movement

  • The Sensory-Friendly Workstation; A Physiotherapist’s Guide

    The Physiological Cost of Neurodivergent productivity When a neurodivergent brain cannot filter out background noise or visual “clutter,” the body enters a “fight or flight” state. It is important to have a sensory friendly work station! To focus amidst chaos, the body instinctively braces itself. This leads to chronic tension in the muscles at the

    read more

  • The Modern Office and How to Fix it.

    Why the Modern Office is Failing Your Best Thinkers (and How to Fix It) The Core Problem Open-plan offices, designed for collaboration, often act as a sensory “fishbowl” that overwhelms neurodivergent (ND) talent (such as those with ADHD, Autism, and Dyslexia), causing anxiety and hindering their performance. Small triggers in traditional offices (background chatter, lighting,

    read more

  • 5 Surprising Ways to Reverse Your Desk-Job Posture Today

    For most office professionals, the workday is a marathon of “screen-time fatigue.” Spending eight or more hours a day tethered to a workstation isn’t just exhausting; it’s a physical assault on your musculoskeletal health. This prolonged sedentary behavior creates a specific pattern of dysfunction: a stiff thoracic spine and a chronic forward head position that

    read more

  • Why the 60-Second Rule is the Ultimate Game-Changer for Desk Workers

    Sedentary behavior has become an undesirable hallmark of modern society. For the modern professional, sitting for more than eight hours a day is a baseline reality, yet research indicates this prolonged positioning is directly associated with increased neck, shoulder, and low back pain. Our bodies are biomechanical masterpieces designed for movement, not for the static, hunched-over posture necessitated

    read more