3 Month Supine with Leg Lowering
for Core Stability & Low Back Control
A DNS-based core stability progression prescribed by Dr. Dockery to train deep abdominal pressure, hip control, and lumbar stabilization — one leg at a time.
What Is the 3 Month Supine with Leg Lowering?
The 3 Month Supine with Leg Lowering is a core stability progression rooted in Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilization (DNS) — a rehabilitation approach based on the developmental movement patterns that humans naturally use in the first year of life. The “3 month supine” refers to the position a healthy three-month-old infant assumes: on their back, hips and knees at 90 degrees, spine neutral, deep core muscles pressurized and active.
The leg lowering component adds a controlled challenge to that foundational position. By slowly lowering one leg toward the floor while keeping the low back flat and intra-abdominal pressure maintained, the exercise trains the deep stabilizing system — the diaphragm, pelvic floor, transverse abdominis, and multifidus — to work together as an integrated unit under load.
The goal is not range of motion. It is quality of stabilization: how far can you lower your leg before your low back loses contact with the floor, your ribs flare, or your hip begins to click or pinch? According to research on lumbopelvic stability, coordinated deep core activation is one of the most important factors in chronic low back pain prevention and recovery.
Common Conditions This Exercise Addresses
Dr. Dockery commonly prescribes this exercise for patients dealing with any of the following:
Clinical note: This exercise is a natural progression from the basic 3 Month Supine / 90-90 Breathing position. Patients should be comfortable maintaining a flat low back and proper abdominal pressure in the static position before adding leg movement.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Move slowly and with full control. You should feel gentle abdominal engagement — not gripping, bracing, or breath-holding. If your low back arches, your ribs flare, or you feel hip clicking or pinching, reduce your range of motion or return to the static 90/90 position first.
Set up your position
Lie on your back on a firm surface. Bring both hips and knees to approximately 90 degrees — feet in the air, shins parallel to the floor. Let your low back settle gently flat against the floor. Keep your neck long and chin slightly tucked.
Create abdominal pressure
Gently expand your abdomen in all directions — front, sides, and back — as if you are “ballooning” it outward. This is intra-abdominal pressure, not sucking in. You are pressurizing the cylinder of your core, not flattening it. Maintain this pressure throughout the movement.
Slowly lower one leg
Keeping the knee bent, slowly begin lowering one leg toward the floor. Focus on extending through the hip rather than pulling from the hip flexor. Lower only as far as you can while keeping the low back completely flat and the abdominal pressure intact.
Return and repeat
Bring the leg back to the starting 90-degree position before lowering the opposite leg. Alternate sides with slow, deliberate movement. Complete 10 repetitions per leg as a starting point, provided the movement stays quiet, controlled, and pain-free.
Key Technique Points to Focus On
Watch the Technique
Why This Exercise Works
Frequently Asked Questions
This content is for educational purposes only and should not replace individualized care. Stop this exercise if symptoms worsen, and consult Dr. Dockery or your healthcare provider if you are unsure whether it is appropriate for your condition.
Build a Stronger, More Stable Core in Livonia, MI
Exercises like this are most effective as part of a complete DNS-based rehabilitation plan. Dr. Dockery serves patients throughout Livonia, Farmington Hills, Redford, Plymouth, and the greater Wayne County area.

