Why Sitting Down Destroys You | Roger Frampton | TEDxLeamingtonSpa

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  • Опубликовано: 13 май 2024
  • Fitness expert and male model, Roger Frampton, discusses how chairs are your enemy, how attitudes towards exercise are flawed and suggests an alternative way to look at how our bodies can become strong and agile.
    Register for free at roger.coach/register for further tutorials and information and follow on / rogerframptonguru and * rogerframpt...
    rogerframpt... for videos and tips on how to move and regain your body's natural movement
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Комментарии • 4,5 тыс.

  • @BibleBreakout
    @BibleBreakout 2 года назад +3484

    Finally had the chance to sit down and watch this

  • @danboric3966
    @danboric3966 3 года назад +4244

    I liked how this guy hacked his way to a guaranteed standing ovation.

    • @TheKurt147
      @TheKurt147 3 года назад +58

      underrated comment

    • @fostxswire1600
      @fostxswire1600 3 года назад +43

      A deserved standing ovation

    • @user-jh6kx1fw9h
      @user-jh6kx1fw9h 3 года назад +5

      What else could he have done, with such an idiotic topic; this talk seems oriented for orphans, people who haven't got parents...

    • @eestaashottentotti2242
      @eestaashottentotti2242 3 года назад +29

      He got standing ovulation.

    • @okebaram
      @okebaram 3 года назад +12

      This comment deserved a million likes

  • @glitteringsunshine4306
    @glitteringsunshine4306 2 года назад +172

    Graffiti on a wall in town: "First they teach us to walk and talk. Then they teach us to sit down and shut up."

  • @UberTankred
    @UberTankred 3 года назад +1709

    I watched this video standing on my couch.

  • @timjansen7694
    @timjansen7694 6 лет назад +1905

    I was told I sit too much. Now when I feel like I am sitting for too long a period of time, I lay down.

    • @manpreetbrar4327
      @manpreetbrar4327 3 года назад +49

      😅😂🤣

    • @manpreetbrar4327
      @manpreetbrar4327 3 года назад +54

      Really i do the same 😂

    • @SILLYHEART21
      @SILLYHEART21 3 года назад +21

      Brillant uhhh this is what two years ago so sorry for the late response

    • @theglowingcommunity
      @theglowingcommunity 3 года назад +3

      🤣

    • @danboric3966
      @danboric3966 3 года назад +5

      How is this one not even in the realm of likes as the first (most expected) witty comment?

  • @madisonadams1805
    @madisonadams1805 8 лет назад +5177

    The video title being read by literally everyone sitting down right now...

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 8 лет назад +36

      Hah..more on my channel. Thanks for watching. Roger

    • @Upper_echelon_exotics
      @Upper_echelon_exotics 7 лет назад +45

      Actually I am laying down in bed with a fever... Can't wait to feel better!!!

    • @siropallius
      @siropallius 7 лет назад +45

      I was lying down

    • @Lozosan
      @Lozosan 7 лет назад +58

      laying down😝

    • @thelolmaster1997
      @thelolmaster1997 7 лет назад +54

      ha, walking
      get fit losers ;)

  • @karenkaren3189
    @karenkaren3189 3 года назад +665

    I was a nurse for over 40 years
    Very little sitting!
    Now in retirement I walk 4-5 miles a day

    • @favoritemustard3542
      @favoritemustard3542 3 года назад +21

      So, you're walking _less_ now? lol

    • @DanRichter
      @DanRichter 3 года назад +11

      I'm a nurse. I'm watching this because I sit for 12 hours a day at work

    • @jzf128
      @jzf128 3 года назад +6

      I am also serving almost 40 years in the geriatricare service and believe me , i have more then 12000 steps a day.

    • @Kris_AB
      @Kris_AB 3 года назад +5

      Given the year the world's had and the 10+ years I witnessed the work the nurses and PSWs at my grandmother's nursing home did (volunteered there for a couple years and worked/helped alongside them too), I almost wanna start saying "Thank you for your service" as one would to a military veteran at this point.
      Because yeah...it's huge. And stressful and takes its toll on many nurses' bodies. Thank-you. Hope retirement's treating you well and good on ya for continuing to be active.

    • @paullebon323
      @paullebon323 3 года назад

      You should have been a psych nurse 😉

  • @OwenPrescott
    @OwenPrescott 3 года назад +536

    I have a theory sleeping on a bed is an issue too. I'm in my 20's and had back pain from working at a desk most days. I thought it was sitting down but once I started sleeping on the hard floor my back pains and insomnia went away. Interestingly it's common in asian cultures to both squat and sleep on hard surfaces.

    • @RGTomoenage11
      @RGTomoenage11 3 года назад +15

      Yeah, the bed hurts me.

    • @docbrown3139
      @docbrown3139 3 года назад +46

      I cured my Sciatica sleeping on a futon (Japanese floor mattress) I think I developed sciatica from the mattress (thick coil mattress) to begin with! Now I prefer to sit or sleep on harder surfaces, soft cushions or mattresses really buggers up the back!

    • @jimthor806
      @jimthor806 3 года назад +24

      Imagine being like guess I’ll try sleeping on the floor tonight XD

    • @RGTomoenage11
      @RGTomoenage11 3 года назад +3

      Jim Thor
      I do that all the time, TRT at least once a week. It will help

    • @dexaler9008
      @dexaler9008 3 года назад +51

      Everyone's body is different. Sleeping on a firmer mattress will help some people. It will make things worse for others. Same goes for sleeping on an a hard surface. Beyond that idea, Sitting Disease is a real thing. No amount of exercise alone will counteract it. Only sitting less is better along with exercise. To your point about Asian cultures it is also common to be shorter in height and be lighter in weight. This body structure lends itself to squatting and sleeping on hard(er) surfaces. A person's body composition is important when talking about what experiences has helped. In contrast, my dad used to lay on the floor and watch TV and he's 6'2" and weighed (at the time he would lay on the floor) 280lbs. Everybody's body is different.

  • @joshatticks
    @joshatticks 3 года назад +647

    I did just as he said and fixed 20 years of back pain. Yoga every day, not a class but just mindful movement.

    • @zyxw2024
      @zyxw2024 3 года назад +18

      lol How much compensation are you receiving? "...20 years of back pain." Doesn't instantly abate.

    • @jaywilliams510
      @jaywilliams510 3 года назад +11

      Check out The Alexander Technique. It’s helped me develop this mindfulness.

