Progressing an exercise sounds simple: make it harder, add load, increase reps, or move to a more challenging variation.
But in rehab, performance, and corrective exercise, progression is not always that straightforward.
In this episode of the Movement Podcast, Gray Cook and Lee Burton discuss how to think through exercise progression and regression using movement baselines, postural positions, neurodevelopmental sequencing, and real-time feedback.
They break down why a person may need to move backward before moving forward, how supported, suspended, stacked, and standing spine positions create a roadmap for exercise selection, and why the goal is not always to coach harder — sometimes it is to change the posture, reduce the task, and let the person become more aware.
This conversation also explores:
Why movement changes from day to day How corrective exercise can become a personal “movement floss” Why regression is often the key to better progression How to use supported, quadruped, kneeling, and standing positions Why bird dog, rolling, bridging, half kneeling, and get-ups matter How to know when an exercise is too hard or too easy Why fast responders and slow responders need different strategies How to bake corrective work into a real training program
The key message: progression should not be random. It should be guided by the person’s movement baseline, their response to the exercise, and whether the drill creates a manageable friction point that helps them improve.
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