icon-account icon-glass

Popular Products

The Lean Protein
Whey protein powder for weight-loss.
The Energy Booster
Pre/intra-workout powder with BCAAs.

9 Easy Stretching Exercises That Will Increase Flexibility

23rd June 2023

23rd June 2023

By Shivraj Bassi

Have you ever heard the saying that you should bend, not break? It’s not only a good adage to apply to life in general, but an excellent mentality for the importance of stretching in your fitness regime. It might not give you the rush of crossing a half marathon finish line or bench pressing your bodyweight, but it’s incredibly important for maintaining and improving mobility, reducing pain and tightness and ensuring your workouts are safe and efficient. 

While you might think that skipping your warm up stretch won’t do any harm and means you’ll get to the most exciting part of your workout faster, neglecting flexibility can have serious effects in the long term. Tight muscles can strain joints, and as we age muscles become shorter and less elastic. Not performing those all important warm up stretches could impact your ability to do the sports you love. 

With that in mind, we’ve curated a selection of exercises for flexibility that will help to increase your range of movement in the easiest possible way. For extra help, The Recover Capsules are a great addition to your stretching routine to support muscle recovery and reduce inflammation, so you’ll soon be on your way to being supple and strong. 

Standing hamstring stretch

There’s a reason this move is so popular. It stretches your legs, hamstrings, back and neck, and all you have to do is bend forward.  

  • Stand relaxed with your arms by your sides and your feet hip width apart 
  • Bend forward from the hips, lowering your head towards the floor while keeping your shoulders relaxed
  • If you can touch the floor or your toes, do so. Otherwise, hold the backs of your legs and hold for 30 seconds to two minutes before slowly rolling upright once more

Figure four stretch

This stretch is done lying down, so no excuses for not doing it. It stretches your hips, glutes and lower back in a gentle way that’s great if you have knee or back pain

  • Lie on your back with your knees bent and feet on the floor
  • Cross your right foot over your left thigh and lift your left leg off the floor
  • Hold onto the back of your left thigh and gently pull both legs into your chest until you feel a stretch, then hold
  • Hold for 30 seconds to two minutes then release and repeat on the other side

Frog stretch

If you’re guilty of crossing your legs while sitting on a chair (who isn’t?), this leg stretch can help to relieve tight hips and lower back pain. It stretches the hips and inner thighs.

  • Start out on all fours and position your knees so they’re wider than shoulder width
  • Turn out your toes and position the inner edges of your feet flat against the floor
  • Shifting your hips back, move towards your heels and if possible, move from your hands to your forearms for a deeper stretch
  • Release after holding from 45 seconds to two minutes

Butterfly stretch

This stretch for your legs is great at opening up your hips and can help improve posture. It increases flexibility in the hips, thighs, glutes and back. 

  • Sit with the soles of your feet pressed together, knees bent out to the side and back straight
  • While holding onto your feet, slowly lower your top half towards your feet while pressing your knees toward the floor
  • Hold this position for 30 seconds to two minutes before slowly rising back up

Sphinx pose

If you work at a desk and spend your days hunched over a screen, sphinx pose can help to relieve tension in your lower back. This position stretches your chest, shoulders and back. 

  • Lie on your front with your legs pointing straight out behind you
  • Place your elbows under your shoulders and your forearms on the floor, then lift your chest up and gently arch your back
  • Press the lower half of your body into the floor, engage your abs and relax your shoulders while holding the position
  • Hold the stretch for 45 seconds to two minutes, stopping if you feel any discomfort

Lunge with spinal twist

This stretch works multiple areas of your body and is helpful for posture-related aches and pains. It works your hip flexors, back and quads. 

  • Standing with your feet together, then take a large step forwards with your right foot
  • Bend your right knee and drop forward into a lunge, keeping your left leg directly behind you with your toes on the ground
  • Placing your left hand on the floor, twist your upper body to the right and raise your right arm towards the sky
  • Hold for 45 seconds to two minutes, then repeat on the other side

Triceps stretch

Stretching your arms is important to increase upper body strength. This exercise increases flexibility in your triceps, shoulders, back and neck.

  • Extend your arms straight over your head
  • Bending your right elbow, reach your right hand down to touch the upper middle of your back
  • Grasp just below your right elbow with your left hand and pull your right elbow gently towards your head
  • Hold for 30 seconds to two minutes, then repeat on the opposite side

Seated shoulder squeeze

If you experience shoulder or back pain, this stretch shouldn’t be skipped. It can help to relieve back tension and stretches out your arms, back and shoulders. 

