Thoracic Mobility for Handstands and Overhead Work
The thoracic spine (mid and upper back) is the least mobile part of the spine in most desk workers, and its stiffness directly limits handstand alignment and overhead pressing mechanics. Here's what I do about it.
Foam roller thoracic extension: lie with a foam roller under your mid-back, arms crossed over chest, and gently extend over it segment by segment. This is the most effective passive thoracic mobility tool I know. Daily, 5 minutes.
Thread-the-needle: in a quadruped position, slide one arm under your body, rotating the thoracic spine. Hold each end range 5 seconds. This trains rotational thoracic mobility, which also contributes to handstand alignment.
Wall angels: stand with your back flat against a wall, arms in goalpost position, and slide them up overhead while maintaining flat back contact. This directly rehearses the thoracic position needed for a straight handstand.
The handstand alignment improvement from three months of dedicated thoracic mobility work is substantial. Most people with banana-back handstands need this before any amount of balance practice will work.
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