Recovery Day Planner
Health & Safety Boundary
This skill supports general wellness planning for non-medical recovery days. It does not provide post-surgical protocols, injury rehabilitation, illness treatment, return-to-play clearance, medication advice, or medical recovery instructions. Follow your clinician plan for surgery, injury, infection, chronic conditions, pregnancy, or any restricted activity.
When to Use / When Not to Use
Use this skill after ordinary exertion, travel, poor sleep, heavy stress, or a mild non-urgent disruption when you want a gentle planning framework.
Do not use it for chest pain, fainting, breathing problems, fever that concerns you, suspected injury, concussion, severe dehydration, post-operative care, or symptoms that are worsening or unexplained.
What is a Recovery Day
A recovery day is a lower-demand day that gives attention to rest, food, fluids, light movement, and mental space. It is not a medical treatment plan.
Recovery Day Components
Consider sleep protection, practical hydration reminders, familiar meals or snacks, comfortable light movement, reduced optional decisions, and a calmer environment.
Recovery Day Templates
| Scenario | Planning prompts |
|---|---|
| Post-exercise | What feels tired? What can be lighter today? What meals and breaks are easiest? |
| Post-travel | What time zone, sleep debt, movement stiffness, or meal disruption needs attention? |
| Post-illness | What did your clinician advise? What ordinary tasks can wait? What symptoms should you monitor? |
| Heavy stress day | What commitments are essential? What can be simplified? Who can help? |
Light Movement Menu
Only if comfortable, consider easy walking, gentle joint circles, slow sit-to-stand practice, relaxed stretching, or quiet breathing. Stop with pain, dizziness, chest discomfort, or unusual symptoms.
Recovery Day Reflection Prompts
Ask what restored energy, what felt like too much, what signals would prompt medical guidance, what support helped, and what to change before the next high-demand day.
Recovery Red Flags
Seek medical guidance for severe or worsening symptoms, fainting, chest pain, trouble breathing, confusion, new weakness, signs of infection, dehydration concerns, injury, prolonged fever, or recovery that is not following the plan given by your clinician.
Building Recovery into Your Weekly Rhythm
Look ahead for high-demand days and place lower-demand blocks around them. Keep the plan flexible when work, caregiving, travel, or medical guidance changes.