    • @sunkcostfallacy2738
      @sunkcostfallacy2738 3 года назад +31

      @Pink Salt If you do it long enough, I'm sure it could reversal the spine. I doubt this guy just did it once and miraculously cured 20 years of back pain. It probably took a few years. The Ted speaker himself said it took him about two years, and I'm sure the older you are, the longer it would take, but I don't see why it's completely unbelievable. It's a gradual process, like building muscle. Doesn't happen overnight.

    • @sunkcostfallacy2738
      @sunkcostfallacy2738 3 года назад +19

      @@zyxw2024 Compensation from who? And where can I sign up? I didn't know you could get paid for writing your experience on a RUclips comment section.

    • @zyxw2024
      @zyxw2024 3 года назад +3

      @@sunkcostfallacy2738 Ask the trumpsters. They're raking in the $ for lying rife on social media outlets.

  • @mikey4590
    @mikey4590 3 года назад +364

    This TED Talk is actually good because it comes up with a solution! Many TED TALKS just leave you a question with no solution, it's sad.

    • @michaellondon7
      @michaellondon7 3 года назад +5

      True

    • @vanessahogan2837
      @vanessahogan2837 3 года назад +13

      Actually I watched it three times trying to find the solution.. are you saying we should stand instead while pressing heels together because I was trying to squat and couldn't really do it

    • @healing-vibe-tribe
      @healing-vibe-tribe 3 года назад +24

      I got the vague message that we all sit too much. I didn't hear specifics of how sitting is harmful. Nor did I hear any solutions. It's an important bit of info, I know, disappointed it was an Info Lite version.

    • @rickt1951
      @rickt1951 3 года назад +4

      Please share the solution.

    • @camobooty2008
      @camobooty2008 3 года назад +2

      Spot on. I never understand why they leave you with no solution.

  • @jjchamberlain3357
    @jjchamberlain3357 3 года назад +708

    “Sitting down destroys”, *talks to a crowd full of sitting people

    • @Anarcho-Communist895
      @Anarcho-Communist895 2 года назад +27

      @Cyril School and jobs are killing people. Lack of sleep is another health issue.

    • @QueenDiamondDust
      @QueenDiamondDust 2 года назад +1

      @Miles amen

    • @drlop6754
      @drlop6754 2 года назад +6

      @Miles no

    • @enricolodiS.I.T.
      @enricolodiS.I.T. 2 года назад

      😂🤣😂

    • @fleckx
      @fleckx 2 года назад +4

      So.... he's reaching his target audience then?

  • @robfj3414
    @robfj3414 2 года назад +87

    I remember hearing somewhere decades ago about the importance of this "childlike" sitting posture, the ability to do it or not being an important measure of flexibility. In my career as a firefighter, it was one of the first physical tests we had to do during recruitment. Later, as an instructor with the Fire Service, I was amazed to find how small a percentage of young and otherwise fit young people were capable of sustaining this posture. This is an important reflection of how the modern world has taken away something important from us; our ability to move freely and easily through our world.

    • @kathryngannon485
      @kathryngannon485 2 года назад +4

      In every sense of the word.

    • @minutemanmedic4143
      @minutemanmedic4143 Год назад +2

      Just started going through the academy and it’s so incredibly important to have a good power back, SCBA cylinders are a pain if you don’t.

  • @mattvalcarc
    @mattvalcarc 8 лет назад +2282

    I can see through his ruse. He's just trying to get people to have better butts

    • @harrymatadeen
      @harrymatadeen 8 лет назад +28

      looool

    • @FreeSpirit47
      @FreeSpirit47 8 лет назад +45

      +Matt Valcarcel YASS! sounds good to me!

    • @abidhussain7552
      @abidhussain7552 7 лет назад +41

      Well, are your from seating industry?? just saying :)

    • @sabah3585
      @sabah3585 7 лет назад +5

      lol

    • @Reylaymon
      @Reylaymon 7 лет назад +70

      i mean are you complaining? butts are great

  • @machin8593
    @machin8593 3 года назад +301

    I'm gonna sound like an old lady but this young man is quite articulate and really made his point. I'm going to try and move my body as he said. It was very educational.

    • @benjaminwright8032
      @benjaminwright8032 3 года назад +13

      Machin you sounded perfectly fine

    • @yea4253
      @yea4253 2 года назад

      It was a bad point. Great that it motivated you to start moving around more though

    • @chimichurri2612
      @chimichurri2612 Год назад +1

      yes old lady

    • @beastbum
      @beastbum Год назад +1

      Articulate?
      That?
      I think you need a dictionary. He sounds like his tongue was blocking the exit to a beehive.

    • @MJ-cg5gy
      @MJ-cg5gy Год назад

      You do sound like an old lady

  • @leosearlehawkins2819
    @leosearlehawkins2819 2 года назад +48

    What he talks about is basically movement with awareness ... taught as part of The Alexander Technique and Feldenkrais for most of the 20th Century. The principles I learned from practitioners of those disciplines enabled me to walk again and live without pain even when my body was damaged. Anyone interested would be wise to google these terms.

  • @Saumon6644
    @Saumon6644 3 года назад +35

    As a ballet enthusiast I find this very interesting - the most important aspect of ballet technique is posture and turnout, where our core has to stay activated, shoulders back and pelvis tucked in. Turnout consists of pushing the heels forward by activating our glutes. If you don't get the foundations right, it will mess up your technique when you do more complicated moves and lead to serious injuries - this is actually the biggest factor for injuries in the dance industry; professional dancers often forget their basic technique due to the pressure of having to do bigger jumps, more turns, better turnout ect.

    • @ziraprod6090
      @ziraprod6090 2 года назад

      Turnout is not good.

    • @jhb61249
      @jhb61249 10 месяцев назад

      Do yourself squat!

  • @Ravi-ut7kk
    @Ravi-ut7kk 4 года назад +325

    1. GET A STANDING DESKS 2. EAT A CLEAN DIET 3. EXERCISE DAILY

    • @davidkolouch9772
      @davidkolouch9772 3 года назад +36

      4. sleep at least 7 hours a day 5. drink plenty of water..... the list is endless :D

    • @counterguardian6145
      @counterguardian6145 3 года назад +12

      You still have to sit half the time even with a standing desk. I don't have one but I had to stand in more less one place at work for hours and boy did my back hurt.

