Mobility Warmup Designer
Health & Safety Boundary
This skill offers general movement-organization prompts for everyday comfort. It does not prescribe exercise for injuries or medical conditions, provide physical therapy, diagnose mobility limits, create rehabilitation plans, or replace clinician guidance. Stop any movement that causes pain, dizziness, chest discomfort, numbness, or unusual symptoms.
When to Use / When Not to Use
Use this skill to sketch a gentle warmup before ordinary walking, desk breaks, morning movement, or evening wind-down.
Do not use it for acute injury, post-surgical recovery, unexplained pain, balance problems, neurological symptoms, pregnancy-specific restrictions, or return-to-sport clearance.
What is Mobility
Mobility is comfortable control through a range of motion. Flexibility refers more to available range, while stability refers to control and support. A warmup usually starts easy, moves gradually, and prepares the body for the next activity.
Warmup Design Principles
Start small, move joint by joint, keep breathing steady, match the warmup to the next activity, avoid sharp pain or neurological symptoms, and ask a professional about persistent limitations.
Movement Menu by Body Area
| Body area | Gentle options to consider |
|---|---|
| Neck | Slow look left and right, chin nods, ear-toward-shoulder range without forcing. |
| Shoulders | Shoulder rolls, arm circles, wall slides within comfort. |
| Spine | Cat-cow style motion, seated rotations, side bends without strain. |
| Hips | Hip circles, marching in place, gentle lunge position shifts. |
| Knees | Easy knee bends, supported sit-to-stand, heel slides. |
| Ankles | Ankle circles, heel raises, toe raises, calf movement. |
Routine Templates
Morning: neck, shoulders, spine, hips, ankles, then easy walking. Pre-walk: ankles, calves, hips, marching, then a slow start. Desk break: neck, shoulders, wrists, spine, and standing hip shifts. Evening: slow breathing, spine motion, hips, calves, and relaxed stretches.
Safety Prompts
Ask whether the movement is comfortable, whether you are holding your breath, whether the feeling is mild stretch or pain, whether support is needed, and whether a clinician or physical therapist would be more appropriate.
Progression Prompts
Add variety before intensity. Consider changing order, duration, or areas covered. Keep the routine easy to stop or modify.
When to Consult a Physical Therapist
Seek professional guidance for persistent pain, repeated joint locking, instability, falls, numbness, weakness, swelling, post-injury limitations, or uncertainty about whether movement is appropriate.