Functional Movement Workshops: Building a Strong Foundation
Master the fundamental movement patterns that'll serve you in fitness and everyday life. We'll walk you through squats, hinges, carries, and pressing — one step at a time.
Why These Four Movements Matter
You don't need fancy equipment or complicated routines. The movements you'll learn here — squats, hinges, carries, and presses — are the building blocks. They're the patterns your body actually uses. Getting them right now saves you from pain later and opens doors to every type of training you might want to try.
We've built these workshops around real adults who are getting back into fitness after time away. Not everyone comes in athletic. Some people haven't lifted anything heavier than groceries in years. That's completely fine. You'll move at your own pace and build real strength from day one.
The Four Foundational Patterns
The Squat
Your knees, hips, and ankles working together. We'll start with bodyweight, then add load. It's about sitting back, chest up, and controlled descent. Most people feel stronger legs within two weeks of consistent practice.
The Hinge
Deadlifts, kettlebell swings, and bending to pick things up. Your posterior chain does the heavy lifting here. You'll learn to protect your back by using your hips instead of your spine.
The Carry
Picking something up and walking with it. Farmer's carries, suitcase carries — they're simple but incredibly effective. Your core stabilizes everything. You'll notice better posture and less fatigue in daily life.
The Press
Pushing weight overhead or in front of you. Overhead press, push-ups, bench press — they build shoulder stability and upper body strength. We'll keep it safe and progressive.
How the Workshop Progresses
Assessment & Mobility (Week 1)
We start by understanding where you are. Can you squat comfortably? How's your hip mobility? Any old injuries we need to know about? You'll spend the first session learning basic positions and working on mobility. Nothing heavy, just movement quality. Most people leave feeling loose and ready.
Movement Practice (Weeks 2-3)
Now you'll practice the patterns with light weight or just bodyweight. The focus is on how the movement feels, not how much weight you're moving. Coaches give constant feedback. You'll nail down proper form and build confidence. By week 3, you're moving well and ready to add challenge.
Progressive Load (Weeks 4-6)
Time to test yourself. We gradually add weight and intensity. You're hitting the movements with real resistance now. You'll notice genuine strength gains. Squats feel easier. Your deadlift form is solid. Carries don't wind you. That's when you know it's working.
Combination & Integration (Weeks 7-8)
You're combining patterns now. Squats into presses. Hinges into carries. Movement flows naturally. By the end, you've got a solid foundation and the knowledge to keep progressing. Whether you join a class, train on your own, or do CrossFit — you're ready.
What You'll Actually Learn
These aren't vague fitness concepts. You're learning concrete things. You'll understand how to brace your core, why breathing matters, when to reset versus grind through a rep. You'll know the difference between a good squat and a broken one. You'll feel confident under a barbell.
We cover scaling too. Can't do push-ups yet? We've got modifications. Knees giving you trouble? There's a variation. Want to push harder? We show you progression. Everyone in the room is working on something different, and that's normal. The coaches watch every rep and give individual cues.
Real Talk: What to Expect
You'll be sore after the first session. That's normal. We're using muscles you haven't used much recently. It's not injury pain — it's the good kind of sore. By day three or four, it fades. You'll feel stronger, not weaker.
Expect to spend real time on technique. That first squat might not look pretty. Your coach will make adjustments. You'll try again. It'll click. Some people get movements immediately. Others need more reps. Both are fine. There's no competition here.
Sessions are 90 minutes. The first 15 minutes is warming up and mobility work. Then we practice the day's movement pattern — could be squats, could be deadlifts. The last portion might be some conditioning or finisher, scaled to your level. You'll leave tired but energized. Most people notice better sleep that night.
What Changes After 8 Weeks
"I couldn't do a proper squat when I started. My knees were tracking inward and I was rounding my back. Eight weeks later I'm squatting 135 pounds with solid form. More importantly, my knees don't hurt anymore. I actually look forward to training."
— David, 52
Strength Gains
Most people add 20-30% to their squat, deadlift, and pressing numbers by week 6. It's noticeable. You'll feel it carrying groceries, climbing stairs, picking up grandkids.
Pain Reduction
Bad knees, sore back, weak hips — proper movement patterns fix these. You're not treating the symptom. You're fixing the root cause with movement quality.
Confidence
You understand your body. You know how to move. You're not afraid of getting stronger. You've got a foundation to build on.
Important Information
The exercises and movements described in this article are for educational purposes. Everyone's fitness journey is different. If you have existing injuries, pain, or medical conditions, consult with a healthcare professional before starting any new exercise program. Coaches at our workshops assess your individual needs and modify movements accordingly, but medical clearance is always recommended when in doubt.