June 18, 2026

The TNOS Methodology

The TNOS Methodology

Assessment Before Intensity. Control Before Speed. Capacity Before Chaos.

Quick answer

TNOS—the Triphasic Neural Mechanical Optimization System—is Elmore McConnell’s framework for personalized fitness. It combines movement assessment, eccentric-isometric-concentric control, coordination and body awareness, mechanical efficiency, progressive strength, conditioning and regular reassessment. TNOS is not medical treatment or diagnostic testing.

The Problem TNOS Was Built to Solve

Fitness is often divided into disconnected pieces. Strength programs chase load. Mobility programs chase range. Group fitness chases intensity. Nutrition programs chase the scale.

The client experiences all of those things in one body.

TNOS was developed to connect movement quality, tissue control, nervous-system skill, strength, conditioning, recovery and real-life goals within one program.

The Movement MRI: The Blueprint

A medical MRI creates images of structures. The Movement MRI does not. It is a branded coaching assessment that observes movement and performance.

It may review:

  • Health and training history
  • Goals and schedule
  • Posture
  • Breathing and bracing
  • Foot and ankle control
  • Squat, hinge and step patterns
  • Pushing and pulling
  • Shoulder and upper-back movement
  • Rotation
  • Balance
  • Basic strength
  • Conditioning
  • Symptom behavior within safe screening limits

The assessment identifies training priorities. It does not diagnose why pain exists.

Pillar 1: Triphasic Control

Every repetition includes three broad actions.

Eccentric

The muscle-tendon system lengthens while controlling force, such as lowering into a squat, landing, decelerating or lowering a weight.

Isometric

The body holds or stabilizes a position, such as pausing in a squat, holding a plank or resisting rotation.

Concentric

The system produces force as muscles shorten, such as standing from a squat, pressing a weight or accelerating.

A client who only trains the lifting phase may miss control needed for deceleration and stability. TNOS uses tempo and pauses strategically, not as gimmicks.

Pillar 2: Neural Skill

Strength is partly a skill. The brain and nervous system organize timing, balance, coordination, force and confidence.

TNOS neural work may include:

  • Slow practice
  • External and internal coaching cues
  • Balance tasks
  • Contralateral patterns
  • Reaction and coordination drills
  • Breathing and bracing
  • Progressive exposure to unfamiliar movement
  • Skill rehearsal under increasing load or speed

This does not mean a trainer is medically “rewiring” the nervous system. It means using practice and progression to improve movement skill.

Pillar 3: Mechanical Efficiency

Mechanical efficiency asks whether the exercise is set up to produce the intended result for this client.

We examine:

  • Stance
  • Grip
  • Foot pressure
  • Joint position
  • Range of motion
  • Tempo
  • Load
  • Equipment
  • Direction of resistance
  • Fatigue
  • Breathing
  • Compensations

Sometimes the solution is not a new exercise. It is a better setup.

The TNOS Phases

Phase 1: Foundational Symmetry

Establish safe baselines, improve awareness, reduce unnecessary compensation and build basic control.

Priorities may include breathing, foot contact, controlled range, left-to-right comparisons, basic strength and confidence.

Phase 2: Postural Resilience

Maintain useful positions and control under longer duration, greater range and moderate load.

Priorities may include isometric control, trunk endurance, hip and shoulder stability, carries, repetition quality and work capacity.

Phase 3: Dynamic Mastery

Express strength and coordination during faster, more complex or goal-specific movement.

Priorities may include power, deceleration, rotation, change of direction, integrated conditioning and performance.

Not every client needs advanced athletic drills. Dynamic mastery is defined by the client’s life.

TNOS Levels

Beginner

Learn positions, movement categories, breathing, tempo and basic habits.

Intermediate

Build load tolerance, volume, unilateral strength, conditioning and independent execution.

Advanced

Develop greater strength, power, complexity, sport carryover and self-monitoring.

Elite

Apply high-level precision and resilience appropriate to the client’s sport, profession or goals.

“Elite” describes the standard of execution, not a promise that every client becomes a professional athlete.

Program Design

A TNOS session may include:

  1. Readiness check
  2. Breathing and movement preparation
  3. Skill or mobility priority
  4. Primary strength movement
  5. Secondary strength or unilateral work
  6. Pull, push, carry, rotate or locomotion
  7. Conditioning when appropriate
  8. Cooldown or recovery
  9. Homework review

The order changes based on goals and needs.

Pain-Aware Training

Pain is complex. It can involve tissue, sensitivity, stress, sleep, fear, workload and medical conditions. A trainer should not claim that every painful area is caused by a distant weak muscle.

TNOS uses a responsible process:

  • Screen symptoms
  • Respect medical restrictions
  • Find tolerable movements
  • Adjust load, range, tempo and frequency
  • Build capacity gradually
  • Track response
  • Refer when symptoms are concerning or persistent

TNOS and Physical Therapy

Physical therapy is a licensed healthcare service. TNOS is a fitness and performance methodology.

TNOS may be used before injury as prevention-focused fitness, after discharge from therapy, alongside care when approved or for general strength, balance, mobility and conditioning.

Do not market TNOS as a replacement for diagnosis, surgery, physical therapy or medication.

Measuring Success

TNOS can track:

  • Movement quality
  • Strength
  • Balance
  • Range of motion
  • Conditioning
  • Body composition
  • Attendance
  • Recovery
  • Confidence
  • Daily function
  • Sport performance

Progress is not reduced to one scale number.

The Personal Body Map

The client should understand:

  • What to prioritize
  • Which exercises work best
  • Which modifications improve comfort or control
  • How to progress
  • How to train while traveling
  • How to maintain results
  • When to seek reassessment or medical care

That knowledge is part of the result.

Begin With the Blueprint

Book the Movement MRI assessment: 305-306-2648.