Prospect Garden / full-width visual atlas route
Exercise should look like a movement manual, not wellness copy.
The page now spends its horizontal budget on instructional images first: generated GPT-image-2 plates where available, a hand-built anatomical SVG sample while it remains, and CSS placeholder plates only for exercises still awaiting a drawn coaching diagram. The design is subordinate to the content: images are contained, not cropped, and the reviewed HTML instruction stays primary.
--pg-color-parchment-100--pg-color-parchment-200--pg-color-ink-900--pg-color-terracotta-500--pg-color-jade-500--pg-color-sunbeam-400control loop
- Recover range that chairs and screens deleted.
- Add slow tension so joints learn ownership of that range.
- Expose the pattern to load, breath, gravity, speed, and asymmetry.
- Integrate it into gait, floor play, work capacity, and recovery.
Capacity = range × control × load tolerance × recovery × transfer. If a movement does not improve at least one term without bankrupting another, it is entertainment or vanity work.
GPT Image 2 reference section
Card 02 target style: English-only anatomical manga, no cropped content.
This full-width image shows the updated prompt direction on dead hang + scapular pull: English labels only, generous safe margins, visible load paths, common faults, and no layout crop that sacrifices instruction for aesthetics.
full-width image-led exercise atlas
Thirteen root-cause practices, drawn as plates before they become paragraphs.
The primary interface is now a horizontal image rail: each practice gets a large instructional plate area, then threat, root correction, dose, progression, debug signal, transfer, and near-enemy trap. Wide screens should feel like an engineer spreading annotated movement sheets across a drafting table.
Resting squat sit
- yoga
- calisthenics
- ancestral sitting
- ribs stack over pelvis while breath stays available
- knees track toes as the foot tripod stays rooted
- scale with heel elevation or support before forcing depth
- modern threat
- Chair life shortens the ankle, steals hip flexion, rounds the lumbar spine, and turns the bottom of a squat into a panic position.
- root correction
- Restore a human rest shape: feet grounded, knees tracking, pelvis relaxed, spine long enough to breathe.
- instruction
- Accumulate time in a comfortable deep squat. Use a doorframe or counterweight first. Breathe long exhales, pry the knees gently, shift side to side, then stand without hands.
- dose
- 3-6 minutes accumulated daily; one 60-second nasal-breath hold is the graduation test.
- progression
- Heels elevated → heels down with support → unsupported sit → pause goblet squat → loaded front squat pattern.
- engineer frame
- This is a mobility benchmark plus a load-distribution diagnostic. The constraints reveal ankle dorsiflexion, hip external rotation, adductor tolerance, and trunk balance at once.
- debug signal
- If arches collapse, heels float, or breath locks, regress the height and own the foot tripod before forcing depth.
- life transfer
- Easier floor living, better toileting mechanics, safer lifting from low shelves, and hips that do not panic when life leaves the chair grid.
Dead hang + scapular pull
- calisthenics
- climbing
- yoga traction
- passive hang: shoulders elevate without panic
- active pull: scapula slides down while elbows stay straight
- scale with foot assistance before shoulder pain appears
- modern threat
- Screens glue the shoulders forward and make overhead reach feel like a luxury feature instead of factory equipment.
- root correction
- Decompress the shoulder girdle, restore overhead tolerance, and teach the scapula to elevate, depress, rotate, and bear load.
- instruction
- Hang from a bar with relaxed ribs, then perform small scapular pulls: shoulders slide away from ears, chest rises slightly, elbows stay straight, breath remains quiet.
- dose
- 30-90 seconds total hanging daily; 2-4 sets of 5-8 scapular pulls three times weekly.
- progression
- Feet-assisted hang → active hang → scapular pull → slow negative chin-up → strict pull-up or towel hang.
- engineer frame
- A hang is tensile loading for grip, lats, ribs, thoracic extension, and shoulder capsule. Scapular pulls turn passive suspension into active motor control.
