Your Body Was Designed for Variety — Not Just Exercise

Heather Otterbine

June 1, 2026

Most people think about movement in terms of exercise.

We ask questions like:

  • How many steps should I walk?
  • How many days should I strength train?
  • How often should I stretch?
  • What’s the best workout for healthy aging?

And while those are all worthwhile questions, I think there’s a much bigger conversation that often gets overlooked.

Our bodies weren’t designed simply to exercise.

They were designed to adapt.

Real Life Is Variable

Think about your average day.

You might carry groceries from the car.

Reach into a cabinet.

Step over a sleeping dog.

Walk across uneven grass.

Turn quickly when someone calls your name.

Climb stairs while carrying a laundry basket.

Get down on the floor to play with a child or grandchild.

None of those activities happen in a perfectly controlled environment.

Real life is constantly changing.

And our bodies and nervous systems are designed to respond to those changes.

The problem is that modern life often doesn’t provide many opportunities to practice adaptability.

The Challenge of Modern Movement

Many of us spend hours each day sitting.

We drive.

We work at desks.

We look at screens.

We move in the same patterns over and over again.

Even our exercise routines can become highly repetitive.

We walk the same route.

Use the same machines.

Perform the same workouts.

Repeat the same movement patterns week after week.

Now, don’t misunderstand me.

Strength training matters.

Walking matters.

Yoga matters.

Pilates matters.

I teach many of these things myself.

But I believe our bodies need more than repetition alone.

They also need variability.

They need opportunities to coordinate, stabilize, react, adjust, and adapt.

Your Nervous System Learns Through Experience

One of the most remarkable things about the human body is that the nervous system is always learning.

Every movement experience provides information.

When we challenge ourselves with slightly different movement experiences, we give our nervous system opportunities to develop:

  • Better balance
  • Better coordination
  • Faster reactions
  • Greater confidence
  • Improved adaptability

Over time, these experiences help us build movement capacity.

And movement capacity becomes increasingly important as we age.

The Difference Between Being Fit and Being Capable

This is a distinction I think about often.

Someone can exercise regularly and still struggle with certain real-life movement demands.

They may find it difficult to:

  • Walk confidently on uneven terrain
  • React quickly to a loss of balance
  • Carry awkward loads
  • Get up and down from the floor
  • Move efficiently in unpredictable environments

That doesn’t mean they’re failing.

It simply means they may need broader movement experiences.

Fitness is valuable.

But fitness alone is not the same thing as capability.

Why This Matters for Healthy Aging

As I’ve gotten older, my perspective on movement has shifted.

Healthy aging is no longer about chasing fitness trends or pursuing perfection.

It’s about maintaining the ability to participate fully in life.

I want to continue hiking.

Traveling.

Working.

Teaching.

Playing.

Exploring.

Learning.

I want to continue saying “yes” to experiences because my body is capable of supporting the life I want to live.

That’s what functional movement means to me.

Not fancy exercises.

Not circus tricks.

Not perfection.

Capacity.

Small Changes Make a Big Difference

The good news is that movement variability doesn’t require complicated workouts.

Often, it begins with small choices.

You might:

  • Practice balancing while brushing your teeth.
  • Get up and down from the floor more often.
  • Carry groceries instead of always using a cart.
  • Rotate your body more frequently throughout the day.
  • Walk while occasionally changing your gaze or direction.
  • Explore different movement patterns instead of always doing the same thing.

Small moments of variability add up.

Over time, they help keep the body adaptable.

And adaptability is one of the most valuable skills we can maintain as we age.

Exercise Is Practice for Life

This may be the most important idea I can share.

Exercise is not the goal.

Exercise is practice.

The goal is living.

The goal is building a body that supports the activities, experiences, and relationships that matter most to you.

Because your body was designed for more than rigid repetition.

It was designed to adapt.

Reflection Question

What’s one activity you want to continue doing confidently as you age?

Take a moment to think about it.

Your answer might reveal exactly why maintaining movement capacity matters so much.


Want to learn more about Functional Movement and Healthy Aging?

Subscribe to my YouTube channel and join me as we explore strength, mobility, balance, resilience, and the skills that help us continue participating fully in life.

YouTube Channel: @withheatherombodies

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