The Farmer's Carry Will Fix Your Posture Better Than Thinking About Your Posture
Your posture isn't bad because you're lazy or because you don't think about standing up straight enough. It's bad because your core and upper back muscles are weak. And the fastest way to fix that isn't corrective exercises or postural cues—it's the farmer's carry, which is exactly what it sounds like: grabbing weight in each hand and walking.
Here's the biomechanics. When you hold weight at your sides, gravity pulls down. Your body resists that pull by engaging your core, your spinal stabilizers, and your shoulder girdle. Your nervous system has to maintain tension through your entire trunk just to keep the weight from dragging you sideways. This isn't some isolation movement where one muscle does the work. It's systemic. The farmer's carry forces your body to organize itself, and that carryover—pun intended—translates directly to how you stand and sit when you're not exercising.
When you do it right, your shoulders stay packed (not shrugged up toward your ears). Your core feels locked, like you're bracing before someone punches you. You're moving deliberately, not shuffling. Your ribs aren't flaring out. If you're doing it wrong, you'll feel one shoulder riding higher than the other, or you'll notice yourself leaning to compensate. Stop and reset.
Start here: grab two dumbbells or kettlebells that feel heavy but manageable—something you can hold for 30 to 40 seconds without your grip failing. Walk 20 to 40 yards. Rest. Do that three times. Once a week to start. If that gets boring or easy, increase the weight or distance, or switch to single-arm carries (which demand even more core engagement because your body has to resist rotation). Eventually, you can do uneven carries—different weights in each hand—or overhead carries if you want to get ambitious.
The reason this works better than "sit up straight" or ergonomic keyboards is that it builds strength through specificity and overload. Your postural muscles don't strengthen from awareness. They strengthen from work. And the farmer's carry is work.
Do this once this week. Not as a main workout—tack it onto the end of whatever you're already doing. You'll feel the difference in how your shoulders sit by Friday.
Related Topics
Article Ratings
0 ratings submitted

Discussion (0)
Join the Conversation
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!