    • @briansmith4724
      @briansmith4724 3 года назад +8

      Just got Standing Desk,
      Low profile Treadmill
      Will see

    • @D11r41k
      @D11r41k 3 года назад +41

      Standing for too long will kill your veins. Movement is key

    • @Ravi-ut7kk
      @Ravi-ut7kk 3 года назад +3

      Dilar4ik as opposed to sitting for too long ? I disagree man I rather stand than sit for too long good luck to you

  • @zeromailss
    @zeromailss 8 лет назад +177

    Dangit,so L was right after all
    I need to follow his example
    but people look at me weird when I sit that way in a chair

    • @zeromailss
      @zeromailss 8 лет назад

      Mage Bank really ? Might be because you r not used to it,cuz I dont feel that way

    • @zeromailss
      @zeromailss 8 лет назад

      Mage Bank but better try doing it on private, people just not used to see it,I always got the stare 😐

    • @zeromailss
      @zeromailss 8 лет назад

      ***** somewhere in asia,sout east asia

    • @King.Leonidas
      @King.Leonidas 8 лет назад +1

      +Yukino Takada 雪乃 鷹だ that would mean around thailand indoenisa era?

    • @tomassstanislavsky7558
      @tomassstanislavsky7558 7 лет назад +4

      Dont give a damn what others think , your doing this for yourself not them. 👌

  • @shaysingh
    @shaysingh 2 года назад +163

    In a nutshell, we're all born with a natural J-shaped spine. Long sitting periods in modern age cause unnatural spine deformation into an S-shaped spine, which is the cause of many back problems. The current fitness industry emphasizes muscle over movement, which is a backwards approach.
    Prioritizing muscles over movements result in poor posture and injury; whereas a focus on movement is a more natural approach that brings more benefits in comparison, such as greater range of motion, flexibility, correct posture as well as muscle development with a lower chance for injury.
    Spinal movement is the most fundamental movement to have evolved in all mammals (as apparent in the movement of fish, reptiles, apes and humans). The correct emphasis on movement therefore must begin with the understanding of the spine and the proper engagement of it via spinal exercises (such as the bridge) and substitution of unhealthy habits such as sitting in one position for too long or slouching.
    Investing in standing desks and engaging in movement-centered exercises such as yoga and gymnastics are examples of practically applying this knowledge to our life. An ancient proverb states, "you are as old as your spine."

    • @annemariechase
      @annemariechase 2 года назад +4

      Bless you

    • @ailuianele
      @ailuianele 2 года назад +2

      my j shaped spine gives me headaches, episodes of nausea and vomiting, and pain
      pretty sure we need all curvatures (and I'm not the only one to have these problems, I have met other people)
      also, what are the implications of having a J shaped spine on breathing(given the deformation of the thorax), what about the cervical lordosis-doesn't a J-spine turn it into a kyphosis, what about the intervertebral discs?
      Honestly, I'd rather have a lumbar problem than a cervical one (I've had both and would gladly choose the lumbar pain any day)

    • @peneleapai
      @peneleapai 2 года назад

      BEAUTIFUL. Thanks for the recapitulation 👌🏼💜👍🏼

    • @trueword247
      @trueword247 2 года назад +2

      thank you. this comment is better than the video!

    • @SyeedAli
      @SyeedAli 2 года назад

      Thanks! Now there's no need to continue watching. :)

  • @toddspeck9415
    @toddspeck9415 3 года назад +4

    Your story made me sit up straight. And stand up. Amazing information and presentation. Thank you Robert.

  • @rollstuhlmeister
    @rollstuhlmeister 7 лет назад +528

    Fuck, I'm in a wheelchair. I can't stand up!

    • @ShadowSlacker007652aao7qq421
      @ShadowSlacker007652aao7qq421 7 лет назад +37

      Music Loony Well I guess your fucked then huh?

    • @TruthQuest1
      @TruthQuest1 7 лет назад +17

      Music & Lunacy - I have noticed in some nice assisted living homes, they have daily exercise classes for the elderly and disabled - some of the exercise classes feature workouts while sitting, doing a variety including yoga, Tai chi, resistance using elastic tubing, etc. I've got my elderly parents doing engaged. My dad's balance is too poor to stand on his own (probably from years of inactivity, as well as my mother.) However, it's getting them moving, helping their energy, moving in the right direction rather than the trajectory of deterioration. There are Tai Chi instructors that specialize in seated Tai Chi, yoga as well. There is always hope.

    • @RejathRNID
      @RejathRNID 7 лет назад +19

      you are fucked mate

    • @ninifire4282
      @ninifire4282 7 лет назад +6

      I think the overall point is that being sedentary is dangerous, if you can move anything, even your pinky finger, move it, get the blood flowing. Plenty of seated tai chi exercises out there.

    • @OdinzEinherjar
      @OdinzEinherjar 7 лет назад

      Nini Fire What if he's quadraplegic and someone else is making his comment for him?

  • @PInk77W1
    @PInk77W1 4 года назад +268

    Whenever I have a 10hr flight or longer
    I get to the gate 4hrs early and refuse to sit
    for 4hrs. I walk around till my feet are killing. Me. Then when I get on the plane the seat is like heaven.

    • @MsNd4Spd
      @MsNd4Spd 3 года назад +8

      Are you me? PRE corona, i sat on the edge of the chair at work. Now i sit on the floor contorting hips, legs every so often, I now get into child like postures effortlessly.

    • @PeterAByrne
      @PeterAByrne 3 года назад +2

      @Him Bike Excellent advice. I recall (when planes actually flew) departure lounges full of people waiting for international flights, about to be forced to sit for multiple hours, all competing for a chair to sit in while they waited to board. Ludicrous, when you come to think of it. Mind you, 4 hours might be a bit extreme, but absolutely, get there early and walk and walk and walk before boarding. (Although I really doubt that’ll make that aircraft chair any the more comfortable😏)

    • @PInk77W1
      @PInk77W1 3 года назад +2

      Peter Byrne yes after standing for four hrs I thought it was extreme too.
      The seat is only comfortable to the degree your feet ain’t comfortable. LoL.
      Yes sitting for 2-3 hrs waiting for any long flight is like walking 5 miles to the start of a marathon

    • @PeterAByrne
      @PeterAByrne 3 года назад

      @@PInk77W1 Ha! Perfect metaphor.

    • @verwundert
      @verwundert 3 года назад

      remember those 'speed bands'? Just use them as slow treadmills.

  • @pakufishu
    @pakufishu 3 года назад +122

    Me: [Sits on chair]
    RUclips: "How sitting destroys you"
    Me: Stands

    • @ShadyRonin
      @ShadyRonin 3 года назад +2

      Lmao same

    • @nolimits3117
      @nolimits3117 3 года назад

      They are watching 😁

    • @RealityWizard
      @RealityWizard 3 года назад

      Big Brother dont like bad posture

    • @SaltyShaman
      @SaltyShaman 2 года назад

      Heh, yeah. At least I can squat with no problem, do it all the time when waiting for buses, etc. You can actually sit on one heel and rest.

