In 30 years of orthopedic physical therapy, the questions I hear most often are about posture and core strength. And in 30 years, I have watched the fitness industry get both of them spectacularly wrong — over and over. This is the clinical version of the conversation I have with almost every patient.
The Myths You Need to Let Go
Before we talk about what works, we need to clear the ground. There are three beliefs about posture and core strength so widespread and so wrong that they actively harm people who act on them.
Sit up straight all the time. Good posture is a static position you should maintain. Slouching causes back pain.
Posture is dynamic. No single position is correct for sustained periods. Variation and movement are healthier than rigid "good posture." The best posture is your next one.
Core strength means six-pack abs. Do enough crunches and your back pain will go away.
The rectus abdominis (the "six-pack") is a flexor, not a stabilizer. Core stability is about endurance and co-contraction of deep muscles — not superficial strength.
You need a strong core to protect your spine. Core exercises prevent back pain.
The relationship is more nuanced. Core endurance (holding position over time) correlates with back health better than raw strength. People with back pain often have better strength but worse endurance than healthy controls.
What Posture Actually Is
Posture is the position of your body in space relative to gravity. That is it. There is no universally correct posture — there are postures that distribute load well for a given task, and postures that concentrate load in ways that create cumulative stress over time.
The scientific literature on posture and low back pain has shifted significantly in the past decade. The 2021 JOSPT Clinical Practice Guidelines for Low Back Pain — the field's most current evidence synthesis — found that sitting posture has a weak and inconsistent relationship with low back pain. What correlates more strongly with back pain? Prolonged time in any single position, psychosocial stress, physical deconditioning, and — most importantly — fear of movement. George et al., JOSPT 2021;51(11):CPG1–CPG60.
Posture Worth Addressing
That said, some postural patterns do create mechanical problems when maintained for long periods or when they become the predominant resting position:
Forward head posture increases the effective weight of the head on the cervical spine. At neutral, the head weighs approximately 10-12 lbs. At 30 degrees of forward flexion, the effective weight on the cervical spine is approximately 40 lbs. Over an 8-hour workday, that is a significant cumulative load on the posterior cervical structures.
Sustained lumbar flexion (slouched sitting) loads the posterior annulus of the lumbar discs continuously. For people with extension-biased low back pain, this is a primary provocateur. The solution is not constant lumbar extension — it is hourly position variation and active correction using the standing extension reset described in the Low Back Pain Course.
Rounded shoulders and protracted scapulae reduce the subacromial space and increase impingement risk for the rotator cuff tendons. This is particularly relevant for people who perform overhead work or sport.
What Core Stability Actually Means
The "core" in physical therapy does not mean the muscles you see in a fitness magazine. The clinical definition of core stability refers to the ability of the lumbopelvic-hip complex to maintain a neutral spine position under load — the capacity to resist unwanted movement while allowing the limbs to generate force.
The key muscles in clinical core stability are not the rectus abdominis. They are:
Transversus abdominis (TrA) — the deepest abdominal layer, which wraps around the torso like a corset. Research by Paul Hodges at the University of Queensland showed that TrA activates approximately 30 milliseconds before limb movement in healthy subjects — an anticipatory feedforward mechanism that pre-stiffens the spine before load arrives. In people with chronic low back pain, this anticipatory activation is delayed or absent.
Multifidus — the deep paraspinal muscles that provide segmental stiffness to the lumbar spine. Multifidus atrophies rapidly after lumbar spine injury and does not spontaneously recover even after pain resolves — which is why targeted rehab is essential after back pain episodes.
Diaphragm and pelvic floor — these form the top and bottom of the intra-abdominal pressure system. Proper breathing mechanics are part of core function. Breath-holding to stabilize is a compensatory pattern that fatigues rapidly and increases spinal load.
The Exercises That Actually Work
The following exercises are drawn from three evidence-based frameworks: Stuart McGill's spine stability research, the clinical core rehabilitation literature, and postural correction protocols used in orthopedic PT practice. They are organized from foundational to advanced. Begin with the McGill Big 3 regardless of your current fitness level.
Foundation: The McGill Big 3
These three exercises form the evidence base for spine stability rehab. They train spinal endurance without end-range loading, high compressive forces, or spinal flexion. Perform all three before adding any other core exercise.
- Lie on your back. One knee bent, one leg flat. Place hands under the lumbar curve — do not flatten the spine.
- Lift only the head and shoulders. The movement is small. The lumbar spine does not flex — this is not a crunch.
