Warm-up primes your nervous system and joint mobility, making your main work safer and more effective. 2 minutes of activation prevents poor movement patterns and injury risk during the circuit.
Every effective workout follows a progression pattern. Learn the framework that underpins our 15-minute sessions and how to apply it to your practice.
All our workouts follow a proven framework: warm-up activation, movement preparation, primary circuit, and cool-down integration. This structure works for all fitness levels because it prioritizes movement quality over intensity.
Phase 1 primes your nervous system. Phase 2 establishes movement patterns. Phase 3 builds work capacity. Phase 4 facilitates recovery and integration.
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Focus on learning proper movement patterns with controlled tempo. Build awareness of body position, breathing coordination, and fundamental mechanics. No strength targets yet—just clean movement.
Add training volume and tempo variation. Maintain movement quality while increasing work density. Introduce isometric holds and circuit combinations. Body is learning durability.
Combine explosive patterns with high-repetition conditioning. Master complex movement flows. Push metabolic demands while preserving movement integrity.
Adapt training to real life. Mix phases based on recovery, schedule, and goals. Training becomes sustainable habit rather than novelty.
| Phase | Duration | Focus | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Warm-Up | 2-3 min | Activation & prep | Joint circles, light movement, breathing cues |
| Prep | 1-2 min | Pattern practice | Bodyweight rehearsal, movement flow intro |
| Main Work | 9-11 min | Circuit training | 5-8 exercises, timed rounds, controlled pace |
| Cool-Down | 1-2 min | Recovery | Light stretching, breathing work, mind reset |
This template adapts to different focus areas: strength, conditioning, or balanced movement.
Warm-up primes your nervous system and joint mobility, making your main work safer and more effective. 2 minutes of activation prevents poor movement patterns and injury risk during the circuit.
Not recommended. Each phase serves a purpose. Skipping warm-up increases injury risk. Skipping cool-down limits recovery. The framework works because all phases support each other.
Progress when movements feel controlled at your current level for 3-4 weeks of consistent practice. Progression isn't automatic—it's earned through quality repetition and proper movement mastery.