You're reading this with your head tilted forward right now. Maybe 15 degrees. Maybe 45. You don't feel it because your body has adapted to a position it was never designed to hold for hours at a time.
That adaptation has a name: tech neck (sometimes called text neck or forward head posture). And it's quietly affecting the majority of people who work at desks, scroll on phones, or spend any meaningful time looking at screens.
The biomechanics: why your neck hates your phone
Your head weighs about 10–12 pounds. When it sits directly over your spine, your neck handles that weight effortlessly — it's what it evolved to do.
But the moment your head tilts forward, the effective load on your cervical spine increases dramatically. The math isn't kind:
| Head tilt angle | Effective weight on spine | When this happens |
|---|---|---|
| 0° (neutral) | 10–12 lbs | Looking straight ahead |
| 15° | ~27 lbs | Glancing at a laptop |
| 30° | ~40 lbs | Reading on a phone at desk height |
| 45° | ~49 lbs | Scrolling in your lap |
| 60° | ~60 lbs | Head dropped fully forward |
At 60 degrees, your neck is supporting the equivalent of a small child sitting on your head. For hours. Every day. Your spine didn't sign up for this.
What tech neck actually feels like
Tech neck doesn't announce itself. It accumulates. Most people don't connect their symptoms to posture because the onset is so gradual. Here's what to watch for:
- Chronic neck stiffness — especially by mid-afternoon. That "I need to crack my neck" feeling.
- Headaches — tension headaches originating from the base of the skull, often mistaken for stress or dehydration.
- Upper back and shoulder tension — the muscles between your shoulder blades work overtime to stabilize your forward-leaning head.
- Reduced range of motion — turning your head feels restricted. Looking up feels tight.
- Tingling or numbness — in more advanced cases, compressed nerves can cause sensations in the arms, hands, or fingers.
- Visible posture changes — rounded shoulders, a forward head position, or a slight hunch that wasn't there five years ago.
Stand with your back flat against a wall. Do your heels, butt, shoulder blades, and the back of your head all touch the wall naturally? If your head doesn't touch without effort, you likely have some degree of forward head posture.
Why "just sit up straight" doesn't work
If willpower fixed posture, nobody would have tech neck. The problem isn't that you don't know you should sit straight — it's that your conscious attention is finite and your desk session is 8 hours long.
Within minutes of deciding to "sit up straight," your attention returns to your work, your email, your Slack messages. Your body quietly settles back into the path of least resistance. The slouch returns. You don't notice because the whole point is that you stopped noticing.
This is why alarm-based posture apps often fail too. A buzzer that interrupts you every 20 minutes doesn't build awareness — it builds resentment. You disable it by day three.
What actually helps
There's no single fix. Tech neck is a cumulative problem that responds to a layered approach. Here's what the evidence and practical experience point to:
1. Fix your environment first
Before you do anything else, adjust your physical setup. The single highest-leverage change is raising your screen to eye level. If you're on a laptop, that means an external keyboard and a laptop stand (or a stack of books — this isn't a premium problem). Your eyes should meet the top third of the screen without tilting your head.
2. Move more, stretch specifically
Targeted micro-stretches beat long exercise sessions for desk workers. Two minutes of neck rolls, shoulder blade squeezes, and wrist circles every 45–60 minutes does more for your posture than an hour at the gym on Saturday.
The stretches that matter most for tech neck: chin tucks (retracting your head straight back), doorway chest stretches (opening the front of your shoulders), and upper trapezius stretches (ear toward shoulder, gentle hold). Each takes 30 seconds.
3. Build awareness that doesn't require willpower
This is the gap most people struggle with. You can't consciously monitor your posture for 8 hours. You need something that notices when you forget — and reminds you gently enough that you actually listen.
That's the problem Droop was built to solve. Instead of alarms or scores, it uses quiet visual cues that shift when your posture shifts. When you're aligned, it fades away. When you start to slouch, it reflects that back to you. No data collected, no account needed, no shame.
TikTok's viral "adult tummy time" trend — lying prone on your elbows for 10 minutes a day — is actually well-supported by physical therapists for reversing cervical spine curvature. It's a great active fix. Droop covers the other 8 hours when you're back at your desk and your attention is on work, not posture.
4. Strengthen the posterior chain
Tech neck is fundamentally an imbalance problem: the muscles in the front of your neck, chest, and shoulders get tight and short. The muscles in the back get long and weak. Over time, the tight side wins, pulling your head forward.
Exercises that target the posterior chain — rows, reverse flys, face pulls, and prone Y/T/W raises — rebuild the strength that counterbalances hours of forward flexion. You don't need a gym. A resistance band and floor space are enough.
5. Be patient with the timeline
Most people notice improvement within 2–4 weeks of consistent effort. But fully reversing years of postural habits takes 2–3 months. Don't expect overnight transformation. The goal is progress, not perfection — and the biggest wins come from consistency, not intensity.
The bottom line
Tech neck is real, it's common, and it's the predictable result of asking a body that evolved to move through the world to sit still and stare at rectangles all day. The fix isn't dramatic — it's a combination of a better setup, small movements, and gentle awareness throughout your day.
You don't need to be perfect. You just need something that catches you when you forget.