The way you hold your phone matters more than you think. These 6 habits can eliminate neck pain, eye strain, and the dreaded text neck.
Instead of dropping your chin to look down, lift the phone up. This single change eliminates the 27–60 lbs of extra force that a tilted head puts on your cervical spine.
One-handed holding twists your wrist and strains one side of your shoulder. Using both hands distributes weight evenly and keeps your elbows closer to your body — less strain, more stability.
Holding your arm in the air for long scrolling sessions exhausts your shoulder muscles fast. Rest your elbow on a table, armrest, or your own torso to take the load off and keep the phone higher.
Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds. This resets your eye focus muscles and encourages you to drop your phone — giving your neck a break too. Set a timer.
Gripping your phone tightly for hours strains the tendons in your fingers, wrist, and forearm — a leading cause of De Quervain's tendinosis. Hold with a relaxed grip and let the phone rest in your palm rather than be squeezed.
Hunching forward to look at your phone is the most common posture mistake. Sit all the way back so your spine is supported, then bring the phone up to your face — not your face down to the phone.