How to Ride a Bike with Good Posture (Part 1)
Most people, when they ride a bike, tuck their pelvis so the rear portion of their sitz bones rests on the seat. Then they lean over to reach the handlebars causing a lot of spine curvature. With the additional tension created from pushing the pedals and holding the handlebars, and the bouncing and jostling from the road, riding a bike this way can be a painful and harmful activity.
Many modern bike riders look like Mr. Bean when they ride a bike, sitting with an unnaturally curved spine.
Each of these modern-day bikers has a rounded spine and craned neck. Image courtesy John Matrix at bikelist.org.
With a few adjustments, riding a bike can be a harmonious and healthful activity. By using hiphinging and stacksitting, and by making sure you have the right bike and the right settings, you can enjoy this way of exercising and getting around. Here are the key things to look for in a bike frame:
Bike style: In some areas, road bikes and touring bikes—styles that require a deep bend to reach the handlebars—are very common. In other places, cruisers, hybrids, and flat-foot ‘comfort bikes’ are the norm. Pick a style that works best for you, but if you experience back pain, an upright model will likely more comfortable and conducive to good posture.
An additional advantage of an upright bike is that you won’t need much hamstring flexibility and back strength to maintain a J-spine. An upright bike allows you to stacksit on your seat with an easily maintained healthy neck position.
This comfort cruiser is ideal for maintaining a relaxed upright posture. It also has a low bar in the front that makes getting on and off the bike easy.
Shailene Woodley rides a bike with close-swooping handle bars, which make it easy to ride upright with the shoulders back.
This woman from yesteryear demonstrates an excellent J-spine on a ‘comfort’ frame that allows her to stacksit and easily keep her shoulders back.
Here Kim Kardashian rides an upright with cruiser handlebars. With a slight hiphinge, she is able to maintain healthy spine and neck alignment. This position doesn’t require great hamstring flexibility; it does requires slightly more work than stacksitting.
For those who prefer a more aerodynamic racing style, you will need to do a deep hiphinge. It can be challenging to find a seat that allows for appropriate and comfortable pelvic anteversion. I will write more about bike seats in an upcoming sequel post.
To get closer to a racing position with your torso more horizontal, you will need a pronounced hiphinge to maintain a straight spine. This woman hiphinges quite a bit, but stops short of ideal and therefore has a slightly rounded lumbar spine. Ideally, you pivot your head upwards on the neck rather than crane the neck to look ahead (more on this in a future post).
Frame size: For good bicycling posture, you will need an appropriately sized bike frame that allows you to maintain a relaxed shoulder and neck position, and allows you to touch your feet to the ground from your seat. The handlebars need to be within reach without your shoulders pulling forward.
With a little effort, you can find just the right size and style frame to keep you straight and pain-free!
With With good posture and a good bike fit, biking is a pleasure to observe and experience.
The more upright you can be on your bike, the less work you will have to do to maintain your J-spine.
Children often maintain a J-spine on bikes without too much trouble. Children’s bikes are rarely designed for aerodynamic racing, but rather for ease of learning on.
A frame that is too small can cause you to scrunch up, tuck your pelvis, and round your spine. A frame that is too large can pull your shoulders too far forward to reach the handlebars. When your handlebars are in the wrong place and you rest a lot of weight on them, you may create shoulder and neck tension from bracing yourself continuously.
This rider’s bike is too small for him, resulting in a tucked pelvis and rounded spine.
If you are exceptionally tall, you may find it difficult to find a frame that is tall enough to fit you. If you need to lift your seat to its max to create enough legroom for yourself, consider also lifting your handlebars. There are extensions that can be attached to the stem of the handlebars, to bring them closer or farther away, as well as to add height. Your frame needs to be long enough to comfortably reach between seat and handlebars without hitting your knees or scrunching your torso.
This tall rider is having trouble fitting onto a too-small frame—the distance between the handlebars and seat is too short for his torso to fit without buckling at the spine.
For smaller-than-average adults, it is sometimes difficult to find a petite frame that allows you to lower the seat enough to reach the ground, without this causing the handlebars to be uncomfortably out of reach. Again, there are adjustable stems available for handlebars that are shorter than average, or can tilt the handlebars closer to you. With many bike seats, you can also adjust the seat position horizontally, and it may be easier to slide the seat closer to the handlebars than to bring the handlebars closer to the seat. Just make sure that your seat isn’t so far forward that pedaling becomes awkward or uncomfortable.
How well does your bike fit you? What has your experience been riding different kinds of bicycles? How good is your posture when you ride? Please do share!
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Thanks for reminding me that
Thanks for reminding me that not everyone on this list is well-versed in the Gokhale Method. I recommend the book 8 Steps to a Pain-Free Back as background info for what is published here.
Thanks for the bike post! I
Thanks for the bike post! I'm looking forward to more. Since I've gone through a bike posture transformation after my back injury, I'll share.
My back injury recovery exercises have permanently changed the way I ride/race bikes, and it's so good for my back and all the supporting muscle infrastructure. First, I tilt the seat forward ever so slightly (nose downward) This is optional, but helps get into a better hip position, and also gives a slight sensation of falling forward that helps with step 2. Second, and most importantly, instead of "resting" into your handlebars, avoid putting weight on my handlebars whatsoever. Hold your hands in position, but don't rest into them. This has two beneficial impacts. One is that your erector spinae and core muscles become fully engaged and that's what holds you in position, as opposed to upward force through your hands & arms. By taking pressure off your hands though, the back and core muscles are engaged, and it releases pressure from being absorbed by the disks of the back. It also releases pressure from your hands, so the meaty paft of my hands no longer get numb like they used. This whole position makes pedalling much easier too, since the force through the pedals helps hold your torso in the correct position. You'll feel like you're falling forward slightly, and pedaling helps to hold you up, as opposed to pressing into the handlebars for that support. I'll admit this can be tiring on long rides, and takes practice, but it strengthens your back and core muscles, and completely changes the way energy transfers from your body into the bike. Even a short bike ride across town now becomes a core and back muscle strengthening exercise.
In short, hold your forward leaning position but take the pressure off your hands, and notice how your core muscles react.
Dave
Thank you so much for this
Thank you so much for this post! I have been wondering if I am the only one with back problems that also rides a bike!
I have had a similar experience to Dave. A few years ago, I went looking for a new commuter bike that would allow me to sit a little more upright and, after testing so many bikes that I nearly gave up, I settled on the Trek Neko SLX. It is a strange geometry which makes it a little funny looking, but it serves the purpose for me. Bike shope employees, who seem also to be avid riders, don't particularly like this bike or the way I make modifications to the traditional bike riding "stance" (like what Dave described), but I figure they just haven't had to. The Trek Neko isn't what most bikers would call a commuter bike (I think it is called a hybrid), but it is light, has lots of gears (I commute up and down hills), and can take rack mounts, so for my purpose, it works great.
This more upright bike, together with a slight forward tilt of the seat and NO pressure on your hands makes for a much better bike ride for your back. It is often easy to "fall back" into that sagging and curved spine position, but a little practice and awareness will strengthen those core muscles and soon you won't even have to think about it. Like Dave above, I agree that this position transfers energy from your body into your bike and changes pedaling quite a lot (for the better!).
You can ride a bike with a bad back without making it worse!