Training principles

Physical literacy for busy adults

Physical literacy is the ability to move well, understand your body, and make good decisions under real-life constraints.

4 min read · by · educational content, not medical advice

What it includes

  • Basic movement competence: squat, hinge, push, pull, carry, brace, and condition with control.
  • Effort awareness: knowing the difference between productive challenge and reckless fatigue.
  • Session judgment: knowing when to push, when to reduce volume, and when to recover.

Why it matters for professionals

  • Busy schedules create interruptions. Competent people restart faster.
  • Travel, childcare, and work pressure mean conditions are rarely perfect.
  • The more physically literate you are, the less dependent you are on ideal circumstances.

How to build it

  • Use repeatable movement patterns and enough repetition to own them.
  • Review technique, pacing, and decision-making, not just sets and reps.
  • Treat the program as skill practice as much as a conditioning tool.