When we hear the word posture, most of us picture someone sitting tall or standing upright. But posture isn’t just about stillness. It’s also about how your body holds and organises itself while you’re moving. This is called dynamic posture.
Dynamic posture is the way your head, spine, hips and limbs work together when you walk, bend, lift or reach. It’s not about looking perfect. It’s about whether your body can move in a way that feels balanced, efficient and confident.
Your musculoskeletal (MSK) system, your muscles, joints and bones, is like a team. Good dynamic posture is that team working well together. Poor dynamic posture is when one player is overworked while others aren’t pulling their weight.
When your dynamic posture is working well:
You see dynamic posture in action all the time:
These aren’t just small details. They’re little signals of how your MSK system is coping in motion.
Dynamic posture isn’t something you can “get right” in one day. It’s something you learn to notice. Each time you move, your body gives feedback. Sometimes ease, sometimes stiffness, sometimes a little ache. The more you tune in, the more you learn where your body feels balanced and where it might need a little help.
Choose one ordinary movement, maybe walking to the kettle, standing from a chair, or carrying your bag. As you do it, ask yourself:
You’re not looking for “faults”. You’re simply learning your own body in motion.
Dynamic posture is posture in motion. It’s not about looking perfect but about moving with balance and ease. By paying attention to how you move through everyday tasks, you begin to understand your own body better, and that awareness is the first step to improving MSK health.