Beginner 2 min read

Cat-Cow

The cat-cow is a fundamental spinal mobility drill that alternates between flexion and extension, segment by segment. It warms up the entire spine, relieves stiffness, and teaches you to differentiate movement at each vertebral level.

Setup

  1. Start on all fours (quadruped) with your hands directly under your shoulders and knees under your hips. Fingers spread wide, shins flat on the floor.
  2. Cow (extension): Inhale and slowly drop your belly toward the floor. Lift your chest and tailbone toward the ceiling, creating a gentle arch. Let the movement ripple from your pelvis up through your spine to your head.
  3. Cat (flexion): Exhale and reverse — tuck your tailbone, round your spine toward the ceiling, and let your head drop between your arms. Push the floor away with your hands to maximize the rounding.
  4. Flow between the two positions, initiating each transition from the pelvis and letting the wave travel up.

Coaching Cues

What to feel:

  • A wave-like motion through each segment of the spine
  • A gentle stretch in the lower back during cat (flexion) and through the chest and abs during cow (extension)

Common mistakes:

  • Only moving the head and hips while the mid-back stays locked — focus on mobilizing every segment
  • Rushing through the transitions instead of moving slowly and deliberately
  • Holding the breath — coordinate inhale with extension, exhale with flexion
Tip

Think of your spine as a chain with 24 links. The goal is to move each link independently. Slow down enough that you can feel each vertebra transition from flexion to extension.

Video and animated demos coming soon.

Programming

Parameter Recommendation
Reps 10-15 cycles
Sets 1-2
Frequency Daily
When to do it Morning routine, warm-up, desk breaks

Progressions

  1. Beginner: Standard cat-cow as described; focus on smooth, pain-free motion.
  2. Intermediate: Add lateral flexion (side bending) — trace a circle with your ribcage for “cat-cow circles.”
  3. Advanced: Perform from a bear crawl position (knees hovering 2 cm off the floor) to add a core stability challenge.