First minute — stand tall
Feet hip-width, unlock knees, roll shoulders back five times. Let arms hang heavy. Exhale longer than you inhale for four breaths.
A micro break is simply a two-minute pause: you step away from autopilot typing, rest your eyes, and move your body a little. This article describes general habits some office workers use—results vary and this is not medical guidance.
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Start With Eye Rest
When you stare at a screen, you blink less—and your eyes can feel dry or tired. Try the 20-20-20 habit: every 20 minutes, look at something far away (about 20 feet) for 20 seconds. In most offices that means a window, the end of the hall, or a far wall.
You do not need a walk meeting—just stand by your chair when your hips feel stiff or your head feels fuzzy.
Feet hip-width, unlock knees, roll shoulders back five times. Let arms hang heavy. Exhale longer than you inhale for four breaths.
Interlace fingers overhead, reach up without arching lower back. Side bend left and right for 15 seconds each. Sit back down with control.
Mix three short breaks—eyes, posture, and a little movement—and you may feel less drained by mid-afternoon. Pick a tab below, follow the steps, and check them off as you go. Try one full round every hour or so of screen time, or hook it to something you already do (after lunch, before your next call).
Close what you are working on so your brain feels a real stop. Look at something far away for 20 seconds, then cup your palms over your eyes lightly for 10 seconds—do not press on your eyes. Roll your shoulders once while you look into the distance.
If the screen feels harsh, turn brightness down a notch. Blink slowly ten times—office air conditioning can dry your eyes. If you were squinting at small text, bump the font size up a little before you continue.
Sit with both feet flat on the floor. If they dangle, lower your chair or use a footrest. Relax your jaw—teeth slightly apart, tongue resting softly on the roof of your mouth. Pull your chin straight back (like making a small double chin) and take five slow breaths.
Press your hands lightly on the armrests and lift your chest without arching your lower back. Roll your shoulders backward three times, then forward once. If your lower back feels numb, stand up for ten seconds, then sit back with your hips all the way in the chair.
Stand by your desk and shake out your hands and wrists for fifteen seconds. March in place gently for twenty seconds if you have room—or rise up on your toes ten times per foot. Take four slow breaths, letting the exhale last a bit longer, and roll your ankles in circles.
Drink some water even if you are not thirsty—dry office air can make fatigue worse. Look away from the screen while you sip. Before you sit down, say out loud (or type) the one task you will do next—it helps you pick up where you left off.
Tick each step when you finish it. Your progress stays on this page while it is open.
Breaks should feel good, not rushed to the point of dizziness. Use handrails if your office has stairs during stand breaks. Hydration supports comfort during long air-conditioned days—keep a bottle visible as a visual cue.
Attach breaks to existing habits: every time you send a file, every bathroom trip, or calendar “focus” blocks. External reminders beat willpower on busy days.
They complement—not replace—longer activity outside work hours. Add walking meetings or stairs when your schedule allows.