movement exploration at your current range is the point. If stretching causes pain, stop. Listen to your body.
You can! Subtle postural shifts, standing, or gentle neck rolls can be done during calls. Between focus sessions or tasks, you have more flexibility for longer breaks. The key is finding what works with your actual work rhythm, not against it.
Subtle movement—posture changes, standing, neck rolls—can be done discreetly at your desk. A brief walk to the bathroom or to refill water is typically uncontroversial. Small, consistent breaks are still valuable, even if they're subtle.
Breaks are one factor in comfort, along with workspace setup, posture awareness, and overall habits. If you experience persistent pain or discomfort, consult a healthcare professional. Our guidance is educational and informational.
Join our movement programmes and get support building sustainable habits.
Explore Our Programmes