    • @keiracarmichael9430
      @keiracarmichael9430 2 года назад

      Me: See's the title and sits down anyway!
      After Watching this video i am convinced the dude is a basket case who's obsessed with standing! I ain't trying to find more reasons to over exhaust myself out of fear of looking lazy!

  • @jeremezuanich1444
    @jeremezuanich1444 3 года назад +9

    When I had my own children I saw this, and implemented fixing my own movements. It has been amazing!

  • @SaHaRaSquad
    @SaHaRaSquad 8 лет назад +586

    So this means L's sitting position in Death Note is actually healthy?

    • @TheMitic93
      @TheMitic93 8 лет назад +10

      +SaHaRaSquad Mind blown xD

    • @RaynorJames
      @RaynorJames 8 лет назад +8

      +Lazar Mitic So I was right after all!

    • @dagbjortarthurs8462
      @dagbjortarthurs8462 8 лет назад +65

      I bet he knew sitting normally was unhealthy and sitting like a child was healthier

    • @Walperion_Music
      @Walperion_Music 6 лет назад +4

      Lol ur cool :)
      Yeah, L knew everything all along. Inside L was still a child.

    • @sumayya003
      @sumayya003 5 лет назад +3

      L was really slouchy though huh

  • @ganthc
    @ganthc 4 года назад +1401

    “Sitting down destroys you.”
    People in wheelchairs: “Guess I’ll just die, then. :( “

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 4 года назад +212

      I didn't say it kills you. :). There are so many movements anyone in a wheelchair can do to improve and move the body better. The paralympics is a perfect example of this. Don't look at your limitations, look for what's possible no matter your circumstance. Thanks for watching.

    • @PInk77W1
      @PInk77W1 4 года назад +7

      Titanium Wheel chair and a 50 mile roll

    • @naelyneurkopfen9741
      @naelyneurkopfen9741 4 года назад +4

      Ugh... Just stop.

    • @PInk77W1
      @PInk77W1 4 года назад +3

      Naelyn Eurkopfen 75 mile roll

    • @wmp3346
      @wmp3346 3 года назад +17

      Depression is worse do what you can but try to be positive

  • @funyogi516
    @funyogi516 2 года назад +9

    The best thing my parents did for me as a kid was put me in gymnastics for fun. Because I learned all these "cool moves" in gymnastics, I have always remained flexible. I only realized how different my body was compared to others when in university.. I got really into yoga and was naturally "good" at the poses compared to my friends who seemed to struggle until they got used to it. Never had back pain in my life (besides after a serious workout), even from a bad night's rest. My husband and I used to game together a lot, and after 2 hours he would be all sore and stiff from sitting and I never understood how that happens so easily to him

  • @danr5462
    @danr5462 3 года назад +2

    Not sure I could squat all day while working or using a computer, but that standing with your heals together is amazing!

  • @Hawtload
    @Hawtload 4 года назад +448

    it blows my mind how limited most people's range of motion is these days. definitely a good reason to take up yoga and get a standing desk.

    • @alessandravalmadre7512
      @alessandravalmadre7512 3 года назад +23

      I definitely get your point, but I don't think that in the past people were more flexible, unless we think about people in prehistoric past. Apart from that, during the classical period and then during the middle ages up until 60/70 years ago, the majority of the population would farm, which is a tough job to do, especially without some mechanical help; I don't think this led people to be flexible. On the contrary, they probably had very stiff muscle and joints, and suffer from muscular/skeletal problem from a younger age compared to the present. And those that weren't farmers, worked in factories, where the conditions were just as tough. Just a thought though...

    • @D11r41k
      @D11r41k 3 года назад +23

      Standing for too long can kill your veins, be careful

    • @trexisrimmon9358
      @trexisrimmon9358 3 года назад +10

      Yup and get varicose veins

    • @leonlombard6740
      @leonlombard6740 3 года назад

      )

    • @TxFw
      @TxFw 3 года назад +11

      My veins broke due to standing all night working grave yard shifts at the post office... be careful what you wish for

  • @meeeeeeauuuuuuuu
    @meeeeeeauuuuuuuu 8 лет назад +31

    I regret is so much that many things our Indian culture taught us were scientifically correct, which people gave up thinking they are modernizing and now we are being taught the same thing.

    • @archigoel
      @archigoel 8 лет назад +1

      +meeeeeeauuuuuuuu Check out Rajiv Malhotra's talks on youtube

    • @meeeeeeauuuuuuuu
      @meeeeeeauuuuuuuu 8 лет назад +1

      +Archit Goel Thanks I'll follow it.
      here is a gift in return .. sadly not a video this time :)
      ajitvadakayil.blogspot.in/

  • @TheTaffimup
    @TheTaffimup 2 года назад +16

    Awwsome presentation...very informative!! 👏🏾
    I watch my 3 year old son...he does not like to sit, likes to squat, does downward dog posture when getting up off the floor.
    Truly sad how we have lost all this agility.

    • @hubriswonk
      @hubriswonk 2 года назад

      My Asian g/f's parents are in their late 70's and can squat effortlessly for long periods of time and it has taken me months to simply gain the mobility to do it! Hope your son keeps up with the good habits!

  • @domari9459
    @domari9459 3 года назад +5

    Brilliant presentation! I learnt a lot in few minutes including the stuff I already know. That because sometime we need to hear from somebody who puts that into practice and talks from experience and the results. Thank you Roger.

  • @martinv.-
    @martinv.- 4 года назад +5

    One of the simplest and yet most important talks I ever watched from TED. Stop sitting, start moving. So on point, congratulations!

  • @johanna006
    @johanna006 3 года назад +46

    My chiro told me to get up and move every 45 minutes. That made no diff for me, until one day I got up after 20 mins. Then I finally realised that he said - I could feel the muscles just starting to stiffen up, and walking released them. 45 mins was just too long for me, by then the muscles could not be released by just a short walk to the kitchen.

  • @speaktruth9989
    @speaktruth9989 2 года назад +19

    Yoga really helps with body aches,stretching every day is a must for body pain.

  • @elsacontreras4934
    @elsacontreras4934 Год назад +1

    That’s why I owe so much to training capoeira since I was 16. Keeps your body young and your spirit alive and free , Axê ✨

  • @azucarnegra9550
    @azucarnegra9550 3 года назад +36

    Good job you gorgeous man,my son was in perfect health. As as he started spending all day sitting down in class he started complaining of back pain leg pain chest pain all kinds of muscular pains before he could even reach 18 and now I see why thank you talk was insightful.

