June 18, 2026

How We Work

How We Work

A Repeatable System From Assessment to Independence

Quick answer

We use a six-stage process: clarify the goal, screen for safety, complete the Movement MRI, design the program, coach and measure progress, then teach long-term independence. The plan changes as your body, schedule and goals change.

Stage 1: Clarify the Outcome

“Get in shape” is too vague to guide a high-quality program. We turn broad goals into useful targets, such as:

  • Lose body fat while preserving strength
  • Perform controlled push-ups
  • Walk stairs without stopping
  • Return to golf twice per week
  • Improve single-leg balance
  • Train around a provider-approved limitation
  • Complete a 5K
  • Build a travel routine
  • Reduce waist measurement over a defined period

Stage 2: Screen for Safety and Scope

We review health history, symptoms, injuries, surgery, medication, previous care and exercise readiness. We decide whether the client can begin, needs modifications or should obtain medical clearance.

We do not diagnose or treat medical conditions. A responsible referral is a sign of quality.

Stage 3: Assess Movement and Capacity

The Movement MRI may examine:

  • Breathing and bracing
  • Posture and alignment
  • Foot and ankle control
  • Squat and hinge mechanics
  • Stepping and single-leg control
  • Pushing and pulling
  • Shoulder and upper-back movement
  • Rotation
  • Balance and coordination
  • Basic strength and conditioning

Not every client performs every test. The assessment is adapted to ability and safety.

Stage 4: Build the Program

The plan specifies:

  • Training days
  • Session length
  • Exercise order
  • Sets, repetitions and rest
  • Tempo and range
  • Intensity targets
  • Modifications
  • Homework
  • Recovery priorities
  • Nutrition actions
  • Progress measures

We explain the plan in plain language.

Stage 5: Coach, Measure and Adjust

During sessions, the coach watches technique, effort, symptoms, recovery and progress. We adjust when equipment is busy, travel changes the week, a movement feels different or the current plan stops producing progress.

Useful coaching is responsive without becoming random.

Stage 6: Build Independence

The long-term goal is not to hide information so you remain dependent. You should learn:

  • How to warm up
  • How to choose exercise variations
  • How to read your program
  • How to adjust load and range
  • How to train while traveling
  • How to recognize warning signs
  • How to maintain progress
  • When to return for reassessment

The Coaching Relationship

You can expect preparation, punctuality, honest feedback and professional boundaries. We expect communication, reasonable effort, respect for policies and early notice when health or scheduling changes affect training.

Progress Reviews

Reviews may occur every four to eight weeks. We compare useful baselines, including:

  • Strength or repetition changes
  • Range of motion
  • Balance
  • Exercise quality
  • Conditioning
  • Body measurements
  • Adherence
  • Energy and sleep
  • Comfort during daily activities
  • Goal-specific performance

Your Plan Should Evolve

Training should change when you improve, travel, change goals, complete medical care, add equipment, enter a new season or need more or less weekly volume.

That is how we turn a workout into a system.