- debug signal
- Sharp anterior shoulder pain, numbness, or rib flare means reduce load and rebuild with feet support and shorter sets.
- life transfer
- Better posture, stronger hands, healthier shoulders, climbing readiness, and the primitive confidence that your arms can actually hold you.
Hip hinge / deadlift pattern
- strength training
- yoga forward fold
- manual labor
- spine transmits force while hips fold back
- object tracks close to midfoot through the lift
- scale with dowel contact or block height before floor pulls
- modern threat
- Modern backs flex all day under laptops, then get asked to lift groceries with no posterior-chain map.
- root correction
- Teach the hips to fold while the spine transmits force, so hamstrings, glutes, and lats do the work instead of lumbar panic.
- instruction
- Use a dowel along head, thoracic spine, and sacrum. Push hips back until hamstrings load. Then progress to kettlebell deadlifts, Romanian deadlifts, or sandbag lifts.
- dose
- 2-4 strength sets, 5-8 crisp reps, two or three days weekly; stop sets when speed or spinal position degrades.
- progression
- Dowel hinge → kettlebell from blocks → floor deadlift → single-leg RDL → awkward object lift.
- engineer frame
- The hinge is a load path problem: center of mass stays close, shins mostly vertical, hips move back, brace turns the trunk into a beam.
- debug signal
- If you feel only low back, the hips are not accepting load or the object is too far from your midfoot.
- life transfer
- Back-safe lifting, hill power, sprint mechanics, and the anti-fragile posterior chain that lets adults do physical work without drama.
Push-up plus
- calisthenics
- martial arts
- Pilates plank
- hands root while ribs stay stacked over pelvis
- elbows track 30-45 degrees as the body lowers as one plank
- press the floor away so scapulae wrap the ribs
- modern threat
- Desk life leaves the chest tight, serratus asleep, wrists underprepared, and pressing reduced to mirror-muscle bench angles.
- root correction
- Rebuild horizontal pressing as a whole-body plank: hands root, ribs stack, glutes assist, scapulae glide around the ribs.
- instruction
- Incline push-ups first. Lower as one plank, elbows about 30-45 degrees, pause, press the floor away, then add a small plus at the top by spreading the shoulder blades.
- dose
- 3-5 submaximal sets of 6-15 reps; leave 2-3 clean reps in reserve.
- progression
- Wall → table → floor → ring push-up → deficit push-up → pseudo-planche lean.
- engineer frame
- A push-up is a closed-chain press. The floor gives honest feedback: wrist extension, trunk stiffness, shoulder blade protraction, and elbow path all show up.
- debug signal
- Sagging hips, craned neck, flared elbows, or lost top protraction means the variation is too hard.
- life transfer
- Falling safely, getting off the ground, shoulder-friendly pressing, and an upper body that connects to the rest of the organism.
Strict row → pull-up ladder
- calisthenics
- climbing
- gymnastics basics
- pull starts at scapula before elbows bend hard
- sternum travels toward hands while neck stays long
- body remains one lever before pull-up negatives are added
- modern threat
- Forward-head typing makes the back passive and lets the front body become the visual tyrant.
- root correction
- Balance pressing with pulling, recover scapular retraction/depression, and build the lats as shoulder stabilizers rather than costume wings.
- instruction
- Use rings, a table, or suspension straps. Pull sternum toward hands without shrugging, pause, lower slowly. Add chin-up negatives only when rows are crisp.
- dose
- Pull twice as many total reps as you press until posture and shoulders feel balanced.
- progression
- High ring row → low ring row → feet-elevated row → flexed-arm hang → negative chin-up → strict chin-up/pull-up.
- engineer frame
- Horizontal rows are the low-risk regression for vertical pulling. They teach line-of-pull, body tension, and shoulder blade sequencing before full bodyweight load.
- debug signal
- If biceps cramp first or shoulders jam near ears, initiate with the shoulder blades and reduce difficulty.