- Hold for 7-10 seconds while breathing normally. Breath-holding defeats the purpose — practice diaphragmatic breathing throughout.
- Use a descending rep scheme: 10, rest, 8, rest, 6. This matches the endurance-focused goal of the exercise.
- Start on hands and knees. Neutral spine — not arched or rounded. Set the pelvis level. Brace the core gently as if bracing for a light punch.
- Extend the opposite arm and leg simultaneously (right arm, left leg). The key: resist rotation. Your hips must not rotate or drop to either side.
- Hold 8-10 seconds. Return slowly. Sweep the floor on return to build additional stability through the movement arc.
- Common error: lifting the leg too high and compensating with lumbar extension. Keep the leg at hip height only.
- Lie on your side. Elbow directly under the shoulder. Stack your feet or stagger them.
- Lift your hips until your body forms a straight line from ankle to shoulder. Do not let the hips pike upward or sag downward.
- Breathe. Hold for 10-20 seconds. The quadratus lumborum and lateral abdominals are the target muscles.
- Regress to knees-down if needed. Progress by increasing hold time, then adding hip abduction at the top position.
Intermediate: Functional Loading
Add these once the McGill Big 3 can be performed with full technique for the prescribed sets and holds. These exercises train stability under dynamic or higher-load conditions.
- Lie on back. Arms pointed at the ceiling. Hips and knees at 90 degrees (tabletop). Brace core gently.
- Lower the opposite arm and leg simultaneously toward the floor. Take 4 full seconds.
- The lower back must stay flat against the floor throughout. If it arches, your range of motion is too large.
- Return slowly. Alternate sides. The challenge is lumbar control, not limb movement — slow is harder.
- Anchor a resistance band at chest height to a door frame or fixed point. Stand perpendicular to the anchor, feet shoulder-width.
- Hold the band with both hands at your chest. Step away to create tension.
- Press the band straight out in front of you. Hold 2-3 seconds. The band will try to rotate you toward the anchor — resist this entirely.
- Return to chest slowly. The goal is to prevent any trunk rotation throughout the entire movement.
- Lie on back, knees bent, feet flat. Drive hips up into a bridge. Squeeze glutes at the top. Hold this position throughout.
- Without letting the hips drop or rotate, lift one foot 2-3 inches off the floor. Hold 2 seconds.
- Lower the foot. Lift the other. This is the “march.” The challenge is maintaining hip height and level hips while moving the legs.
- If hips drop when you lift the foot, your glutes are not strong enough yet — hold a standard bridge longer before adding the march.
Posture-Specific Exercises
These exercises address the most common postural patterns seen in clinical practice: forward head, rounded shoulders, and anterior pelvic tilt.
- Sit or stand with neutral spine. Look straight ahead.
- Gently draw your chin straight back — as if making a “double chin.” This is a horizontal translation, not a nod down.
- Hold 5 seconds. Feel a gentle stretch at the base of the skull. Release slowly.
- This activates the deep cervical flexors (longus colli, longus capitis) which are inhibited in forward head posture and replace the overactive sternocleidomastoid and scalene pattern.
- Stand with your back flat against a wall. Feet 2-3 inches from the wall. Lower back, mid-back, and head all in contact with the wall.
- Raise arms to a “goalpost” position (90-90) against the wall. Both elbows and wrists touching the wall.
- Slowly slide arms overhead, maintaining all contact points. This is very difficult at first — do not force it. Only go as high as you can without losing contact.
- Slide back to starting position. This trains posterior shoulder mobility, lower trapezius, and thoracic extension simultaneously.
Your Weekly Program
Here is how to integrate these exercises into a sustainable weekly program. The McGill Big 3 are daily. The functional and posture exercises are every other day to allow adequate recovery.
Tuesday / Thursday / Saturday — Daily Habit Exercises: McGill Big 3 → Chin Tucks (3x daily throughout the day) → Standing extensions at your desk (every hour) (15 minutes structured + habits throughout day)
Sunday — Active Recovery: 30-minute walk, gentle mobility, or rest
Daily Habits That Matter More Than Exercise
When to See a PT
This program is appropriate for general posture improvement and core stability maintenance in healthy adults without significant musculoskeletal conditions. See a physical therapist if:
You have specific pain with any of these exercises that does not resolve with technique correction. You have a known diagnosis (spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, disc herniation, osteoporosis) that may require modification. You have leg pain, numbness, or tingling associated with your back symptoms. You have tried a general core program consistently for 8-12 weeks without improvement in pain or function.