# Lower Back Warm Up

> Morning, lower back is stiff, wants to wake it up gently before the day.

- **Canonical URL:** https://wakeout.app/exercises/morning-lower-back-warm-up-exercises
- **30-second demo video:** https://wakeout-assets.b-cdn.net/demos/lowerBackWarmUp.mp4
- **Exercise count:** 12
- **Positions:** standing
- **Where:** bedroom, living_room
- **Time of day:** morning

## When to reach for this pack

Morning, lower back is stiff, wants to wake it up gently before the day.

## Why this happens

The lumbar spine stiffens overnight. Seven or eight hours of horizontal, mostly motionless sleep lets synovial fluid grow viscous and the erector spinae cool down, which is why that first bend to tie your shoes feels like asking a cold engine to redline. This pack is built for the ten minutes between bed and breakfast — gentle, standing movements that pump synovial fluid back through the lumbar facet joints and gradually recruit the muscles that will carry you upright all day. The goal isn't a workout. It's telling a back that's been neutral for hours that it's about to be vertical, loaded, and occasionally twisting to reach the kettle. Most desk workers notice their back tolerates sitting better when they spend a few minutes waking it up first, rather than going straight from pillow to chair and expecting the lumbar spine to sort itself out mid-morning.

## About this routine

Best as the first movement of your day, done standing in pajamas before coffee. No mat needed, about four minutes, room for a bathrobe. Skip if you have an active disc injury, sciatica flaring into the leg, or post-surgical restrictions — those need a physio, not a morning routine. Safe during uncomplicated pregnancy. Not medical advice, just a gentler way to start the day than going straight from mattress to office chair.

## Exercises

1. **Assisted Bow Hold**
2. **Assisted Side Reaches**
3. **Bow And Hold**
4. **Circle Bows**
5. **Crescent Moon - Left Arm**
6. **Crescent Moon - Right Arm**
7. **Leaned Over Head Raises**
8. **Leaning Torso Rotations**
9. **Left Ankle Hold**
10. **Right Ankle Hold**
11. **Torso Rotation**
12. **Under-knee Touches**

## Who this is for

- **Strengthen Back** — Pack explicitly focuses on activating and protecting lower back muscles with movements designed for back health and strain prevention
- **Engage My Hips** — Lower back mobility exercises typically involve hip movements and stretches, as these areas work together anatomically
- **Engage My Core** — Directly targets lower back muscles which is a key component of core engagement as specified in the requirements

## Frequently asked

### Why is my lower back so stiff every morning?

Overnight immobility is the main reason. Synovial fluid in your lumbar facet joints becomes more viscous without movement, and the discs rehydrate slightly, both of which temporarily reduce range of motion. Add a soft mattress or a day job that keeps you seated, and the erector spinae wakes up tight. The stiffness usually resolves within 20 to 30 minutes of normal activity, but gentle morning mobility work shortens that window substantially.

### Should I stretch my lower back right when I wake up or wait?

Give it five minutes of light standing or walking first, then stretch. Disc tissue is slightly more hydrated on waking, which means it's also more vulnerable to end-range forward bending. A few minutes of gentle standing movement — like the ones in this pack — warms the joints and lets hydrostatic pressure settle before you ask the lumbar spine for any real range.

### Is this different from a regular lower back routine?

Yes. This pack is specifically morning-coded and preventive. For acute pain at the desk, use the lower back tension release pack. For building protective strength, use the lower back strength pack. This one assumes a healthy back that simply stiffens overnight and needs a thoughtful on-ramp before the day's demands.

### Can I do this if I already have lower back pain?

If the pain is mild, non-radiating tension, this pack is usually fine and often helps. If the pain is sharp, shoots down a leg, worsens with bending, or followed a specific injury, skip it and see a physician. Morning warm-ups are designed for stiff-but-healthy backs, not for managing structural issues like disc herniation or nerve impingement.

### How long until I notice a difference?

Most people feel better-moving within a week of daily use. The short-term effect — looser hips, easier forward bend, less stiffness putting on socks — shows up on day one. The cumulative effect, where mornings stop starting with a wince, takes about seven to ten mornings of consistency. Miss a few days and the stiffness returns, which is the whole argument for doing it routinely.

---
Wakeout — desk exercises that break the sit habit. iOS: https://apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1242116567 · Chrome: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/wakeout-new-tab-desk-exer/pgepchplpmblclpfgklclelgdiinoihb