On: Consistency

You are what you do.

Not what you think, read, talk about or present online. They all play a role in your self talk, but they are not you.

You are what you do. Just as your body is made up of what you consume, your mind is as well.

Choose your inputs for your desired outputs.

Want to be functionally more effective? Model those who are, with applied thought. Want a different path? Observe, reflect, change and do.

Not everyone has the physiology to be an Olympic athlete, not everyone has the mental capacity to be a theoretical physicist, but you are far more capable than you think.

So find those current boundaries and explore them, supporting yourself with good inputs, solid relationships and measurable outputs.

We are here to help you start that journey, from physical therapies to starter PT concepts.

Upgrade the mind, optimise the body.

On: fitness to survive

Being fit is a good idea.

The fitter you are, the more likely you are to…. quite frankly be better at everything.

Of course, fitness is defined as suitable to a role or task, but in this case, we are talking about optimal health and well-being, in all areas.

Research shows repeatedly that the fitter you are overall, the greater your capacity and capability, even down to surviving and recovering from major trauma. One study even showed that, of those who experienced whiplash, the fitter people recovered faster and with less negative outcomes 6 months on than those who rated lower on activity scales.

You also are more likely to respond effectively to stress and mental pressure, since the body cannot differentiate easily, and only has a few responses available.

Fitness doesn’t have to be all leggings, crop tops and pouting in the mirror, neither does it have to be muscles, grunting and maximal exertion. It’s about building a base capacity, optimising power to weight ratio and being more capable.

So, if you’re struggling, start by doing something.

We have a starter plan we regularly offer to clients that simply involves:

  • Walking for 10 minutes at a brisk pace
  • Then:
  • Stepping up and down for 20 steps on each leg
  • Touching the floor then reaching for the sky, 10 times on each side
  • 10 Wall pushups
  • 10 Standing rows (squeezing the muscles at the end), no load, just controlling the muscles.
  • Repeat the movements 3-5 times
  • 10 minutes brisk walking

Simply by adding load in, and changing the movements for more dynamic ones, that can be almost infinite in scope. Steps become lunges, wall pushups become burpees, rows become pull-ups, floor to sky becomes a dumbbell snatch, walking becomes running and skipping.

Move. Improve your capacity, capability and resilience. Become more human, upgrade the software, optimise the hardware.

Of course, before beginning any health journey, if you haven’t moved for a while, seek professional medical support first to clear you for takeoff.

Onwards and towards a better healthspan.

On: The cost of entry

You can do anything you put your mind to. Dream, believe, achieve. Hustle and grind. All of these are worthy motivational statements. And all ignore the cost of entry and the cost of continuation.

This is the effort, time and material required to even start on the path, and maintain momentum. If you want to set up a small business, there is the initial outlay for kit and materials, even if you are working from your kitchen table (often things you don’t expect), as well as the energy required to become proficient and the time required to learn business management. If you want to become a personal trainer, first you need to get qualified then find a stable clientbase. Become an astronaut or surgeon? Start planning from as young as possible because the baseline requirements are so high.

How does this apply to movement and motivation? If you want to start doing something active, the cost of entry doesn’t have to be high. You probably already have a pair of shorts, leggings, trainers and a top that will start and if you find something you enjoy, the cost of continuation will be low, since the cost / benefit equation is biased favourably.

Remove the roadblocks one by one and you will get there, wherever you define there to be.

On: Finishing

Start with the end in mind. Easily said, not always easily carried out. And sometimes you will never finish.

Putting up a shelf, yes. It may be technically challenging, if you don’t have the requisite skills, but it is specific and attainable.

When it comes to health and longevity, there is no endgame before death.

Instead, flip the problem.

Check in with each decision to see if it will contribute to the desired outcome (not dying early / staying healthy for longer). Smoking / Vaping? No. A third beer? No. A walk during your lunch break? Yes. Salad over chips? Yes. Making art over scrolling mindlessly? Yes.

We cannot change our genes, we can’t avoid the end, but we can influence the small things that add up.

Choose life every day, simplify and allow space for the universe to give you things.

On: Beyond movement

There are the eight prescribed movement patterns: flex, extend, rotate, push, pull, squat, lunge, walk.

But beyond that is the ability to do them smoothly and under load.

For example, when out walking, without losing step, run your fingers along the ground. That involves walking, flexing, lunging and an element of rotation.

Now repeat the action raising your hand over head to touch a tree leaf. Again, walking, extending, rotation.

The more complex the move, the more we challenge our neuromuscular system, the less spare capacity we have and greater the risk of subtle injury due to compromise.

