What Is an EveryDay Athlete?
June 29, 2026

A new way of thinking about movement, healthy aging, and preparing your body for the life you want to live.
When you hear the word athlete, what comes to mind?
Maybe it’s an Olympian.
A marathon runner.
A professional basketball player.
Someone who spends hours in the gym every day.
For a long time, I thought so too.
But after more than two decades of teaching movement, I’ve come to believe something very different.
I believe we’re all athletes.
Not because we compete.
Because every single day, life asks something of our bodies.
We carry groceries.
We climb stairs.
We play with grandchildren.
We kneel in the garden.
We lift laundry baskets.
We walk the dog.
We reach into the back seat of the car.
We catch ourselves when we trip.
We get up from the floor.
Those aren’t competitions.
They’re life.
An EveryDay Athlete simply chooses to prepare for it.
Aging Changes the Body. That Doesn’t Mean We’re Powerless.
One of the greatest myths about aging is that everything simply declines and there’s nothing we can do about it.
That’s not the whole story.
Yes, our bodies change.
Strength may decrease.
Balance often becomes more challenging.
Recovery can take longer.
Mobility can slowly diminish if we stop asking our joints to move.
These changes are part of being human.
But they are not the same thing as helplessness.
Our bodies remain remarkably adaptable throughout our lives.
We can support them.
We can challenge them.
We can maintain important qualities.
In many cases, we can improve them.
The goal isn’t to become twenty-five again.
The goal is to become the kind of older adult who continues saying “yes” to life.
That’s where the EveryDay Athlete philosophy begins.
Body Literacy Changes Everything
Most people think about exercise by asking,
“What workout should I do?”
I think there’s a better question.
“What does my body need?”
That’s Body Literacy.
Body Literacy is learning to understand your body well enough to make intentional choices instead of simply following workouts.
It’s recognizing the qualities that help us move well, recover well, adapt well, and continue doing the things we love.
When you understand those qualities, exercise stops feeling random.
It becomes purposeful.
Every Exercise Program Has Strengths.
Every Exercise Program Has Blind Spots.
This might be one of the most important lessons I’ve learned after teaching thousands of classes.
Running is wonderful.
Yoga is wonderful.
Pilates is wonderful.
Strength training is wonderful.
Swimming is wonderful.
Walking is wonderful.
Pickleball is wonderful.
Every one of them develops valuable qualities.
Every one of them also emphasizes certain qualities more than others.
That’s not criticism.
It’s simply how our bodies adapt.
Instead of asking,
“Which exercise is best?”
I prefer asking,
“What qualities is this helping me develop…and what qualities might benefit from a little more attention?”
That one question changes everything.
Because now we stop judging movement.
We start understanding it.
Think About Your Movement Like an Investment Portfolio
If I wouldn’t put my entire retirement into one investment, why would I expect one type of movement to prepare my body for everything life asks of it?
Most of us understand that a strong financial portfolio isn’t built by putting everything into one place.
We diversify.
Not because one investment is bad.
Because different investments contribute different strengths.
Movement works much the same way.
A financial portfolio…
- isn’t built overnight.
- grows through consistent investment.
- becomes more resilient through diversification.
- reflects your long-term goals.
- needs occasional rebalancing.
- prepares you for the future.
Now think about your body.
A movement portfolio…
- isn’t built overnight.
- grows through consistent practice.
- becomes more resilient through movement diversification.
- should reflect the life you want to live.
- needs occasional rebalancing as your body changes.
- prepares your future body—not just today’s workout.
I absolutely love a challenging workout.
I enjoy getting stronger.
I enjoy sweating.
I enjoy feeling capable.
This philosophy isn’t about doing less exercise.
It’s about doing more complete exercise.
If you love running…
Keep running.
Let’s also make sure you’re investing in strength, mobility, balance, coordination, and recovery.
If you love lifting weights…
Fantastic.
Let’s also invest in movement variety, adaptability, and mobility.
If you love yoga or Pilates…
Wonderful.
Let’s also make sure you’re building the strength, balance, power, and resilience your future body will appreciate.
The goal isn’t to replace the movement you love.
It’s to complete it.
Build a More Complete Body for the Life You Want to Live
This is what The EveryDay Athlete is really about.
Not perfect workouts.
Not chasing soreness.
Not trying to “exercise harder.”
It’s about preparing your body for real life.
For hiking.
For traveling.
For gardening.
For carrying groceries.
For playing with grandchildren.
For recovering after a stumble.
For getting up off the floor confidently.
For continuing to say yes to the life you love.
Movement isn’t simply something we do to burn calories or check a box.
It’s one of the most meaningful investments we’ll ever make in our future selves.
Because every workout…
Every walk…
Every strength session…
Every balance exercise…
Every mobility practice…
Every recovery day…
Is another investment in the body that will carry you through tomorrow.
That’s what it means to become an EveryDay Athlete.
And I think that’s a journey worth investing in.
Start Building Your Movement Portfolio
If this way of thinking about movement resonates with you, I’d love to invite you to download my free EveryDay Athlete Checklist.
It’s a simple guide that introduces the essential movement qualities your future body depends on and helps you begin thinking about your own movement portfolio.
Because becoming an EveryDay Athlete isn’t about finding the perfect workout.
It’s about learning how to build a more complete body for the life you want to live.
👉 Download your free EveryDay Athlete Checklist here.
Until next time…
Keep Moving, Stay Curious, and Take Good care of Yourself!
Similar Posts

July 13, 2026
Your Body Is Talking. Are You Listening?
Most of us were taught how to exercise. Very few of us were taught how to understand our bodies. Have you ever noticed how one part of your body keeps...

July 6, 2026
Body Literacy: The Skill That Gives You a Say in How You Age
What if one of the most important skills you could develop as you age isn’t strength, flexibility, or even balance? What if it’s learning to understand your body? I call...

June 29, 2026
What Is an EveryDay Athlete?
A new way of thinking about movement, healthy aging, and preparing your body for the life you want to live. When you hear the word athlete, what comes to mind?...

June 22, 2026
What Flamingoes and Weebles Can Teach Us About Aging Well
If you’re of a certain age, you probably remember the Weebles. You know, those funny little toys that wobbled all over the place but somehow never fell down. “Weebles wobble,...

June 15, 2026
The Hidden Choices That Shape How You Age
Most people think aging happens all at once. One day you’re young. The next day your knees hurt, you need reading glasses, and you’re making noises every time you stand...

June 8, 2026
Aging Can Feel Scary—But Here’s What We Can Control
June 9, 2026 Aging Can Feel Scary—But Here’s What We Can Control Let’s be honest for a minute. Aging can feel scary. Things change. Sometimes very unexpectedly. You wake up...

June 1, 2026
Your Body Was Designed for Variety — Not Just Exercise
Most people think about movement in terms of exercise. We ask questions like: And while those are all worthwhile questions, I think there’s a much bigger conversation that often gets...

May 25, 2026
What IS Functional Movement? (And Why It Matters More As You Age)
Somewhere along the way, many people started believing that getting older automatically means becoming weaker, stiffer, less capable, and more fragile. And honestly…I don’t believe that’s the whole story. Now,...

May 18, 2026
Your Low Back Isn’t the Problem: 3 Things Your Body Is Trying to Tell You
Low back pain has become one of the most normalized problems in modern life. People expect stiffness when they wake up.They expect aching after sitting.They expect their back to “go...

May 11, 2026
Why Your Back Still Hurts: Hips, Core Timing & Movement Coordination
Low back tightness is incredibly common. And for many people, the instinct is immediate: Stretch the back.Crack the back.Massage the back. But what if the low back isn’t actually the...