    • @Emre-wo6df
      @Emre-wo6df Год назад +1

      My parents cant see that even after I tell them over and over what the cause is. I am 33 now. How lucky your kid is.

  • @Pooofcomify
    @Pooofcomify 7 лет назад +222

    This is basically the athletic vs aesthetic argument: Train muscles individually, you get big muscles and no functional strength, train the body as one, you get a functional body

    • @megaloblabber2948
      @megaloblabber2948 3 года назад +9

      those are some wise words thank you

    • @Pooofcomify
      @Pooofcomify 3 года назад +1

      @ᚱᛰUᛠӖᚱ ᚦᗩӖϻᛰᚤ exactly lol

    • @wendybussell7534
      @wendybussell7534 3 года назад +2

      Just got to watch this, loved you reply. Noticed just how different my body works now that I have had some knee issues and resulting therapy. I walk differently now and have totally better posture. It totally makes sense!

    • @Joao-ur7ey
      @Joao-ur7ey 3 года назад +4

      Even tho, the athletic path still rewards you with a great physic!

    • @evelynbaron2004
      @evelynbaron2004 3 года назад +3

      @@Joao-ur7ey I got messed up defending how long it's taken getting back up on my feet; never really cared about that stuff to begin with but watching the video my physio guy would totally agree that posture really does play a huge role; yes he's a young good-looking guy why is that so wrong? He's not a snake oil salesman; sharing his experience mostly mad at myself for being in a bad mood and pressing the wrong button thoughtlessly.

  • @silverace08
    @silverace08 3 года назад +3

    what a revelatory talk-thankyou for this most important reminder that we have all been ignoring

  • @justlikeyouful
    @justlikeyouful 3 года назад +41

    In my 50s two things made my back get super strong:
    1. Riding a road bike in the summer alternating standing and sitting while pedaling normally the whole time.
    2. Shoveling small scoops of snow in the winter alternating left and right hand positions.

    • @yea4253
      @yea4253 2 года назад

      lol no

    • @mrsirman2177
      @mrsirman2177 2 года назад

      Try bridging

    • @charlieisamonster
      @charlieisamonster 2 года назад +1

      Good for you👍.
      I agree cycling is an excellent form of exercise. I myself have gone from obese to quite fit in the space of six months mainly down to cycling regularly and an improved diet. I think some Pilates or yoga now I’ve got my weight down and fitness up would be very beneficial as a supplement, like this Ted speaker was promoting.

  • @caldeh
    @caldeh 8 лет назад +70

    I'll summarize: Time, weight and distance are flawed measures of improvement. The focus should be on posture and ability to move properly, then the other goals...
    Great talk!

  • @Ian24s
    @Ian24s 3 года назад +8

    Love having a nice sit. Always have, and always will. Underrated.

  • @mohdshahnawaz3864
    @mohdshahnawaz3864 3 года назад +2

    Absolutely loved this video. Thank you so much for this valuable information Roger. Lots of love from an Australian 🇦🇺😀

  • @luislopez1800
    @luislopez1800 2 года назад

    Very grateful I stumbled on to your video. 15 minutes later now....I still can stop thinking about it.
    Starting to watch it again.
    Thank you!

  • @alibeaumont-filder3185
    @alibeaumont-filder3185 3 года назад +22

    Fascinated to learn .. as although standing for long periods of time in work .. I saw my parents health decline due to this specific poor health situation

  • @tabbymrp
    @tabbymrp 3 года назад +805

    The squatting style Asian toilets make more sense than the modern Western style seating toilets then!

    • @mai567
      @mai567 3 года назад +49

      For more reason than one! ;)

    • @linda1lee2
      @linda1lee2 3 года назад +47

      The same for birthing. However, it can be hard for those with arthritis.

    • @kelkabot
      @kelkabot 3 года назад +52

      You can tell that if you ever move your bowels in that position! The angle is much better for elimination (and childbirth)!

    • @KatariaGujjar
      @KatariaGujjar 3 года назад +35

      Western style toilets cause colon cancer

    • @user-jh6kx1fw9h
      @user-jh6kx1fw9h 3 года назад +25

      Anyone spending that much time on the toilet should probably see a doctor.

  • @HAL-dm1eh
    @HAL-dm1eh 3 года назад +4

    One of the most productive of these talks I've seen. I pursued bodybuilding off and on most of my life and it wasn't until I found Mark Rippetoe of Starting Strength that all of this started to make sense, and I actually started to build a healthy strong body (that showed it).
    Most of my life I was focusing on individual muscles and little movements like biceps curls, etc. This is very flawed. We have to do what this guy is saying to do, focus on MOVEMENT and the BODY knows what to build.
    He had me focusing on basic barbell movements that the body had to work as a unit to achieve. One of the memes people love to use about him is his saying "hip drive", which he commands you do during the squat, the bread and butter of his program.
    I had a lot of problems that were solved doing his program, not to mention building a very strong, sizeable body in short order without steroids. Now if I could just solve the bone spur problem in my spine (either thanks to genetics or well, SITTING) I'll be gold.

  • @itskittyme
    @itskittyme 3 года назад +4

    Thx, been locked up in my room for 1 year now.
    And on top of that, videos like this now give me anxiety attacks
    Thanks.

    • @SaltyShaman
      @SaltyShaman 2 года назад

      Time for some supplements to help nourish your endocrine system :) Hit the internet and research, research, research!

  • @meyersonfire
    @meyersonfire 3 года назад +102

    I hope everybody got up and moved either during this video or right after.

  • @DiLiNiTi
    @DiLiNiTi 4 года назад +3

    I think this man is on a good track. He's got things going for him that put him in a powerful position in society. Yet he still has the intention to contribute what he can. Very useful and inciting talk

  • @drjimdrlinda
    @drjimdrlinda 3 года назад +1

    Excellent information. We teach this and other postural stance techniques daily! Good job!

  • @teflondave7823
    @teflondave7823 2 года назад +37

    We need a sitdown with this guy and the guy who stands for "Why Standing Destroys You" to sattle this matter once for all.

    • @zantas-handle
      @zantas-handle 2 года назад +13

      That is genius! One of the cleverest and funniest things I've ever read!
      Don't invite the guy who's down with being horizontal in bed all day - whatever he says, he'll be lying!

  • @ClovisdeCruz
    @ClovisdeCruz 7 лет назад +37

    Get up stand up... stand up for your right.

