• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    710 months ago

    You might want to work on that. I had the same posture and I’m pretty sure it contributed (or was just a symptom of) weak glutes and hip muscles, which in turn contributed to inflexibility in my hamstrings.

    Now, after having worked on strengthening my glutes and hip muscles, I sit like a true pro, I’m a lot more flexible and I am overall stronger. Good times all around.

  • @Betch
    link
    610 months ago

    I sit like that on or off camera. As long as the camera angles are good I’m good 🧚‍♀️

    • @TootSweet
      link
      English
      410 months ago

      Came here to say this. If you put it close enough to your face and point the camera up a bit, no-one can tell your posture.

      That said, I’m still waiting for the day when I can deep-fake myself on Zoom to have perfectly-combed hair, good posture, and a collared shirt like the boss requires even when I don’t have perfectly-combed hair, good posture, and/or a collar. And even occasional blinks where the filter fails temporarily are a deal breaker. (Unless I can make the video just look like my internet is fucked and lagging rather than showing me with no filter. That’d be fine.)

      • @Betch
        link
        110 months ago

        Well soon we’ll all be in the Vision Pro world and we’ll be using avatars instead of cameras.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    210 months ago

    Oh man fix it up! I used to put one leg over the other and one day I sudenly stopped being able to move my right foot. Turns out I ruptured a nerve. Was a few months till I could move my foot again! That was one hell of a weird trip to the urgencies, the doctor thought I was having a stroke, I was inside all types of machines for a few hours till they figured it out!

  • hash
    link
    110 months ago

    Leg over the armwrest for me. Why is it so comfy sometimes?

  • Mr Fish
    link
    110 months ago

    Reject humanity. Return to shrimp