Healthy Hips = Stronger Spine!

May 18, 2026
 

 

Tl;dr

Dynamic hip stabilising exercises build on static control by adding movement. They train your ability to maintain posture, alignment, and muscle activation while the body is in motion. The goal is smooth, controlled hip movement, which helps support the lower back because the spine sits on top of the hips.

 

Why is hip stability important for the lower back?

The idea behind this approach is simple: the lower back sits on top of the hips. So if the hips are unstable, the spine above them must work harder to compensate.

When the hips are stable, the lower back is in a better position to stay controlled and supported during movement. That is why so much of this work focuses on building control at the hip first, rather than jumping straight into spinal loading or core exercises.

What are dynamic hip stabilising exercises?

Dynamic hip stabilising exercises are the next step on from static stability work. In the earlier stage, the focus is on getting the basics right, that’s ...

Continue Reading...

What is the McGill Method? It's not what the internet is telling you

Apr 16, 2026
 

 Tl;dr

The McGill Method is not just the “Big 3” exercises. It is a process of assessment and clinical thinking used to understand what triggers or relieves low back pain. It involves identifying patterns through questions, physical assessment, and ongoing evaluation, then selecting the right tools (like the Big 3) only when appropriate. The key idea is that assessment never stops - even during rehabilitation.

 

What is the McGill Method really about? Is it just the “Big 3” exercises?

Most people misunderstand the McGill Method and reduce it to the “Big 3” exercises. 

However, the Big 3 are just tools, not the method itself.

The McGill Method is actually a process of assessment and a way of thinking about low back pain problems and how to solve them.

The Big 3 are simply one set of tools that can be used, if they are appropriate for the individual case.

They sit “on a shelf,” and are selected only when needed, for example, if assessment suggests spinal instability.

They are no...

Continue Reading...
Close

50% Complete

Two Step

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.