  • @procrasti86
    @procrasti86 8 лет назад +290

    7:01 So the Slavs were right all along

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 8 лет назад +4

      Haha

    • @skolex3121
      @skolex3121 8 лет назад +15

      J spine masterrace

    • @AleixoTeixeira
      @AleixoTeixeira 8 лет назад +36

      +procrasti86 Fuck now I gotta get me some adidas wear

    • @SkateSka
      @SkateSka 8 лет назад +8

      +procrasti86 I'm Bulgarian yes, I sometimes need to do that when I take a dump in a small village there.

    • @procrasti86
      @procrasti86 8 лет назад

      George Mirchev
      No no no no no... I meant something like this watch?v=2-8gsWZqDBM

  • @zedianzediessi
    @zedianzediessi 3 года назад +14

    I was about to go out and do something and then this was recommended to me so now I’m here sitting down while watching this

  • @FionaLundy
    @FionaLundy 3 года назад

    I love the squeezing the heels together instruction! It works so perfectly! Thanks I’ll use this!

    • @lucasbachman8376
      @lucasbachman8376 2 года назад

      I could feeling it in my glutes but it also squeezed my balls together

  • @davidestes4573
    @davidestes4573 3 года назад +57

    I started playing drums when I was seven. This meant I had to sit on a throne, which offered no back support for long periods of time to practice. When I was fifteen I fell of a forty foot dry waterfall and landed on my back resulting in a compression fracture of my lumbar vertebrae. My first thought was that I wouldn't be able to play anymore. With the aide of a back brace I made a full recovery. When I was twenty-one I played six hours a night, six nights a weak for six months strait. I never suffered from any back pain. Later on like any good musician I worked construction as well as performing at night. I was a tile setter and this is truly back breaking work but I was always careful not to bend when I lifted heavy buckets or shoveled. I lifted with my knees. I did start having some back pain after I began working with computers sitting in a cubicle for 8 to 10 hours a day. One of my band mates was a personal trainer and he showed me that if i stood with my feet crossed and reached upward with one arm and alternated this stretching exercise it would alleviate the pain.What's the point. Never sit hunched over a keyboard for a period longer then 20 minutes. Stand up, walk around, stretch your spine. Be careful. Back injuries are painful and permanent.

    • @joseluisgomez6404
      @joseluisgomez6404 3 года назад +4

      Wow! Thank you very much for sharing your story

    • @adamf.4823
      @adamf.4823 3 года назад +5

      Could you explain the stretch in more detail please? PLEASE!

    • @ColetteBrowneWeekes
      @ColetteBrowneWeekes 3 года назад +1

      Thanks for sharing

    • @daisyq3418
      @daisyq3418 3 года назад

      Best comment on the page.
      Please tell us more. You sound like a Solution Seeker! 👍
      And I am sorry you have back pain.

    • @beenmicrophone5817
      @beenmicrophone5817 2 года назад

      YEAH, THE STRECTH PLAEASE DESCRIBE THE STRETCH

  • @mariannewolf57
    @mariannewolf57 5 лет назад +5

    Powerful information, Roger! Thanks for this very helpful speech!

  • @Danno5894
    @Danno5894 3 года назад

    This needs 100000000000 likes because this is worth that many likes in GOLD.
    ABSOLUTE BRILLIANCE AND I WISH THIS TALK WAS HOURS LONG.

  • @thebookofcurtis
    @thebookofcurtis Год назад +1

    I’ve watched this half a dozen times. Pushing your heals together really does feel great on the back.
    Kind of like Dorothy from the wizard of Oz clicking her heals together and saying “There’s no place like home”.

  • @athews1976
    @athews1976 6 лет назад +7

    This is very interesting, I have to admit. Sometimes when I watch these talks, I think that what they're talking about won't really amount to anything with the way the world is today or that it doesn't or won't really matter in the real world. But, these nuances about the body, the joints, natural movements, and posture as it relates to the performance and durability of the spine in the physical anatomy of the modern man, really does *MAKES A WHOLE LOT OF SENSE.* I've always felt that there should be a science about physical movement of the body as it relates to performance, durability, and posture. It shouldn't always be about pushing limits as it is in sports. What about simply the preservation/maintenance of the aging body?
    Again, this perspective makes a whole lot of sense.

  • @Packless1
    @Packless1 7 лет назад +897

    ...sitting is the new smoking... ;-)

    • @bashful228
      @bashful228 7 лет назад +14

      and hype is the new currency. for hundreds of years since Buddha literally *billions* of monks have spent long hours sitting in meditation with relatively little deleterious effects and many benefits.

    • @romancernega
      @romancernega 7 лет назад +56

      bashful228 I have never seen a monk meditate on a chair must be a new age monk thing

    • @bashful228
      @bashful228 7 лет назад +3

      and the difference between chair and cushion is what exactly?

    • @romancernega
      @romancernega 7 лет назад +22

      bashful228 I think a chair is a tad higher than a cushion and the way you sit on them is totally different

    • @bashful228
      @bashful228 7 лет назад

      so from that perspective a cushion would be so much worse than a chair even?

  • @SpizawkDaKizowz
    @SpizawkDaKizowz 2 года назад +1

    I have been in agreement with this for several years. I almost never sit now...I stand or lie down most of the time. I learned this the same way Roger did - I had back problems. I've been a powerlifter for several years, and the best strength coach I ever had said the exact thing about kids: they exhibit perfect squat form, and we need to unlearn some of the incorrect things we generally pick up after toddler-hood.

  • @blahdeblaaah9445
    @blahdeblaaah9445 3 года назад

    Love this talk. Ballet classes should be the new PE in school. They do what he is saying.

  • @FallNorth
    @FallNorth 3 года назад +82

    A lot of people will now work from home due to covid.
    I've worked from home far longer, and I can assure you, sitting (...slouching..) in an unergonomic sofa for many hours a week is far worse for your back than good office chairs.
    Another medical train wreck "side effect" coming down the line, sadly.

    • @kaliaparijat
      @kaliaparijat 3 года назад +3

      just get yourself a standing desk

    • @billytheweasel
      @billytheweasel 3 года назад

      I set mt table/desk up to stand at. They made me return real soon after that!

    • @doraymeandyou
      @doraymeandyou 3 года назад +2

      I never sit at home. I’m either on my feet or lying down. When I’m out though, sitting has an advantage over standing as seated I don’t have the annoyance of my pants constantly sliding down.

    • @carpejkdiem
      @carpejkdiem 3 года назад +1

      You mean scamdemic plandemic totalitarian WORLD GOVERNMENT UNITED NATIONS INITIATIVE OLD BIBLICAL FIRST ATTEMPTED BY NIMROD NEW WORLD ORDER AGENDA and the cashless forced vaccines in order to buy or sell

    • @bioniclegoblin6495
      @bioniclegoblin6495 3 года назад +1

      @@doraymeandyou ...you need a belt.

