The squat is one of the most useful gestures of the human body. It allows you to sit, stand, bend down and stabilize. When you stop practicing, stiffness and lack of balance appear.

How to do it safely:

  • Place a firm chair behind you.
  • Spread your feet shoulder-width apart.
  • Lower yourself by moving your hips back, not your knees forward.
  • Touch the chair gently and slowly climb back up.
  • If you need support, use a table or backrest, without pushing yourself.

Perform 3 to 4 sets of 8 to 12 repetitions, resting between sets. Over time you will be able to go down more and rely less on support.

2. Adapted push-ups: getting started is easier than you think

Push-ups are not just an exercise “of youth”; They are a basic movement that strengthens the arms, chest, shoulders, and core of the body.

Initial version:

  • Lean against a wall.
  • Place your hands at chest level.
  • Gently lean forward and push back into the starting position.

When this is easy, you can move forward by leaning on a table or bed, and later, on the floor with your knees supported.

The important thing is not how many you do, but the consistency.

3. Piriformis stretch: release deep tension in the hips and back