Mobility And Flexibility Routine

Creates a personalized mobility and flexibility routine with sport-specific warm-ups, post-activity stretches, daily movement snacks, and progression guidance.

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openclaw skills install mobility-and-flexibility-routine

Mobility & Flexibility Routine

⚠️ Educational only. This skill does not replace a physiotherapist, sports medicine doctor, or certified mobility coach. Consult a professional before starting a new mobility routine, especially if you have existing joint conditions, injuries, or chronic pain. Stretching should never cause sharp pain — stop immediately if it does and seek professional advice. The user is responsible for their own movement safety.

Description

Builds a personalized mobility and flexibility routine to complement any sport or training program. Addresses sport-specific tightness, daily movement restrictions from sedentary patterns, and helps you move better in training and daily life.

What This Skill Does

This skill creates a complete mobility system tailored to your primary activity and body. It covers:

  • Sport-specific mobility flow — Address the joints and movement patterns your sport demands most
  • Dynamic warm-up sequence — Prepare your body before training with active, movement-based preparation
  • Post-activity stretch routine — Cool down and restore range of motion after exercise
  • Daily movement snacks — Short (< 5 minute) mobility habits you can do anytime
  • Progression from passive to active mobility — Build control through your full range, not just flexibility

Required Inputs

To design your routine, the skill will ask:

  1. Primary sport or activity — What do you do most? (e.g., running, weightlifting, cycling, desk work, general fitness)
  2. Problem areas or tightness — Where do you feel tight or restricted? (e.g., hips, shoulders, lower back, hamstrings)
  3. Time available per session — How many minutes for a dedicated mobility session?
  4. Sedentary patterns — How many hours do you sit per day? Any repetitive positions?

Prompt Flow

  1. Clarify activity and restrictions — Understand your primary sport, known tightness, and daily movement patterns.
  2. Design warm-up sequence — Create a sport-specific dynamic warm-up to prepare your body before activity.
  3. Create post-activity routine — Build a stretching or mobility routine for after training or in the evening.
  4. Suggest daily habits — Offer short movement snacks that take under 5 minutes and can be done at your desk, during TV, or between tasks.
  5. Explain mobility progression — Describe how to move from passive stretching to active mobility drills that build control and strength at end ranges.

Output Structure

Each routine includes:

  • Sport-specific mobility flow — Joint-by-joint warm-up tailored to your activity
  • Dynamic warm-up sequence — 5–10 minutes of movement preparation (e.g., leg swings, arm circles, world's greatest stretch, cat-cow)
  • Post-activity stretch routine — 5–15 minutes of targeted stretching or mobility work
  • Daily movement snacks — 3–5 short habits under 5 minutes each (e.g., hip flexor stretch at your desk, shoulder dislocates with a towel, ankle circles)
  • Progression guidance — How to evolve from passive holds to active, controlled movements

Key Mobility Concepts

Passive vs. Active Mobility

  • Passive mobility — Using an external force (gravity, a strap, body weight) to achieve a range of motion. Good for initial tissue lengthening.
  • Active mobility — Using your own muscular control to move through and hold a range of motion. Builds usable, functional range.

Joint-by-Joint Approach

Different joints have different needs:

  • Ankles — Need mobility (dorsiflexion is critical for squatting, running, cycling)
  • Knees — Need stability (they are a hinge joint; mobility comes from ankles and hips)
  • Hips — Need mobility (extension, flexion, internal and external rotation)
  • Lumbar spine — Needs stability (most people need core control, not more lower back stretching)
  • Thoracic spine — Needs mobility (rotation and extension for overhead work, breathing, posture)
  • Shoulders — Need mobility and stability (scapular control + glenohumeral range)
  • Neck — Needs stability and controlled mobility

Common Sport-Specific Focus Areas

For Runners

  • Hip flexor and quad mobility
  • Ankle dorsiflexion
  • Thoracic rotation
  • Hamstring flexibility (active, not just passive)

For Lifters

  • Thoracic extension for overhead positions
  • Hip mobility for squat depth
  • Shoulder external rotation for pressing
  • Wrist mobility for front rack positions

For Desk Workers

  • Hip flexor stretching (combat shortened position from sitting)
  • Thoracic extension (counter rounded posture)
  • Neck mobility exercises
  • Shoulder and chest opening

Safety Boundaries

  1. Not a replacement for professionals — Does not replace a physiotherapist, sports medicine doctor, or certified mobility coach.
  2. No diagnosis or treatment — Does not diagnose or treat joint conditions, injuries, or chronic pain.
  3. Never push into pain — Stretching should produce a sensation of tension, never sharp pain. Stop immediately if you feel sharp pain.
  4. No aggressive assisted stretching — Does not recommend aggressive partner-assisted stretching without qualified supervision.
  5. User responsibility — The user is responsible for their own movement safety, respecting their body's signals, and seeking professional care when needed.
  6. Medical conditions — Users with hypermobility conditions, joint replacements, or spinal issues should consult a professional before starting mobility work.

When to Stop and Seek Help

Stop immediately and consult a healthcare professional if you experience:

  • Sharp, stabbing, or shooting pain during any movement
  • Joint clicking or popping accompanied by pain
  • Numbness, tingling, or radiating sensations
  • Persistent stiffness that does not improve with gentle movement
  • Any pre-existing injury that flares up during mobility work