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Energize Your Day — Workout 1

This 15-minute beginner workout focuses on stretching for beginners. Led by Mish Naidoo, it targets spine, shoulders, hips with evidence-based exercises designed for women of all fitness levels.

Exercise Breakdown

14 exercises in Workout 1

Balance2 exercises
1m 13s
8:06
Standing Hip Circles

Draw your core in a bit more, and then reverse your circle.

hipscoreankles
medium
8:41
Dancer's Pose

Soft bend through the right knee, and I want you to kick this foot into your hand.

quadschestshoulderscoreankles
medium
Cool-down1 exercise
40s
14:00
Seated Torso Circles

Especially if you feel tense in your lower back or tight this morning, this posture helps to release.

lower backhipsspine
low
yoga10 exercises
9m 33s
0:25
Child's Pose

Take a deep breath in through the nose, give me a long sigh out the mouth.

hipslower backshouldersspine
low
1:16
Cat-Cow

As you exhale, we round through the spine, tuck the chin to chest.

spineneckchestshoulders
low
1:56
Flowing Cat-Cow Variation

Bend the elbows slightly, dip your hips to your ribs, look up, open your chest.

spinechesthipsarms
low
2:41
Locust Pose

Squeeze your glutes, squeeze the inner thighs.

lower backglutesinner thighsshoulders
medium
3:21
Downward Facing Dog with Calf Stretch

Spread your palms out wide, melt your chest back.

calveshamstringsspinearmsankles
medium
4:16
Sun Salutations (Surya Namaskar)

Jump or step back to plank. Move your body forward, wrap the elbows in, chaturanga.

full bodycorearmsspine
medium
6:41
Three-Legged Dog to Knee Tucks

Hug your right knee in, shift the body weight forward.

coreshouldersgluteships
medium
7:21
Low Lunge to Crescent Lunge

Palms interlace, and then I'm going to try to pull my chest through the arms.

hip flexorsquadschestcore
medium
11:20
Camel Pose

Roll your shoulders back, move the hips forward, breathe into it.

chestshouldersquadship flexorsspine
medium
12:30
Supine Spinal Twist

With the exhale, shoulders come down. Maybe you close your eyes.

spinelower backhipsshoulders
low
breathing1 exercise
29s
14:41
Final Breathing and Visualization

Close your eyes and visualize the rest of your day, something good that you would like to have happen to you.

full body
low

Muscles Targeted

Primary

spineshoulderships

Secondary

chestcorelower back

Equipment & Modifications

Equipment Needed

  • mat

Don't Have Equipment?

You can substitute with:

thick towelcarpet

Available Modifications

  • blocks
  • hands on lower back for support
  • hands on ankles for deeper stretch

Coaching Highlights from Mish Naidoo

Jump or step back to plank. Move your body forward, wrap the elbows in, chaturanga.

Form

Still squeeze the core, squeeze the glutes. Engage your quads.

Safety

If your right heel touches, lift the right toes. It's a deeper stretch.

Modification

Close your eyes and visualize the rest of your day, something good that you would like to have happen to you.

Motivation

Mish approaches stretching with genuine reverence for the body. She weaves breath into every movement transition and encourages you to listen rather than force. Her style is gentle without being passive.

Form

Her favorite phrase is 'feel the spine get longer'. and she means it literally.

Form

Health Benefits

Anyone carrying tension they didn't ask for. Women managing anxiety, insomnia will find the spine, shoulders, hips focus here addresses exactly the areas where stress lives in the body. Also: anyone who sits at a desk, carries children, or wakes up stiff. This is beginner level — your body sets the pace, not the clock.

Relevant For

anxietyback painbalancecardiovascularcore strengthfatigueflexibilityhip paininsomniametabolismneck painposturesciaticastress

Frequently Asked Questions

What muscles does this stretching workout target?

This routine focuses on spine, shoulders, hips, with secondary lengthening through chest, core, lower_back. When we talk about hamstring stretches, it's not just about muscle length. Mish Naidoo cues fascial release alongside static holds, which targets the connective tissue wrapping around each muscle group. Research published in the Journal of Sports Science shows that consistent stretching of this type improves range of motion by 10-25% over 4 weeks. 14 exercises in 15 minutes gives each area adequate hold time.