  • @JayyyMarz
    @JayyyMarz 7 лет назад +1521

    the title, to me, pretty much says: teachers are ruining us by making us sit in desks all day.

    • @swiftfizz788
      @swiftfizz788 7 лет назад +16

      Ice-cream Lover Imma tell this to my English teacher

    • @colinglen4505
      @colinglen4505 7 лет назад +108

      I've been a critic of forcing kids to sit at a desk for 5 hours a day for many years now. it's extremely unhealthy. they should cut the amount of subjects and replace them with some activity between lessons.

    • @1dream0decision
      @1dream0decision 7 лет назад +75

      teachers don't make those rules.

    • @KhanhTheLearner
      @KhanhTheLearner 7 лет назад +87

      But they can break it. I have been taught by many teachers who did not like students sitting around all the time, and let them stand up and walk around for small activities, or just go out of the classroom to the field and stuff. Those were the best teachers ever, and I actually understood more concepts, and got higher test scores. Win-win- and win.

    • @SRoseBlog
      @SRoseBlog 6 лет назад +6

      Ice-cream Lover teachers don't make u do that. Your parents do

  • @hoon_sol
    @hoon_sol 2 года назад +17

    Imagine people awkwardly looking at each other afterwards, none of them wanting to be the first to succumb to sitting down again.

  • @robertkelley576
    @robertkelley576 2 года назад

    This is a brilliant , and timely, presentation.

  • @nealliu1746
    @nealliu1746 4 года назад +552

    People in quarantine: *chuckles* i'm in danger

    • @pumacaine
      @pumacaine 4 года назад +6

      standing up is still allowed

    • @johnnyjackson9745
      @johnnyjackson9745 4 года назад +4

      Vacation Day's Mikey Momo for now..

    • @adorable3817
      @adorable3817 4 года назад +2

      I've been working out through all of quarantine. Spend most of my time on a matt 😄🙈

    • @siafulinux
      @siafulinux 3 года назад +3

      Living on the edge! I love danger!

    • @wladynosz1565
      @wladynosz1565 3 года назад +3

      Is lying down also bad?

  • @QuickTalks
    @QuickTalks 8 лет назад +318

    The 2 key takeaways from this:
    1. Practice the "Asian Squat" - Keep both feet flat on the floor and go down into a squat as low as you can with your bum basically hanging as low as possible. You shouldn't feel tension in your thighs. Then rest your arms upon your knees. [It's really hard at first - practice!]
    2. Stand strong - Tuck your belly button in, keep your shoulders back and high. Feet flat on the floor and lightly squeeze your heels together. Your feet should make a V shape. If your feet are pointing straight ahead parallel to each other, you're going to fall over easily!

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 8 лет назад +10

      Thanks for posting this. Video response now live on my channel. Roger

    • @ed7519
      @ed7519 6 лет назад +4

      +QuickTalks: That "Asian Squat" hurts the knees. Not good for the knees!

    • @compilation8800
      @compilation8800 6 лет назад +1

      Jin Nijel Chia what?

    • @thelittlestmig3394
      @thelittlestmig3394 6 лет назад +30

      It's slavic squat, blyet.

    • @davidshaw1999
      @davidshaw1999 6 лет назад

      QuickTalks à

  • @hakansaribal5093
    @hakansaribal5093 3 года назад +19

    It’s all about balance. Sitting or laying down all day makes you numb and feeling bad. Being active all day like working, shopping or exercising makes you tired and feel like 💀. Everything starts with a discipline that you have to set up for yourself.

  • @user-se4qu7qz6y
    @user-se4qu7qz6y 3 года назад +12

    Amazing talk! Other than the fact that this is an important issue to raise, which is 80% of making a great Ted talk, I also loved the examples you chose - how kids move and how we wrongly measure success at the gym. Those examples really pushed the message. And of course, the ending was beautiful!

  • @kalyarthurs2846
    @kalyarthurs2846 3 года назад +3

    People walk badly too. Movement like kids- when they move they lean forward to get momentum. They don’t walk straight up and stretch the legs out - there’s so much more to say here. Love the talk it seemed authentic and centered. Thank you.

  • @riccardomoscatello2030
    @riccardomoscatello2030 7 лет назад +901

    This is all well and good, but you didn't offer ANYTHING on how to do it, how do we improve our posture and skeletal range of motion?

    • @craigfreeze2975
      @craigfreeze2975 7 лет назад +76

      I guess he kinda told us how to stand with our heels pushing in but I couldn't agree more...

    • @riccardomoscatello2030
      @riccardomoscatello2030 7 лет назад +52

      Craig Freeze Yeah kinda vague, but i found a lot of videos from Esther Gokhale on the subject, check them out if you want to know more

    • @craigfreeze2975
      @craigfreeze2975 7 лет назад

      +Riccardo Moscatello okay, great thanks! I'll look into them!

    • @nm628679c
      @nm628679c 7 лет назад +33

      How do we achieve the improved posture and skeletal range of motion?
      The Alexander Technique,
      That's how.

    • @craigfreeze2975
      @craigfreeze2975 7 лет назад +2

      +Mark Dawson thank you!

  • @AtMyHappyPlace
    @AtMyHappyPlace 3 года назад +37

    Wow, what a great public speaker. So nice to watch a Ted talk with no “ums”. He pauses and paces appropriately and give awesome information. So informative - thank you!

    • @31xrg
      @31xrg 2 года назад

      I agree. Bill Gates is an astonishingly poor speaker with constant umms.

    • @yea4253
      @yea4253 2 года назад +1

      *terrible information

  • @cd4683
    @cd4683 Год назад +1

    Fantastic content. Important distinction between gymnastics and body building is the why. One is generally not done for vanity.

  • @dex6892
    @dex6892 8 лет назад +29

    if everyone is interested in what this guy has talked about i urge you to go and search for kelly starrett and his book "becoming a supple leopard". The man by no means "invented" these approaches but he has organised the principles very well.

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 6 лет назад +1

      Declan Ball I agree. We both have books designed to get people moving better. He’s a great guy. Even re tweeted this talk.

  • @jeffersonsantiago5567
    @jeffersonsantiago5567 7 лет назад +373

    so who ruined our back bones? it was the school who made us sit the whole day, carry a bag full of heavy books and notebooks and school work.

    • @LePotatoJuice
      @LePotatoJuice 4 года назад +15

      Western culture my friend.

    • @shaktipat736
      @shaktipat736 4 года назад +4

      Weight-lifting and bodybuilding too.

