That headline is backwards—good exercises should relieve sciatica pain, not “help you get it.” The right movements can ease pressure on the sciatic nerve and reduce leg pain.
Sciatica usually comes from irritation or compression of the sciatic nerve, often related to issues like lumbar disc herniation or sciatica itself.
Here are 3 simple, effective exercises many people find helpful:
🧘 1. Knee-to-Chest Stretch
What it does: Gently stretches the lower back and relieves nerve pressure
How to do it:
- Lie on your back
- Pull one knee toward your chest
- Hold for 20–30 seconds, switch sides
👉 Keep it gentle—no bouncing.
🧘 2. Piriformis Stretch
What it does: Targets a muscle that can press on the sciatic nerve
How to do it:
- Lie on your back
- Cross one ankle over the opposite knee
- Pull the bottom leg toward your chest
- Hold 20–30 seconds
🧘 3. Cat–Cow Stretch
What it does: Improves spinal mobility and reduces stiffness
How to do it:
- On hands and knees
- Arch your back up (cat), then dip it down (cow)
- Move slowly with your breath
⚠️ Important tips
- Movements should not increase sharp pain
- Stop if pain shoots down your leg
- Consistency matters more than intensity
🟡 When to be careful
Avoid self-treatment if you have:
- Severe or worsening pain
- Weakness in the leg
- Numbness in the groin area
- Loss of bladder/bowel control (urgent medical issue)
🟢 Bottom line
The right exercises can reduce sciatica pain over time, but they must be done gently and correctly. There’s no instant fix—but regular, controlled movement helps most people improve.
If you want, describe exactly where your pain runs (back, buttock, down the leg), and I can tailor these exercises more precisely for you.