About This Recovery Routine
Rest days are important, but sitting completely still is not the answer either. This session gives your neck just enough movement to stay loose without adding any strain. Every exercise is floor-based, slow, and restorative.
You will start with cat-cow to gently mobilize your entire spine, settle into an extended child’s pose, then use thread-the-needle to release the junction where your neck meets your upper back. Light ear-to-shoulder tilts and rolls at the end keep the neck itself from stiffening up. The whole thing feels more like a cooldown than a workout.
What This Routine Targets
- Spinal mobility through cat-cow
- Upper back and neck junction with thread-the-needle
- General neck maintenance with light rolls and tilts
- Full relaxation through extended child’s pose
What’s Included

Cat Cow
Duration: 0:30
Flow through cat and cow to mobilize your spine and melt away stiffness one breath at a time.
Difficulty: Beginner
Instructions
- Begin on hands and knees with wrists under shoulders and knees under hips.
- Inhale as you drop your belly, lift your chest, and gaze forward or slightly up.
- Exhale as you round your spine, draw the belly toward the ceiling, and tuck your chin.
- Continue gliding between the two shapes in rhythm with your breath.
Tips
- Move slowly enough that each vertebra gets a moment of attention.
Adjustments
- Keep your head more neutral if your neck prefers less movement.

Child's Pose
Duration: 1:00
Melt into child's pose to reset your breath and relax the back with a calming stretch.
Difficulty: Beginner
Instructions
- Start on hands and knees, then widen your knees while keeping big toes touching.
- Sit your hips back toward your heels and reach your hands forward.
- Lower your chest between your thighs and rest your forehead on the floor or a support.
Tips
- Crawl your fingertips forward to deepen the stretch through the sides of your body.
- Let your chest sink toward the ground with each exhale.
Adjustments
- Keep knees closer together if that feels better for your hips.
- Rest your forehead on a block, pillow, or folded blanket if it does not reach the floor.

Thread the Needle
Duration: 1:00
Flow through thread the needle to stretch your shoulders, chest, and upper back with a twist.
Difficulty: Beginner
Instructions
- Start in tabletop with hands under shoulders and knees under hips.
- Lift one arm toward the ceiling to open your chest.
- Slide that arm under the opposite arm with the palm facing up, lowering your shoulder and head toward the floor.
- Unwind back to tabletop and repeat before switching sides.
Tips
- Press the supporting hand firmly into the floor for stability.
- Keep hips stacked over knees as you twist.

Ear-to-Shoulder
Duration: 0:45
Melt tightness in your neck by gently drawing one ear toward your shoulder while you breathe.
Difficulty: Beginner
Instructions
- Sit or stand tall with arms relaxed.
- Tilt your head toward one shoulder, reaching that ear closer without lifting the shoulder.
- Place the opposite hand behind your back and rest the other hand lightly on top of your head for a subtle assist.
- Hold for a few breaths, then switch sides.
Tips
- Keep the chin neutral instead of tipping up or down.
- Let both shoulders stay soft and heavy.
Adjustments
- Skip the hand assist if the stretch feels intense enough with gravity alone.

Shoulder Rolls
Duration: 0:30
Roll your shoulders to release tension and bring warmth into your upper back and neck.
Difficulty: Beginner
Instructions
- Sit or stand tall with shoulders relaxed.
- Lift your shoulders up toward your ears, then roll them back and down in a circular motion.
- Repeat for several reps, then reverse the direction.
Tips
- Keep the motion smooth and fluid to avoid neck strain.
- Relax your neck and look forward while you move.
Adjustments
- Make smaller circles or simply lift and lower the shoulders if that feels better.

Neck Roll
Duration: 0:30
Roll your head gently side to side to release tension through your neck and shoulders.
Difficulty: Beginner
Instructions
- Sit tall with shoulders relaxed.
- Lower your chin toward your chest, then roll your head toward one shoulder so the ear hovers over it.
- Return through center and repeat toward the other shoulder, continuing in a slow rhythm.
Tips
- Move slowly to avoid strain or dizziness.
- Stop short of full circles to keep the neck happy.
Adjustments
- Keep the range of motion smaller if you experience discomfort.
Who Should Try This
Anyone on a rest day who wants to keep their neck from tightening up, or someone recovering from a particularly intense stretch session. Also works well on days when your neck feels sensitive and you want to move it without pushing.
Tips for Best Results
- Move even slower than you think you need to. This is a recovery session, not a stretch session.
- In child’s pose, let your forehead rest on the floor and let the weight of your head create a gentle traction on the back of your neck.
- During thread-the-needle, sink your shoulder toward the floor rather than forcing the twist.
- This pairs well as an evening routine before bed.
Rest and Recover
Recovery is where the real progress happens. The stretching you did on harder days created change. This session lets that change stick. Think of it as the glue between your deeper sessions.