    • @HeadsUpTV
      @HeadsUpTV 4 года назад +7

      @@shaktipat736 You don't lift, do you?

    • @Missriziki
      @Missriziki 4 года назад +3

      @@shaktipat736 explain please

    • @ansas.9957
      @ansas.9957 3 года назад +9

      @@shaktipat736 If you lift with improper form, absolutely, you'll ruin your body. If you lift properly and progress slowly and safely, you'll just strengthen your bones and joints.

  • @laurenflynn2012
    @laurenflynn2012 3 года назад

    I have been in so much pain with my "nice" Cotsco bought office chair. Thank you for validation- sitting on a chair that has a big inflatable exercise ball right now, a bit of pain relief when working

  • @geol1936
    @geol1936 3 года назад +6

    Even while driving or riding in your car, etc, make the seat incline at approximately a 110 degree angle (adjust to your liking in that degree range). Angling back a bit is much better for our backs.

  • @manflynil9751
    @manflynil9751 3 года назад +11

    I'm turning 50 next week. This is a brilliant , and timely, presentation.

    • @ericarn
      @ericarn 3 года назад

      Have a great birthday! 🎈🎉

    • @mrsirman2177
      @mrsirman2177 2 года назад

      Try bridging my man, with a slow progression

  • @charliechuck8994
    @charliechuck8994 6 лет назад +7

    Good looking model gives me advice. Priceless

  • @Eriugena8
    @Eriugena8 3 года назад +2

    Preach on, brother. I was taking a long walk today, thinking about leaving my desk job to become a stone mason, and this video randomly comes on while I was listening to a guy talk about ufo’s and theosophy

  • @meenukumar_live
    @meenukumar_live 3 года назад +18

    I believe him and found my hack for modern day life, since squatting wouldn’t be welcome in places we visit, the important thing is to to make sure your weight is on your pelvic bones, that ensures the spine to straighten and then remember to push your chin with a finger so the skull sits on the spine. Shoulders fall back in place and a kind of ramp model agility swipes down the entire body. The legs making righ angles from the hip, knees and ankles. The only thing important is to sit on a hard surface, I prefer the floor, but when on a couch, I either sit in the front edge or the back edge, else plop a board or hard cushion on my chair.
    The result: u feel really light and don’t feel the need to collapse to rest

    • @sunshine3914
      @sunshine3914 3 года назад +1

      I’ve always had the habit of sitting on the arm of my chair. Taken a lot of flack for not being able to sit like a “normal” person. But I’m over 60 & never had a sit down job... nor any back or leg pain. Other than sitting, I’m pretty agile.

  • @iv4n
    @iv4n 8 лет назад +149

    That was just a long winded excuse for him to get an audience to give him a standing ovation.

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 6 лет назад +8

      Ivan D totally, been planning it since I was sitting in a squat. Hahaha

    • @ch-17vevo55
      @ch-17vevo55 4 года назад +4

      This comment is underrated

    • @Davorta
      @Davorta 4 года назад +1

      Yo we need to do noble prize for best commenr pls

  • @denniskent_
    @denniskent_ 8 лет назад +21

    This is such a great talk, I've been choosing to stand a lot more in the last couple of months and I feel much better! :)

  • @Avanti12
    @Avanti12 2 года назад +2

    I wholeheartedly agree with everything you said! THIS is why I became a yoga teacher. You are only as old as your spine.

  • @gitanjalireddy4372
    @gitanjalireddy4372 2 года назад +6

    Sit on the floor like the Eastern cultures. These are practices that have tested time. Sitting on the floor for eating food, passing bowels in the squatting manner, squatting down for rest (seen even by farmers) keeps you healthy and many might complain of arthritis but my great grandmother seldom did. She lived in the rural side where the concept of chairs isn’t as common as the bench where it’s easier to slouch. Crossing your legs as you sit makes keeping the spine straight less of a conscious task and a posture itself.

  • @kkarthurs721
    @kkarthurs721 6 лет назад +11

    Wow thank you I have been saying this to my patients and students for years. Comparing westerners and squatting cultures. It is couches and car seats, that are killing us! Love your talk. Walking and running like kids too, heart first.

    • @twhoney30102
      @twhoney30102 2 года назад

      "Heart First" I love that. Fits right in with one of my favorite RUclipsrs --Gregg Braden

  • @lukeluke7158
    @lukeluke7158 7 лет назад +3

    this is the best TED Talk ive ever heard

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 6 лет назад

      Thank you. Can I get you a free sample of the book?

  • @112productions
    @112productions 2 года назад +1

    I feel amazing, my new sofa just arrived. Time to binge on some ted talks…

  • @infpisland9295
    @infpisland9295 3 года назад

    It’s still very insightful and useful though to know about how the human body should ideally work

  • @MrWithinsGift
    @MrWithinsGift 8 лет назад +3

    Great talk. This wisdom needs to be shared globally

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 8 лет назад +1

      Thanks for watching. More tutorials when you register at www.roger.coach. Thanks Roger

    • @vince7735
      @vince7735 7 лет назад

      It is - it's on RUclips!!!

  • @MylesShank
    @MylesShank 8 лет назад +4

    Great points! My back definitely hurts the most when I've been sitting in a chair for too long.

    • @roger.frampton
      @roger.frampton 7 лет назад

      My pleasure. Registration is now open and free at www.roger.coach. Thanks for watching. Roger

  • @bobbarrett2631
    @bobbarrett2631 2 года назад

    Simple. Thank You Mr Frampton. I only wish that I could have view Your diologue years ago.

  • @Brightandheavy
    @Brightandheavy 3 года назад

    Thankyou for this technique. Spinal issues are common in my genetics. For others like me, other helpful tips to check out: an exercise called "Wall Angels", that stretches the posterior chain if your posture rounds towards the front, and an exercise called "Janda Short Foot" which helps maintain the arch of the foot. Also, consider purchasing a dennyroll, a cushion that helps recreate and preserve the natural S shaped curve of the neck.

  • @hannahsheikh6058
    @hannahsheikh6058 8 лет назад +3

    at twice the speed, this talk is pretty engaging and informative

  • @fostxswire1600
    @fostxswire1600 3 года назад +4

    Many companies now employ adjustable computer stations, where someone can stand to work. At first, I was like why, but if you sit long enough you might get bored. Plus, it's a personal option and the chair is right there if you change your mind. As long as it's a quick option of chair or stand I like this idea.

  • @saxlegrange
    @saxlegrange 3 года назад

    This is a great talk bro well done and thank you

  • @ginaurrely5407
    @ginaurrely5407 2 года назад

    That is absolutely true. Thank you