On: Movement

Note: if you’re a seasoned gym goer, this isn’t going to be for you.

Leggings and trainers on, new t shirt, new attitude.

Old body.

A common problem. You’ve got your new motivation, goals set and defined, but after a couple of days, you’re sore, stiff and tired.

Your body hasn’t had time to learn.

If you haven’t moved and exercised vigorously for a while, then time is needed for your soft tissue to change, to adapt, and begin to grow.

And, if you’re a little older, then you need show your body some love to clear the worst of the scar tissue and old injuries first.

From zero, walk. From walking, move weights, from weights and walking to increased cardiovascular load (running, cycling, swimming, rowing etc) and more frequent / intense weights.

Your overall goal should be 3 -4 sessions a week of decent cardio, with an elevated Heart and Breathing rate, and 2 sessions of Resistance Work. If you do CrossFit in a good box, or circuit training classes, you can get this in one session, but anything is good.

If you find injuries that need addressing, niggles that need support, or want a more individual plan based on your body, experience and goals, then contact us, or a professional near you.

Move, you evolved to.

On: The path to mastery

First there is apprenticeship. A period of learning the basics, preferably from a master. Often boring, often hard work, apparently pointless if you don’t understand the process.

Eventually, you move on, the masters think that you have learned enough to be safe, to go and independently continue to develop your skills. This is the journeyman phase, and can last many more years.

Eventually, you may achieve mastery of your chosen craft and are a craftsman. This doesn’t mean you can stop learning, merely that you are at an expert level.

However, within this is the fact that there are levels even in the mastery and many do not make it beyond journeyman.

You can see this is almost any domain, from programming to medicine, artist to bricklayer. There are a multitude of journeymen who can do a good job, competent, safe, knowledgeable. These people will provide the backbone, the core of work. They should be working toward mastery, honing, polishing, reflecting.

But you will know when you meet a true craftsman. There is the extra moment, the way they handle themselves and their tools, the way they can see a problem and frame a solution.

Aim to be a craftsman in all you do, and aim to work with as many craftsmen as you can. Find the best and mirror, watch not just what they do but what they don’t do. How they hold their hands, and how they hold their body. Listen to your own body and see if it is allowing you to do the job as efficiently. If you’re studying a more cerebral skill, such as programming or an art, look at the surrounding inputs, their environment and their basic toolset.

And then realise that that final element is a gift, one that they have succeeded in realising. But realise also that few find that final boundary, any hard work is rewarded.

Work hard, explore the boundaries and maximise your skills.

Optimise the body, upgrade the mind.

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.

You are what you do.

They presented with a long history of shoulder and back pain, with occasional headaches, particularly in the evening. No other significant complaints, simply a tight and painful upper back, and shoulders, with a stiff neck.

After taking a thorough history and checking pertinent red flags, I carried out a suitable examination, looking at how they used their body, how it wanted to respond passively and actively.

And the thing was, other than the presenting complaint, there wasn’t much to be found. An anteriorised head posture and slightly kyphotic thoracic spine, but nothing much more than you might expect for a modern lifestyle. They exercised frequently, were not obese and tried to optimise their working posture when at a desk.

I treated what I found, and we addressed a few issues, but I was unhappy with their progress, as the complaint didn’t feel like it was resolving along the curve I expected.

Then it clicked. Whenever I went through to reception to collect them, they were playing with their phone. Head slumped forwards on the chest, looking down at the tiny screen and typing or scrolling away.

The problem is, modern expectations are that we are constantly connected, with rewards and punishments meted out by both the device and other people if we do not respond to its electronic siren call. I am as guilty as the next person, at instinctively checking and wasting hours.

It was this small, but frequent behaviour that was causing, in this case, the shoulder pain. Looking down was loading the back of their neck, the shoulders were coming in to support the arms holding close and everything matched when I mimicked them.

However, other than taking the phone away from them, there wasn’t a direct intervention I could do, so instead we discussed possible mitigation strategies, to reduce the automatic reaction, shorten the time spent interacting and change the posture, things that have been shown to work.

Following the rules of three, I suggested:

  • Switching on greyscale. This, interestingly, makes the device far less stimulating, but still allows you to work effectively. It also helps increase battery life on some devices.
  • Clean up the home screen and put apps that distract in a folder so you don’t see them first
  • Turn off notifications for social media applications

The point was simply to create a brain pause that allowed for a moment more reflection before the action, rather than create a wholesale change that would more likely fail.

Having created this awareness and put in some simple measures, we were both very happy to see that the treatment was then far more effective and the presenting issues resolved.

After they had left, I reflected in how the simple actions we do can have profound impacts and that, as practitioners of every discipline, we need to continue to look at the whole person, not just the complaint.

Program design in fitness

Following some recent research, I have been thinking about the way we approach fitness training.There is some evidence that there are 2 modes in the body and we need to activate both for the best output. There is the short time, high intensity work and then the long, slow output.The problem is, when we train with people, we don’t focus on these, we fall onto the middle ground. It’s easy. We don’t need to work hard, we don’t need to push the client. But then they don’t improve, they get disheartened and our reputation isn’t enhanced.

Instead of taking them for a jog around the park, change it up. Make them sweat, push them hard. Use the primal patterns, look at complex movements if they are capable of them. And if they’re not, get them ready.

And then guide them to being more active every day (the long slow stuff). Help them change their diet so they eat clean.

They will see changes and you will enhance your reputation too!