Skip to main content

Restore & Reset — Session 4

This 25-minute beginner workout focuses on 25 minute beginner flexibility for spine and hips. Led by Jessica Casalegno, it targets spine, hips, shoulders with evidence-based exercises designed for women of all fitness levels.

Exercise Breakdown

19 exercises in Session 4

Flexibility14 exercises
14m 16s
0:15
Easy Pose with Neck Stretch

The more you walk your right fingertips out on the mat, the deeper that pull will be.

neckspinehipsshoulders
low
1:51
Seated Side Bend with Knee Anchor

Keep your right hand attached to the left knee.

spineshoulderships
low
2:26
Seated Spinal Twist

Float your left hand behind your back, push right hand towards left knee.

spineneckshoulders
low
2:46
Seated Rotated Backbend

Ribs stay rotated towards the ceiling.

spinechestshoulders
low
4:10
Seated Cat-Cow Variation

Flex your spine forward, open up your chest, neck, and throat.

spineneckchest
low
5:10
Seated Forward Fold with Leg Swap

Crawl those fingertips out as far as they can reach.

hipslower back
low
6:31
Butterfly Stretch

The more you can keep your back flat instead of arched, the better it is.

inner thighshipsspine
low
7:21
Seated Windshield Wipers

Without moving your ankles, drop your knees on one side of your mat.

hips
low
8:11
Seated Wrist and Shoulder Stretch

Bend through the elbows, lean back into the shoulders.

wristsforearmsshoulders
low
8:51
Seated Forward Fold with Point and Flex

Inhale, flex your feet, pull toes in towards your torso.

hamstringscalvesankles
low
10:00
Cat-Cow

Pull your tail under like you're pulling a tail in between your legs.

spinecoreneck
low
12:21
Thread the Needle

Thread the needle all the way through, dropping right cheek down.

upper backshouldersspine
low
16:30
Pyramid Pose

All ten toes to face in the same direction and both feet flat.

hamstringshipsspine
medium
21:41
Lizard Lunge

Walk the hand to the inside of the foot.

hipship flexorsinner thighs
medium
Balance2 exercises
2m 18s
11:01
Bird-Dog with Quad Stretch

Kick into the hand, opening up through your chest.

coreshouldersquadsspine
medium
18:21
Standing Split with Quad Bind

The more you engage your glute to raise your leg, the better it will be.

gluteshamstringshipsquads
high
Cool-down1 exercise
50s
24:10
Child's Pose

Alleviate the pressure out of your hands.

lower backhipsspine
low
yoga2 exercises
3m 40s
14:00
Downward Facing Dog with Ankle Cross

Exhale to push your knees all the way down towards the mat.

hamstringscalvesshouldersspine
medium
20:20
Triangle Pose

Try to keep our torso all in the same plane of movement.

hipshamstringsspinecore
medium

Muscles Targeted

Primary

spinehipsshoulders

Secondary

hamstringsneckcore

Equipment & Modifications

Equipment Needed

  • mat

Don't Have Equipment?

You can substitute with:

thick towelcarpet

Available Modifications

  • If you cannot reach the feet, no big deal, just continue to flex and point.
  • Tuck your toe under to help maintain balance.
  • Left hand can stay overhead or reach behind to grab the inner thigh.
  • Use props to help assist you to drop your chest down.
  • Hold onto opposite elbows or take reverse prayer for unsupported version.
  • Bend through the knee and reach back to capture the foot for a deeper stretch.
  • Hover the bottom hand to engage the obliques.
  • Lower your back knee if it is too much.
  • Come down onto forearms for a deeper stretch.

Coaching Highlights from Jessica Casalegno

The more you walk your right fingertips out on the mat, the deeper that pull will be.

Form

If you find that you're rounding through your spine, take a moment to reset.

Safety

Keep reaching and pulling to feel the side stretch.

Motivation

Jessica brings a blend of strength and grace. Her sessions balance power with control, and she's especially attentive to shoulder and hip mechanics.

Form

She'll push you hard, then remind you that rest is part of the work.

Form

Health Benefits

Women who want to move freely again. If chronic pain, vaginal dryness sound familiar, the joint mobility work here directly supports your recovery. The spine, hips, shoulders emphasis addresses the most common restriction patterns in women. Beginner level with modifications — depth comes with time, not force.

Relevant For

back painbalancecalvescore strengthflexibilityhip paininsomniajoint painneck painpelvic floorposturesciaticashoulder painstress

Frequently Asked Questions

What muscles does this flexibility workout target?

This session works through spine, hips, shoulders as primary focus areas, with hamstrings, neck, core getting secondary attention. For hip mobility exercises, what matters is the combination of active and passive range of motion work. Jessica Casalegno sequences these 19 movements to progressively open tissue — starting gentle and building depth. A systematic review in Sports Medicine found this progressive approach yields better long-term flexibility gains than aggressive static stretching alone.

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 flexibility workout that make sessions like this effective.

Is this workout suitable for beginners?

Yes. Jessica Casalegno 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 back flexibility exercises that make sessions like this effective.

How long is this flexibility session?

About 25 minutes, including warm-up and cool-down. Jessica Casalegno packs 19 exercises into that window — I want to be honest: 25 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. Jessica Casalegno demonstrates modifications including: If you cannot reach the feet, no big deal, just continue to flex and point.; Tuck your toe under to help maintain balance.; Left hand can stay overhead or reach behind to grab the inner thigh.. 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.

What's the difference between hip mobility exercises and general stretching?

I get this question constantly, and the answer actually matters. General stretching typically targets muscle length in a single plane. Hip mobility exercises works through multiple planes of motion — flexion, extension, rotation, lateral movement — to improve how your joints actually function in daily life. This session uses active range of motion challenges alongside passive holds. Jessica Casalegno's sequencing moves through spine, hips, shoulders in patterns that mirror real-world movement. A shoulders and arms workout approach addresses not just muscle flexibility but joint capsule mobility, fascial glide, and neuromuscular coordination. That's why you'll feel improvements in how you move, not just how far you can reach.

How often should I do this flexibility workout?

3-4 times per week is the sweet spot for flexibility work. Your tissues need time to adapt and remodel — daily intense flexibility training can actually be counterproductive if you're not giving connective tissue time to recover. Alternate this session with complementary sessions from the same course. Rest days aren't lazy days — they're adaptation days. The research is clear: progressive overload applies to flexibility just as it does to strength.

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

Flexibility work matters more for women over 35 than most people realize. Collagen production declines starting around age 30, and accelerates during perimenopause as estrogen — which stimulates collagen synthesis — drops. That's why joints feel stiffer, recovery takes longer, and range of motion quietly shrinks. This session counteracts those changes through progressive tissue loading. Jessica Casalegno's approach targets the fascial system alongside muscle flexibility, which research in Frontiers in Physiology (2019) identifies as a critical but often overlooked factor in age-related mobility loss. Consistency here literally changes your tissue architecture.

How does this session address hip flexor strengthening exercises?

Hip flexor strengthening exercises requires a combination of joint mobility and muscular control through range. This session addresses both. Jessica Casalegno includes active flexibility challenges — where you're building strength at end ranges — alongside passive holds for tissue adaptation. That dual approach is what the literature calls 'functional flexibility': not just how far you can go, but how strong and controlled you are at those ranges. A 2020 review in the International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy found that active flexibility training produced better functional outcomes than passive stretching alone.

Related Workouts & Topics

About the Trainer

Jessica Casalegno

Flexibility Trainer

From: Restore & Reset