Perhaps your thoughts will be swayed by the argument made in this study:
“Benefits of Swaying While Standing to Higher Selective Attention in Goal-Directed Visual Tasks,” Anke Hua, Mélen Guillaume, Sergio T. Rodrigues, Fabio A. Barbieri, and Cédrick T. Bonnet, Human Movement Science, vol. 99, February 2025, article 103318. The authors explain:
“Overall, our finding highlights that short-term tasks (lasting a few minutes) may be performed equally well, and perhaps even better performed when standing than when sitting…. [C]onsistent with our expectation, ANT [attention network test] performance was higher when standing potentially because participants adjusted their sway. In contrast, while sitting, there was no significant correlation between body sway and ANT performance.”