  • With your arms extended straight out behind you, clasp your hands together
  • Gently pull your shoulder blades together and extend your arms out
  • Squeeze in this position for three to five seconds before releasing. Do this five to 10 times

Knee to chest stretch

This satisfying exercise increases flexibility and releases pain and tension in your lower back and hips, as well as stretching your hamstrings. 

  • Lie on your back with both legs extended flat on the floor
  • Pull your right knee close into your chest, keeping the left leg straight and your lower back pressed down into the floor
  • Hold this position for 30 seconds to two minutes, then repeat on the other side

Product Spotlight

Need Expert Advice?

Other Insights

The Ingredient We Almost Didn't Put In The Energy Booster
There's a question we ask about every ingredient before it goes into a product. Not "is this trending?" Not "does it look good on the label?" Just: does the evidence actually support putting this in? Most of the time, that question is straightforward. Either the research is there or it isn't. But occasionally you land on an ingredient where the science says yes and something else gives you pause. That's where formulation gets genuinely interesting. Beta alanine was one of those decisions. What Beta Alanine Actually Does Most people who've taken a pre-workout have felt beta alanine without knowing it. It's the ingredient responsible for the tingling sensation you get in your face, your neck, your hands. That feeling has a name: paraesthesia. It's harmless. But it's also the reason we nearly left beta alanine out. Before I get to that, the science. Beta alanine is a non-essential amino acid. On its own, it doesn't do very much. But inside muscle tissue, it binds with another amino acid called histidine to form something called carnosine. And carnosine is where the real work happens. During intense exercise, your muscles produce hydrogen ions as a byproduct of energy production. It's the build-up of those hydrogen ions, not lactic acid as most people think, that causes the burning sensation and the drop-off in performance. Carnosine acts as a buffer. It mops up those hydrogen ions and delays the point at which fatigue kicks in. The research on this is substantial. A 2012 meta-analysis published in the journal Amino Acids, covering over 40 studies, found that beta alanine supplementation consistently improved exercise capacity, particularly in high-intensity efforts lasting between one and four minutes. The effect size was meaningful and reproducible. This wasn't a promising pilot study. It was a decade of accumulated evidence pointing in the same direction. In practical terms: more reps before failure. More output before you hit the wall. Sustained performance over a longer window. So why the hesitation? The decision we almost got wrong The tingling. Not because it's dangerous. It isn't. The paraesthesia from beta alanine is a well-understood pharmacological response and there is no evidence of harm at the doses used in supplementation. But we had a real concern: if someone takes The Workout Blend for the first time and feels an unexpected tingling in their face, and nobody told them it was coming, we've just lost their trust. Possibly permanently. The easy path was to leave it out. Plenty of pre-workout formulas do exactly that, either because they're being cautious or because they want a smoother consumer experience. No ingredient, no explanation required. We talked about it a lot. And the conclusion we kept coming back to was this: removing an ingredient with strong evidence because it might confuse people is not how we want to make formulation decisions. That's the same logic that leads brands to include ingredients with weak evidence because they're more familiar, more comfortable, more sellable. The answer wasn't to remove it. The answer was to be upfront about it. The tingling means the beta alanine is working. It's a real physiological response to a real ingredient doing a real thing. If we believe in the science, we include the ingredient and we explain what's happening. That felt like the right standard to hold ourselves to. What the rest of the market does Most pre-workout formulas fall into one of two categories.The first is the stimulant-heavy formula. Stacked with caffeine at doses that produce a short spike, a noticeable crash, and not much else underneath. These sell well because the immediate sensation of energy feels like evidence that something is working. It often isn't, not in any meaningful physiological sense beyond what caffeine alone would do. The second is the proprietary blend. A long list of ingredients with no disclosed amounts, making it impossible to know whether any of them are present at doses that match the research. Proprietary blends let brands list an ingredient without committing to a dose that would actually work. Both approaches optimise for perception. Neither optimises for performance. What I'd recommend The Energy Booster (soon to be renamed to The Workout Blend) contains beta alanine alongside citrulline malate, which supports nitric oxide production and blood flow during training, BCAAs at a 2:1:1 ratio to safeguard lean muscle, and natural caffeine from guarana for sustained energy without the spike you get from synthetic sources. The formulation is built around what the research supports at doses that match the evidence. If you feel the tingling the first time you take it, that's the beta alanine. It's normal, it fades within 20 minutes or so, and it's a sign the formula is doing what it's supposed to do. Read more
Our Top Tips For Maintaining A Healthy Daily Wellness Routine