Therefore, we should train these elements. Not just the standard gymrat moves, but through play.

Look at an object and play with it. A plate carried overhead. A tree branch that can be climbed on or over, or under. A line on the pavement to walk along, skip over, or walk backwards over.

Look at the environment as a playground, and use it to improve the way you move.

Injury proof yourself through play.

We can get better

Because we’re not dead yet (Turner et al 2015)

You cannot remain in stasis. Even that requires the expenditure of energy, so with no input you will slip into slow decay.

Therefore, choose wisely. Put your shoes on. Expend energy in a positive direction. Get better at something. Move more, eat fewer junk snacks, spend less time scrolling mindlessly, spend more time reading and learning.

Make that choice every day. It’ll be worth it.

On: Delayed Gratification

There is a relatively well known psychological study where the experimenters place a marshmallow, or other tempting treat, on a plate in front of a child.They then leave the room, promising that, if that item is still there when they return, the child can have more of them. Of course, many of the children cannot resist the sweet and will consume it immediately. Others find ways to distract themselves until the adult returns.

What is particularly interesting is that those who are able to delay gratification and not eat the sweet tend to do better in other areas of life as they grow and develop, as though this skill is transferable.

Almost everyone struggles with weight loss. We all know the benefits of optimising our weight for health, but the reality is that the process is incredibly challenging. At least with a marshmallow you get 2 when the tester returns, in weight loss you simply don’t get negative things a long way down the line. Frankly, its is the ultimate delayed gratification, if we ignore the Abrahmic concepts of Heaven. The true payoff comes at the end of a life hopefully well lived, when you perhaps get to enjoy a longer healthspan.

Assuming that the rest of the body’s homeostatic mechanisms (hormonal balance, neurochemistry, renal function, cardiac function etc) are correct, then for all the diet tea adverts and weight loss pills, weight management really is an energy management equation with no shortcuts. Precisely how that energy is composed and therefore how your body uses it is another matter, but for the purposes of most people’s understanding, if you consume more than you require, if goes in the baggage and you end up carrying it around, leading to pain, dysfunction, and increased risk of disease and early death.

However, don’t eat that nice pizza / pasta / curry / noodle bowl or we may have to chop your leg off in 20 years time doesn’t ring true with the hungry monkey deep inside who thinks that tomorrow might not come either, food is scarce and resources need to be hoarded. We struggle to make the long term interventions that will make a difference because the pay off simply doesn’t exist on most people’s radar.

To manage the monkey, we need to work with it, not try to beat it. Eat a little less (especially energy dense, processed foods) move a little more, use resistance training to optimise muscle mass and reward yourself for the small wins. Just don’t obsess over the scales and remember there are no cheat days.

On: Ladders

Imagine, if you will, a nagging knee pain. Not to the point of limiting daily activity, but certinly limiting sporting activity.

What is the first approach? And if that doesn’t work?

In general, you can imagine a ladder: Physical, Chemical, Surgical. This is not unlike Galen’s idea of lifestyle, (regimen) pharmaceutical (drugs) and surgical (I have moderised it slightly) which, if nothing else demostrates continuity of thought for a good 1500 years.

In the case of the knee pain, the first step is to either seek professional input to correct any functional imbalances, or work on them yourself. If it is more inflammatory, then pain managment and anti-inflammatories can assist, especially if you subsequently require suppport from a rheumatologist. Only when all other options have been attempted, then consider surgery.

Surgery is interesting conceptually. It does not fix anything. If fact, no form of medicine ever heals the body. It simply creates the space and capacity, by supporting homeostasis, to allow the body to fix itself. So a surgeon cannot fix your knee, they can simply aim to restore function and reduce pain, whether through arthroscopy or replacement. And for most, that is sufficent.

How do we fit into this picture? We offer 20 years of physical therapy and functional rehabilitation experience, including pre and post surgical, information and support.

On: Minimal effective dose

There will be an optimum point of effectiveness. The sweet spot where the amount of effort invested produces the optimal return. Improvements continue with more effort invested, up to a certain point, after which you will break.

Of course, there is also a dose response and overload repair argument going on, but most of those are only relevant in athletic or persuits where physical performance is paramount.

This also, I realise, is the same for medication. Too little paracetamol is ineffective, too much leads to liver failure. Just right leads to resolution.

To identify your dose, first choose your objective. Then look at the input parameters, and define the ones you can control versus the ones you cannot. Read what previous people have found efficatious. Sit down and chat with an expert. Then apply, record, reflect, review. Consistency is key.