Back in Line
Welcome to Back in Line with Dr. Mosierâthe show where chiropractic meets real life. I'm your host, Dr. Mosier, alongside my amazing wife and cohost, Ellen. Together, we dive into the aches, pains, and postures of everyday livingâunpacking spinal health, lifestyle habits, and the little things that throw us out of line (literally and figuratively). Whether you're battling back pain or just trying to keep up with your kids, this podcast is your go-to for practical advice, expert insights, and a few laughs along the way. Is your health in lineâor falling behind? Letâs get you Back in Line.
Back in Line
đȘ„ Spinal Hygiene: Daily Habits That Protect Your Spine
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Letâs talk to you about something that can drastically improve the results of your chiropractic careâyour spinal hygiene exercises.
Think of these exercises the same way you think about brushing your teeth.
You donât brush for an hour once a week.
You brush a little every day to protect what youâve already gained.
Your spine works the same way.
đ What All Anatomy Textbooks Agree On
When it comes to spinal health, every anatomy textbook agrees on three non-negotiables:
- Full range of motion in every spinal segment
- Muscle symmetryâone side shouldnât be tighter than the other
- Proper spinal curves
- Cervical lordosis (neck curve)
- Thoracic kyphosis (mid-back curve)
- Lumbar lordosis (low-back curve)
Those curves act as shock absorbers, protecting your spine for the long haul.
When one of those three breaks down, degeneration speeds up.
đ§ The 4 Spinal Hygiene Exercises
Now letâs get into the good stuff.
1ïžâŁ Morning Range of Motion (Wake the Spine Up)
First thing in the morning, your ligaments and tendons are stiff. We want to gently restore movement.
Youâll perform six cardinal movements:
- Flexion
- Extension
- Left lateral flexion
- Right lateral flexion
- Left rotation
- Right rotation
Do these for both your neck and low back, holding each position 15â20 seconds.
This frees up the tissues that hold your spine together and restores mobility for the day.
2ïžâŁ Wobble Disc (Pump the Discs!)
đ” âWobble to the left, wobble to the right,
Wobble, wobble, wobble till you sit up right.â đ”
This exercise works through a process called imbibitionâthe pumping action of the discs.
Hereâs why that matters:
Once youâre over 20 years old, your discs no longer have a direct blood supply.
They rely on movement to:
- Bring nutrients in
- Flush waste out
No movement = no nutrition = degeneration.
The wobble disc restores that movement, especially at:
- L4âL5
- L5âS1
(The most common levels for disc bulges and âthrowing your back out.â)
Do:
- Left/right: 10â12 reps
- Forward/back: 10â12 reps
- Circles: clockwise & counterclockwise
Itâs also an excellent warm-up before your adjustmentâjust like stretching before a workout
3ïžâŁ TheraBand Neck Strengthening (Fix Text Neck)
This one targets a deep postural muscle called the longus colliâa key muscle for head and neck posture.
Hereâs the setup:
- Pull your head straight back (give yourself a double chin)
- Keep your head perfectly still
- Place the TheraBand behind your head
- Extend your arms out and return
đ The head does not move
đ Do about 12 reps
This isnât about building big musclesâitâs about waking up postural muscles so your head stays back where it belongs when youâre:
- Working at a computer
- Gardening
- On your phone
Better posture = less wear and tear over time.
4ïžâŁ Spinal Molding Rolls (Restore the Curves)
This is your end-of-day exercise.
Youâll use two molding rolls:
- One under your neck
- One under your low back
Do this on your bed, not the floor. The bed gives just enough support without being too aggressive.
Why at the end of the day?
đ Your discs are more fluid
đ More receptive to gentle molding
Lay there for 3â5 minutes, allowing your natural curves to be restored.
Remember: degenerative disc disease starts with loss of curve. This exercise directly addresses that.