Slim Thick Neck Training: Posture and Cervical Health at 160-190 lbs
Slim Thick Neck Training: Posture and Cervical Health at 160-190 lbs
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Direct neck training is not on most women’s radar. At 160 to 190 pounds — especially if you carry your weight forward and spend hours at a desk or on your phone — your cervical spine is under constant stress. The muscles that support it are chronically underworked. This produces the forward head posture that shortens the back of the neck, creates chronic tension headaches, and contributes to the rounded shoulder appearance that underdeveloped back and rear deltoid muscles produce.
My name is Xavier Savage. I am a personal trainer based in Houston, Texas, and I work with clients in person and online through XPL, Xesthetic Performance Labs.
Why It Matters
In neutral posture, your ear should be over your shoulder when viewed from the side. Every inch of forward head position adds approximately 10 pounds of effective load to your cervical extensors. If your head is 3 inches forward from neutral — common in desk workers — your cervical extensors are supporting the equivalent of a 40-pound head all day. This produces fatigue, tightness, and eventually injury. The deep cervical flexors at the front of your neck — the postural muscles that maintain neutral head position — are almost universally weak in people who spend hours looking at screens.
Best Exercises
Chin tucks are the highest priority exercise. Stand or sit with your back straight, pull your chin straight back without tilting your head — as if creating a double chin — hold five seconds, release. Three sets of 10 reps multiple times per day. Do these daily regardless of whether they appear in a formal training session.
Band neck flexion and extension use a light resistance band. For flexion, face away from an anchor with the band behind your head and nod forward against resistance. For extension, face the anchor with the band across your forehead and extend backward against resistance. Two to three sets of 15 reps per direction. Use very light resistance — the cervical spine is not designed for heavy loading.
Prone neck extension lying face down on a bench with your head hanging off the edge and lifting to neutral. Two sets of 15 controlled reps.
Dead hangs from a pull-up bar decompress the cervical spine. Hang for 20 to 30 seconds at the end of upper body sessions.
Programming
Chin tucks daily. Formal neck strengthening once to twice per week at the end of upper body sessions. Posture improvement visible within four to six weeks. Read the Slim Thick Back and Slim Thick Traps guides alongside this — neck health and upper back development are interconnected.
I train clients in person in Houston, Texas and online through XPL. Take the XPL Archetype Quiz or visit xperformancelab.com/plans-pricing to work with me directly.
The standards behind the standards. — Xavier Savage, XPL Xesthetic Performance Labs, Houston, TX
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Xavier Savage
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I do not shape muscle. I shape structure. The person you become is the person you construct.
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