Do I need any equipment for this workout?

You'll need: mat. Don't have these? A thick towel on carpet works fine as a mat substitute — I've coached women who started with nothing but a clear floor space and still got results. The equipment here supports comfort and alignment — it doesn't make or break the workout. This aligns with principles of full body stretch that make sessions like this effective.

Is this workout suitable for beginners?

Yes. Mish Naidoo built this for people who are starting or restarting their movement practice. Every exercise has a clear entry point, and she demonstrates modifications throughout. Here's what I tell women who are nervous about starting: the first session is about learning the movements, not about intensity. Your body needs to build motor patterns before it can build capacity. Give yourself three sessions before you judge whether this works for you. This aligns with principles of stretching for beginners that make sessions like this effective.

How long is this stretching session?

About 15 minutes, including warm-up and cool-down. Mish Naidoo packs 14 exercises into that window — I want to be honest: 15 minutes doesn't sound like much. But research from the British Journal of Sports Medicine shows that even 15-20 minutes of structured exercise produces measurable improvements in cardiovascular health and mood when done consistently. It's not about marathon sessions. It's about showing up regularly.

Are there modifications available?

Yes, and this matters more than people realize. Mish Naidoo demonstrates modifications including: blocks; hands on lower back for support; hands on ankles for deeper stretch — I've worked with women recovering from knee replacements, managing chronic pain, dealing with diastasis recti. Modifications aren't 'cheating'. they're how you make the exercise YOUR exercise. The American Physical Therapy Association emphasizes that individualized modification is key to long-term exercise adherence. Skip the ego, take the modification.

How does regular hamstring stretches improve flexibility?

Two things happen when you hold a stretch consistently. First, there's a neurological change — your nervous system learns to tolerate greater range of motion without triggering a protective reflex. That happens fast, often within the first two weeks. Second, structural changes in the muscle and fascia follow. Collagen fibers remodel along lines of stress, and muscle fibers add sarcomeres in series. That takes 4-8 weeks of consistent practice. This session with Mish Naidoo targets spine, shoulders, hips specifically. A cross body shoulder stretch approach like this one works because it doesn't overwhelm any single tissue. Research in the Journal of Physical Therapy Science confirms that daily stretching of 15-30 seconds per muscle group is more effective than infrequent longer holds.

How often should I do this stretching workout?

Daily is ideal — I know that sounds like a lot, but here's why: flexibility gains from stretching are dose-dependent and partially reversible. Skip a week and you lose some of what you built. The good news? This 15-minute session is designed to be sustainable as a daily practice. If daily feels like too much, 4-5 times per week still produces meaningful improvement. A meta-analysis in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports found that stretching 5+ times per week produced significantly greater range of motion gains than 2-3 times per week.

Is this workout suitable for women over 35 or in perimenopause?

Here's something most fitness content ignores: estrogen is a natural anti-inflammatory and contributes to tissue elasticity. As estrogen declines in perimenopause, women often notice increased stiffness, particularly in hips, shoulders, and spine — exactly the areas this session targets. Regular stretching becomes even more important during this transition. It helps maintain joint health, reduces the morning stiffness many women over 35 report, and the parasympathetic activation from slow, breathful movement helps manage the cortisol spikes that accelerate during perimenopause. This isn't optional wellness. For women over 35, it's maintenance.

Can this routine help with upper back and shoulder stretches?

Short answer: yes, but let me explain why. The movements in this session systematically address the areas most commonly involved in upper back and shoulder stretches. Mish Naidoo sequences from general to specific, starting with broader warm-up movements and progressing to targeted holds. Research published in Physical Therapy Reviews shows that this kind of progressive approach is more effective for upper back and shoulder stretches than jumping straight into deep stretches. Your nervous system needs to feel safe before it allows increased range of motion. That's not weakness — that's intelligent biology.

Related Workouts & Topics

About the Trainer

Mish Naidoo

Mish Naidoo

Stretching Trainer

From: Energize Your Day