| name | movement-activity |
| description | Build a sustainable movement practice with walking, cardio, strength, mobility, balance, recovery, and realistic planning. Use when the user wants to move more, start exercising safely, improve energy, or create a practical activity routine. |
Movement & Activity
Movement is medicine. Use this skill to help the user build a sustainable movement practice that improves health, energy, mood, and long-term function without making exercise feel overwhelming.
When to use
Use this skill when the user:
- wants to move more or exercise more consistently
- is starting from low activity
- wants a simple weekly activity framework
- needs help overcoming barriers like time, motivation, cost, or weather
- wants movement to feel sustainable rather than punishing
Why movement matters
- Supports heart health and circulation
- Improves mood, anxiety, cognition, and self-esteem
- Improves sleep, energy, and immune function
- Helps prevent type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, and age-related muscle loss
- Supports better function and quality of life over time
Types of movement
Aerobic
- Walking, jogging, running
- Cycling, swimming, dancing, sports
- Supports endurance and cardiovascular health
Strength training
- Weights, bands, bodyweight, and functional patterns
- Supports muscle, bone, metabolism, and resilience
Flexibility and mobility
- Stretching, yoga, Pilates, mobility flows
- Supports range of motion, recovery, and comfort
Balance and stability
- Balance drills, tai chi, single-leg work
- Important for coordination and fall prevention
Activity targets
Use these as goals, not rigid rules.
150 minutes per week of moderate activity, or 75 minutes of vigorous activity, or a mix
2+ strength sessions per week covering major muscle groups
- Regular flexibility and balance work
- Daily walking or general movement, with
10,000 steps as one possible reference point rather than a universal rule
Intensity guide
- Moderate intensity: can talk but not sing
- Vigorous intensity: cannot say more than a few words without pausing
Getting started
- Start where the user is
- Begin with
5-10 minutes if needed
- Choose activities the user actually enjoys or tolerates
- Make movement easy to access and schedule
- Focus on consistency over intensity
- Track progress and celebrate small wins
- Build movement into normal life, not only formal workouts
Movement throughout the day
- Stand up every hour
- Walk during calls
- Take stairs when practical
- Park farther away
- Use short active breaks instead of more sitting
- Count chores, gardening, and play as real movement
Common barriers
Lack of time
- Break activity into
10-minute chunks
- Use lunch breaks, commuting time, or TV time
Low motivation
- Use accountability, scheduling, and small goals
- Remind the user that motivation often follows action
Cost
- Walking, stairs, parks, home routines, and free videos are enough to start
Weather or environment
- Have indoor backup options
- Reduce friction with simple home plans
Safety
- Warm up and cool down
- Increase gradually over weeks, not days
- Pay attention to form
- Distinguish effort from pain
- Include recovery and hydration
Stop and seek care if
- chest pain or pressure
- severe shortness of breath
- dizziness or fainting
- irregular heartbeat
- severe joint or muscle pain
Reflection and planning
Help the user reflect on:
- Which activities feel enjoyable or realistic?
- What barriers show up most often?
- What would make movement more joyful and sustainable?
- What is the smallest weekly plan they could actually keep?
When responding:
- Turn broad intentions into a simple weekly plan
- Prefer small wins to heroic plans
- Match the plan to current fitness, pain, schedule, and environment
- Encourage gradual progression and recovery