Three bits of advice from having gone through this:
1. You need both stretches and muscle strengthening exercises.
2. Ergonomics while working matter, things like putting your monitor higher will help a lot compared to hunching over a laptop.
3. Consult a physiotherapist. If money is tight then just do a single visit and ask him/her to diagnose and then give you some tailored exercises. You can then do those and might not have to go back.
Not that I know anything ... but I keep thinking about getting a neck brace and wear it when I work on a computer. Seems like a 'simple' fix ... but I have made that mistake before (as in think it is a simple fix).
Three bits of advice from having gone through this:
1. You need both stretches and muscle strengthening exercises.
2. Ergonomics while working matter, things like putting your monitor higher will help a lot compared to hunching over a laptop.
3. Consult a physiotherapist. If money is tight then just do a single visit and ask him/her to diagnose and then give you some tailored exercises. You can then do those and might not have to go back.
I'd echo at least seeing a therapist even to get a single diagnosis just to make sure there's nothing more serious going on.
My personal recommendation is to look into the short exercise book "Treat Your Own Neck" by the late physical therapist Robin McKenzie.
surgery-free, ballroom dance teacher fixed mine with insults and side-eye
Not that I know anything ... but I keep thinking about getting a neck brace and wear it when I work on a computer. Seems like a 'simple' fix ... but I have made that mistake before (as in think it is a simple fix).