- life transfer
- Carrying kids, climbing, better desk posture, stronger grip, and shoulders that have a back-side brake system.
Loaded carry: farmer + suitcase
- strongman
- manual labor
- rucking
- ribs stack over level pelvis while the load tries to tilt you
- handles travel vertically as grip stays secure without panic
- quiet steps prove the carry is locomotion, not static posing
- modern threat
- Modern life outsourced carrying to wheels, deliveries, elevators, and tiny convenience loads.
- root correction
- Rebuild integrated strength: grip, feet, trunk, hips, breath, and gait under honest load.
- instruction
- Carry two equal weights for farmer carries, then one weight for suitcase carries. Walk tall, quiet steps, ribs stacked, no leaning away from the load.
- dose
- 4-8 carries of 20-60 meters, one to three days weekly; use loads heavy enough to demand attention but not posture fraud.
- progression
- Grocery carry → dumbbell farmer → suitcase carry → front rack carry → uneven object/sandbag carry.
- engineer frame
- A carry is a moving isometric. The payload tries to tilt, rotate, compress, and distract the system; walking exposes leaks better than a static plank.
- debug signal
- If grip dies instantly, traps cramp, or you waddle, reduce weight and lengthen the walk.
- life transfer
- Groceries, travel bags, moving apartments, hiking, real-world bracing, and adult confidence around heavy inconvenient objects.
Split squat / step-up
- strength training
- hiking
- martial stance work
- front foot tripod stays rooted while knee tracks mid-toes
- pelvis stays square and level through the descent
- scale with hand support or a lower step before adding load
- modern threat
- Flat floors and symmetrical machines hide left-right asymmetry until stairs, trails, knees, or hips complain.
- root correction
- Build single-leg control through foot tripod, knee tracking, hip stability, and usable leg strength.
- instruction
- Use a split stance. Lower straight down, front knee tracks over middle toes, rear knee descends, torso tall enough to breathe. Step-ups use a quiet foot and full hip extension.
- dose
- 2-4 sets of 6-10 reps each side; use slow eccentrics before adding weight.
- progression
- Supported split squat → reverse lunge → front-foot-elevated split squat → step-up → Bulgarian split squat.
- engineer frame
- Single-leg work is asymmetry detection. It reduces load requirement while increasing balance, frontal-plane control, and tendon specificity.
- debug signal
- Knee collapse, foot wobble, or hip hike tells you the stabilizers are at capacity even if the prime movers feel bored.
- life transfer
- Stairs, trails, getting up from the floor, sprint resilience, and knees that trust the foot underneath them.
Foot tripod + calf/tibialis spring
- running drills
- balance work
- yoga standing poses
- big toe mound, little toe mound, and heel root the tripod
- calf and tibialis share the ankle through controlled rise and lower
- pogo work waits until balance, arch, and landing stay quiet
- modern threat
- Cushioned shoes and flat indoor floors turn feet into sleepy meat at the end of the leg.
- root correction
- Restore the foot as sensor, spring, and steering system: big toe, little toe, heel; calf and tibialis sharing the ankle.
- instruction
- Practice short-foot doming, single-leg balance, slow calf raises through full range, tibialis raises against a wall, and barefoot walking on safe varied surfaces.
- dose
- 5-8 minutes most days; 2-3 sets of 12-25 calf and tibialis raises after walks or strength work.
- progression
- Two-foot balance → one-foot balance → eyes moving → calf raise → pogo hops → easy barefoot grass strides.
- engineer frame
- The foot is the first sensor in the gait control loop. If the input is noisy, knees and hips compensate upstream.
- debug signal
- Toe gripping, ankle sickling, or arch collapse means you need slower sensory work before plyometrics.
- life transfer
- Walking pleasure, running resilience, balance, fewer ankle scares, and feet that report terrain instead of muting life.
