Feeling the stiffness in your muscles due to an unexpected project deadline causing you to miss your regular workout for a week? Don’t worry; there’s no significant harm, and you won’t start losing muscle as long as you prevent stiffness and keep your body moving. Incorporate breath work and short exercise sessions, often referred to as exercise snacking.
For breath exercises, take short breaks during your busy day. Consider deep diaphragmatic breathing like the kapalbhati kriya in yoga or alternate nose breathing, also known as Anulom Vilom Pranayam. These exercises are highly beneficial, even when done for just five minutes. Additionally, you can include a bit of tai chi, an ancient Chinese martial routine involving deep breathing, mindfulness, and controlled movements, to relieve stress.
Plan a physical routine lasting no more than five minutes. Climb a flight of stairs, do seated crunches, use your table to bend and stretch your spine, suck in your stomach and stretch your hamstrings, or engage in slow jumping jacks or spot jogging. Slow jumping jacks, done one foot at a time, can improve cardiovascular fitness, increase calorie burn, enhance strength, and promote overall functional fitness. A minute of spot running with high knees raises heart rate, builds muscle strength, and burns calories.
Incorporate exercises that include inversions, back bends, side bends, and stretching intermittently, taking short breaks from blue light emissions at your workstation.
For chair dips, squats, and leg extensions, try the dynamic chest stretch. Stand or sit tall in your chair with arms stretched straight in front of your body. Keep your palms together, move your arms out to your sides at a steady pace, rotate your palms upwards, and push your thumbs as far back as is comfortable for ten seconds. Return to the starting position and repeat three to five times.
Squats can be performed in the corridor against a wall. Keep your chest up, maintain a neutral back position, and bend at the knees and hips, moving into a seated-like position with thighs parallel to the ground. Return to the starting position and repeat, targeting the legs, glutes, and core.
To alleviate tension in your back and shoulders, keep a resistance band at your workstation. Grasp each end in either hand, stand in the middle, raise your arms to form a V-shape with the band, slowly pull on either end, squeeze the band tight, and release.

















