Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

EARN IT Evolution Academy

14 members • Free

3 contributions to EARN IT Evolution Academy
Joy of Movement Chapter One Notes
Like the author, I have had a deep connection to exercise as long as I could remember. It started as loving to play outside, climbing, running, jumping and riding bikes. Grew through athletics both team sports and imitating my father when he started running local races and marathons and blossomed into a career both as an athlete and personal trainer. I am compiling my highlights but wanted to put up some talking points. Here's a summary from Cathy of Chapter One to get you started... Summary: Chapter 1 of The Joy of Movement Core Idea Movement is not just something we should do for health—it is something we are biologically wired to enjoy, connect through, and find meaning in. The modern problem isn’t that exercise is hard. It’s that we’ve been taught to see movement as: - punishment - obligation - a tool for weight loss - or a chore tied to discipline Instead of what it actually is:👉 A natural source of joy, connection, and psychological well-being Key Concepts from Chapter 1 1. The “Exercise = Suffering” Myth is Learned - Many people associate movement with: gym class trauma punishment workouts weight loss pressure - This creates a mental barrier, not a physical one 👉 The issue isn’t your body—it’s your conditioning 2. Humans Are Wired for Movement Pleasure - Movement triggers: dopamine (motivation/reward) endorphins (feel-good) endocannabinoids (calm + euphoria) This is what people call:👉 “runner’s high” (but it applies to many forms of movement) 3. Joy Comes From the Experience, Not the Outcome People who stick with movement long-term: - focus on how it feels - not just what it does (fat loss, aesthetics, etc.) 👉 Outcome-driven = inconsistent👉 Experience-driven = sustainable 4. Movement is a Form of Connection Movement connects us to: - our bodies - other people - shared effort and rhythm This is why: - group fitness works - sports build bonds - synchronized movement feels powerful 5. Redefining “Exercise” Changes Everything
0 likes • Mar 27
I have enjoyed movement as play as a kid- bike riding, tree climbing, exploring nature. I had no organized sports as a teen, but picked up racquetball and strength training in the Navy. Walking and hiking since in Las Cruces led me to prep for the Needles hike and being able to do that felt powerful and led to walking the Camino de Santiago for 33 days. Then came powerlifting which also gives a high.
Tai Chi Trombone Presentation
Here's our presentation from this weekend in Lubbock...https://youtu.be/xon8SkKhUaI
0 likes • Jan 20
Very nice job!
Practice One PDF
For our first couple of practices, we will work on the opening sequence and the fundamentals of the first few postures. We will have a portion of practice focused on the moves by themselves in what I refer to as 'dojo style' that mimics learning any martial art practice. The second portion is working the sequence as a unit in what I call 'flow style' to practice the moves and transitions.
0 likes • Oct '25
Thanks for adding this.
1-3 of 3
Ann Mcphee
1
5points to level up
@ann-mcphee-5170
OWL

Active 24d ago
Joined Oct 13, 2025