What This Finding Means
When your report notes Inadequate Forward Lean, it is describing how your torso (upper body) stays more upright than expected as you move into your squat.
In a balanced overhead squat, your torso naturally inclines slightly forward to help distribute load through your hips (glutes) and keep your center of mass aligned over your base of support. With inadequate forward lean, your body is choosing a more vertical position, which shifts how force is managed through your joints.
This is not a mistake or a failure. It is simply useful information about your current movement strategy.
What It Looks Like in Your Movement
You might notice this pattern in a few ways:
- Your chest stays very upright as you descend into the squat
- Your hips do not travel back as much as expected
- The movement feels more knee-dominant than hip-driven
- You may feel more effort in the front of your thighs than in your hips
On your report, this may be flagged as a torso position that remains more vertical than the model we compare against.
What Your Body May Be Communicating
This finding often gives us insight into how different muscle groups are coordinating.
In many cases, we see a pattern like this:
Muscles that may be overactive
These muscles may be working more than necessary or staying more “on” than we want:
- Quadriceps (front of your thighs)
- Hip flexors (front of your hips)
- Erector spinae (muscles along your spine that help you stay upright)
Muscles that may be underactive
These muscles may not be contributing as efficiently as they could:
- Gluteus maximus (main hip extensor, your primary glute muscle)
- Hamstrings (back of your thighs)
- Deep core stabilizers (muscles that support your trunk and pelvis)
This does not mean anything is “weak” or “tight” in a fixed sense. It simply reflects how your nervous system is currently organizing movement.
Why This Pattern Matters
Your movement patterns show up everywhere, not just in the squat.
A more upright torso during squatting often means your body is relying more on your knees and less on your hips to absorb and produce force. Over time, this can influence how you move during:
- Sitting down and standing up
- Lifting objects from the ground
- Climbing stairs or hills
- Athletic movements like sprinting, cutting, or jumping
When your hips are more involved, they can share the workload more effectively with your knees and lower back. This tends to support more efficient, resilient movement across daily life and training.
Again, this is not about something being wrong. It is about giving your body more options.
How We Use This Information
At Florida Bodywork, we use findings like inadequate forward lean to guide both Orthopedic Bodywork and Orthopedic Fitness programming.
This helps us:
- Improve how your hips and core contribute to movement
- Support better load distribution through your joints
- Build movement patterns that feel smoother and more natural
- Coordinate care with other professionals when needed
Everything we do is based on what your body is already doing well, and where we can gently expand your capacity.
Supportive Directions That Often Help
Rather than forcing change, we look for ways to support your system so it can choose a more efficient pattern.
Many people with this finding benefit from:
- Gentle mobility work for the hips (especially hip flexors, front of the hips) to allow more natural hip movement
- Activation and coordination work for the glutes (your primary hip muscles) to support a more hip-driven squat
- Movement retraining that encourages a hip hinge pattern (learning to send the hips back while maintaining a supported spine)
These are not rigid exercises or prescriptions. They are general directions we may explore and individualize based on your full assessment.
As always, we move in a way that feels controlled, supported, and pain-free. Your body’s signals matter, and we never push through discomfort.
A Note on Pain and Symptoms
If you are experiencing discomfort in your knees, hips, or lower back during squatting or daily activities, this finding can be a helpful piece of the conversation.
It does not mean this pattern is the cause of your symptoms. It simply gives us more context.
If something feels sharp, persistent, or concerning, that is your cue to pause and seek additional guidance.
Possible Injuries
This section of your report is not a diagnosis. It is a way to highlight patterns that may be associated with certain conditions.
If you have symptoms or concerns, we recommend discussing your results with your primary care provider or another qualified medical professional. You can also bring your report to your sessions with us so we can coordinate care.
For a deeper explanation, visit Understanding Possible Injuries.
How to Talk With Your Provider
If you choose to share your results with a medical provider, clear language helps guide the conversation.
You might say:
- “My movement assessment showed limited forward torso lean during a squat. Can we look at how my hips and core are functioning?”
- “I tend to stay very upright when I squat and feel more work in my knees. What would you recommend evaluating?”
- “Here is my assessment report. I would like to understand how this relates to what I am feeling.”
This keeps the conversation focused, collaborative, and grounded in your actual movement.
What To Do Next
This finding is one piece of your overall movement picture.
To deepen your understanding, you can explore other parts of your report:
- Angles and Alignment
- Findings Overview
- Overactive Muscles
- Underactive Muscles
- Possible Injuries
- Your specific Finding Library posts
Each section adds another layer of clarity so we can build a plan that truly fits your body.
If you are ready, we can take this information and begin shaping a personalized approach through Orthopedic Bodywork and Orthopedic Fitness, always at a pace that respects your body and supports long-term progress.