Spine wave + thoracic rotation
- yoga
- Pilates
- dance / flow
- motion spreads node by node instead of collapsing into one hinge
- ribs drive rotation while pelvis and low back stay quiet
- scale range before neck or breath steals the movement
- modern threat
- Screens make the spine a frozen C-shape: neck overreaches, thoracic spine stiffens, lumbar spine steals motion.
- root correction
- Restore segmentation: flex, extend, rotate, and side-bend through many vertebrae rather than one overworked hinge.
- instruction
- Cat-cow slowly one vertebra at a time, thread-the-needle rotations, open books, quadruped T-spine reaches, and gentle standing roll-downs with active return.
- dose
- 6-10 slow breaths daily plus a longer 10-minute mobility block on recovery days.
- progression
- Quadruped cat-cow → thread the needle → half-kneeling rotation → loaded cable chop → controlled Jefferson curl if appropriate.
- engineer frame
- Think distributed systems. A healthy spine spreads motion across nodes; a painful spine overloads one hot server.
- debug signal
- If the neck does all the work or low back pinches, reduce range and drive motion through ribs and breath.
- life transfer
- Less screen neck, easier breathing, cleaner overhead motion, smoother gait, and a spine that can adapt rather than defend.
90/90 breathing + dead bug
- Pilates
- physical therapy
- strength bracing
- long exhale closes ribs over a neutral pelvis
- opposite arm and leg move while low back stays quiet
- scale to heel taps or wall assist before ribs flare
- modern threat
- Anxiety, sitting, and aesthetic ab training teach rib flare, shallow breathing, and a trunk that cannot manage pressure.
- root correction
- Rebuild the rib-pelvis canister: diaphragm descends, pelvic floor responds, abs create pressure, limbs move without stealing the spine.
- instruction
- Lie on back, hips and knees at 90 degrees, low ribs heavy. Exhale fully, feel abs turn on, then lower opposite arm and leg without rib flare or lumbar arch.
- dose
- 3-5 breathing resets of 4-6 breaths; 2-4 sets of 4-8 slow dead-bug reps each side.
- progression
- Crocodile breathing → 90/90 breathing → heel taps → dead bug → hollow hold → loaded carries and hinges with the same rib stack.
- engineer frame
- This is pressure management and motor-control isolation. The bug is a unit test for whether limbs can move while the trunk holds state.
- debug signal
- If low back lifts or breath gets high in the chest, shorten the lever and make the exhale longer.
- life transfer
- Calmer nervous system, safer lifting, better running posture, and less need to armor the body against ordinary stress.
Crawl + floor get-up flow
- flow
- martial arts
- child development
- yoga transitions
- quiet hands and feet keep floor contact controlled
- opposite hand and foot coordinate through crawl transitions
- scale to smaller shapes before fancy flow patterns
- modern threat
- Adults become chair specialists: excellent at 90-degree sitting, clumsy at every transition below the desk plane.
- root correction
- Regain ground citizenship: rolling, quadruped, crawling, kneeling, lunging, squatting, and standing with multiple options.
- instruction
- Move through bear crawl, leopard crawl, shin box, kneeling lunge, squat, and stand. Keep steps quiet and breath nasal; make transitions smooth before fancy.
- dose
- 5-12 minutes as a warm-up or separate play block, three to six days weekly.
- progression
- Rocking → crawling → sit-through → shin-box switch → get-up without hands → low bridge or cartwheel prep if capacity permits.
- engineer frame
- Floor flow is integration testing under low stakes. It couples vestibular input, contralateral patterning, shoulder loading, hip rotation, and problem solving.
- debug signal
- If wrists, knees, or breath revolt, soften the surface, slow down, and use smaller shapes.
- life transfer
- Playing with kids, falling and rising, athletic coordination, and a body that still understands the floor as home territory.
Zone-2 walk / easy ruck
- walking
- rucking
- endurance base
- monastic pacing
- pack stays high and light while posture stays relaxed
- nasal breathing and short-sentence talk test gate the pace
- foot rolls under the body before load or distance increases
- modern threat
- Modernity compresses movement into either nothing or punishment: desk all day, then frantic HIIT to atone.
