Neck Pain? Try These Methods
If you are dealing with neck pain, you are definitely not alone. I see it almost every day in my sessions, and most people are surprised when I tell them the pain usually does not start in the neck at all. In many cases, tight or weak muscles in your upper back and shoulders are the real reason your neck feels tense, stiff, or sore.
I work with clients on this all the time, and once they understand what is actually happening in the body, the relief usually comes much faster.
Why Your Back and Shoulders Affect Your Neck
Your neck does not work by itself. It is connected to everything above and below it, especially the muscles in your upper back, shoulder blades, and chest. When those muscles get weak or tight, your neck ends up doing more work than it should.
Here is what I see the most:
Weak upper back muscles can make your shoulders roll forward
Tight chest muscles can pull your head out of alignment
Overworked neck muscles that try to hold everything up
That constant forward pull is what creates that familiar neck ache or stiffness. The good news is that when you strengthen the right muscles, your neck does not have to fight so hard every day.
Strengthening Exercises That Help
You do not need heavy weights or complicated workouts to start feeling better. A few simple strengthening movements can make a big difference.
#1. Row Variations
Rows help pull your shoulders back and strengthen the muscles between your shoulder blades. Stronger mid-back muscles help your neck relax.
#2. Shoulder External Rotations
These target the small stabilizer muscles in the shoulders. When these muscles wake up, your posture improves naturally.
#3. Scapular Retractions
This is a simple movement, but it teaches your body how to activate the muscles that support proper alignment.
I usually tell clients to focus on slow, controlled movements. Quality matters more than quantity.
READ MORE > How MAT Helps Physical Therapy
Stretches That Help Release Tension
Strength is important but stretching balances things out. Here are a few stretches almost anyone can do safely.
Upper Trap Stretch
Gently tilt your head to one side and let your opposite shoulder relax. This helps release the big muscle that often holds tension.
Chest Opener
You can do this in a doorway by placing your forearms on both sides of the door frame and slowly leaning forward. It helps counter that forward-rolled posture.
Thoracic Extension
Lying over a foam roller or rolled towel opens your upper back and helps your spine move the way it should.
The key is consistency. A stretch you do once will feel good for a moment, but a stretch you commit to will help long-term.
Daily Habits That Reduce Neck Pain
Trust me, little habits add up. I always remind clients of these simple changes:
Raise your screen so you are not looking down
Take breaks if you sit for long periods
Do a quick stretch every hour
Avoid sleeping with too many pillows
Keep your shoulders relaxed, not shrugged
These adjustments keep your body in better alignment, so the neck is not carrying weight it was never meant to carry.
When You May Need More Support
If your neck pain keeps coming back or feels sharp and limiting, it may be a sign that your body needs a closer look. As a kinesiologist, I do far more than basic training or MAT. My work focuses on understanding how your body moves, what is causing the imbalance, and how to correct it with measurable results.
I use tools like metabolic testing, gait analysis, and force production analysis to see which muscles are not doing their job and where your injury risks may be hiding. When we pinpoint those issues, your body starts moving the way it is supposed to, which often reduces neck pain faster than traditional methods alone.
Taking the First Step
Neck pain can be frustrating, but it is very fixable with the right approach. A combination of the right strengthening, stretching, and MAT routines often gives people more relief than they have had in years. If you are tired of the cycle of tension and want a plan that is specific to your body, I am here to help.
Reach out to me, Maurice Harden, at Dynamic Fitness & Rehabilitation, anytime, and we can take a deeper look at what is causing your discomfort and what will move you toward long-term relief.