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The Longevity Coach

19 members • Free

1 contribution to The Longevity Coach
Where To Start
Deep down, you already know you should be working on your mobility. Maybe you do a bit. Nowhere near enough. Cycle of guilt, justification, "I'll start Monday." So today, here's three things that actually work. 1. Try more than once. Failing is part of it. "I tried that, didn't work." Did you? Doing something once and quitting because nothing magical happened isn't trying. Pick one thing. Commit to two weeks minimum. A month is better. Track how you feel on day one and day fourteen. Then decide. Three rules while you're in it: - You'll suck at first. Not a reason to stop. - Weird new aches are normal. Sharp or severe pain isn't. Please don't die! - You'll miss days. One miss isn't failure. Just never miss two in a row. 2. Make the habit easier than not doing it. This is straight Atomic Habits (good book), applied to mobility: - Make it obvious. Pick a time. Pick a spot. Stack it onto something you already do, brush teeth, then nerve floss. Coffee, then couch stretch. - Make it attractive. Pair it with something you actually want, a podcast, your favorite drink, a friend doing it with you. - Make it easy. Comfortable clothes you don't have to change out of. Equipment where you train. If 30 minutes won't happen, do 10. If 10 won't happen, do 5. Five beats zero every single time. - Make it satisfying. Track it. Tick the box. Never miss twice. 3. The carrot isn't enough? Try the stick. Some people need a reality check. If you don't take this seriously, you will end up in pain. Not maybe. Will. Sedentary, repetitive lives quietly take your range, year by year, until one day you can't tie your shoes without bracing. Your body is smart and stupid at the same time. It will figure out the lowest-effort way to do anything, even if that path slowly destroys a joint over time. Tight hips? Your low back picks up the bill. Tight shoulders? Your neck does. You get away with it for years. Until you don't. Ask yourself, honestly: Who do you want to be at 60? At 70? At 80?
Where To Start
0 likes • 2d
Oooh, am I the first to comment? I think you’re awesome Gareth, been following you for a while and do your BBL regularly. After my breast cancer surgeries, they took my right lat, which has caused issues but I’m stronger, fitter and more mobile than I’ve ever been. I’ve also totally got rid of my back pain where my lat used to be by sorting out my CNS and realising my brain was keeping me in pain, not my body. Still got right shoulder issues with my weight training which I think stem from being latless (word?) but it’s a work in progress thanks to you. Keep up the awesome work ❤️
1-1 of 1
Karen Powell
1
5points to level up
@karen-powell-2876
53, breast cancer survivor but now fitter and stronger than I’ve ever been, want to continue til I’m old and grey ❤️

Active 4h ago
Joined May 2, 2026