- root correction
- Restore low-intensity aerobic volume, sunlight, spatial awareness, and the metabolic calm that lets strength training actually recover.
- instruction
- Walk briskly while nasal breathing or speaking in short sentences. Add a light backpack only after easy walking feels restorative, not heroic.
- dose
- 30-60 minutes most days; one longer 75-120 minute walk weekly when life allows.
- progression
- Unloaded walk → hills → light ruck at 5-10% bodyweight → longer terrain → occasional short nasal jog if joints like it.
- engineer frame
- Zone 2 is the base layer of the energy stack: mitochondrial density, capillary network, fat oxidation, and autonomic downshift without high recovery cost.
- debug signal
- If you need music rage, mouth breathing, or sleep debt to survive it, you turned base-building into stress cosplay.
- life transfer
- Mood, sleep pressure, insulin sensitivity, exploration, social walks, and durable work capacity without frying the nervous system.
Tiny dose power: jump, throw, sprint
- play
- track
- martial arts
- ball sports
- fresh reps only while every jump, throw, or sprint stays crisp
- quiet landings and tall hip extension prove power is controlled
- full rest keeps power training separate from conditioning fatigue
- modern threat
- Safe indoor life removes speed. Adults keep strength and endurance long after they lose the ability to express force quickly.
- root correction
- Preserve power, tendon stiffness, coordination, and courage without turning every session into a maximal competition.
- instruction
- After warm-up, do low box jumps, broad jumps, medicine-ball chest passes/slams, hill accelerations, or playful throws. Stop while every rep is crisp.
- dose
- 1-2 days weekly; 3-6 sets of 2-5 reps or 4-8 short accelerations with full rest.
- progression
- March → skip → pogo → low jump landing → medicine-ball throw → hill sprint → flat sprint only after tissues adapt.
- engineer frame
- Power training is high signal, low volume. Quality collapses before fatigue feels dramatic; the nervous system learns from fresh reps.
- debug signal
- Achilles whispers, heavy landings, or slower reps mean stop. Power work is practice, not conditioning.
- life transfer
- Fast reactions, fall prevention, sport readiness, playfulness, libido-of-life, and the feeling that the body still has a second gear.
source traditions as partial maps
What Yoga, calisthenics, Pilates, and flow each know.
These are not lifestyle costumes. Each tradition contributes one durable constraint and one failure mode to avoid.
| School | Axiom | Contribution | Engineer read | Vanity failure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yoga | sthira sukham asanam — steady and easeful posture | Yoga contributes breath-led attention, end-range patience, and the refusal to split body training from nervous-system training. | Treat breath as the control signal and posture as the plant. If nasal breathing collapses, the system is outside its usable operating envelope. | Instagram contortion, passive end-range hanging, and spiritual bypassing: high range without strength, calm words without usable capacity. |
| Calisthenics | Relative strength before external complexity | Calisthenics contributes strict shapes, scapular ownership, leverage literacy, and the ability to move your own mass through space. | Bodyweight is a built-in load cell. Progress by changing lever length, tempo, range, and support before adding circus skills. | Kipping, half-rep muscle-up chasing, and one-arm-something attempts before strict rows, hangs, hollow shapes, and shoulder depression are boringly solid. |
| Pilates | Control precedes amplitude | Pilates contributes rib-pelvis organization, axial length, breath-pressure management, and honest low-load repetition. | The trunk is not a six-pack display; it is a pressure vessel and force-transfer manifold between limbs. | Crunch marathons and ab selfies: local burn that teaches spinal flexion fatigue while leaving breathing, bracing, and gait unchanged. |
| Flow / locomotion | The organism learns through transitions | Flow contributes ground contact, crawling, rolling, rhythm, play, and the lost adult skill of moving without a machine track. | A transition is an integration test: ankles, hips, spine, shoulders, eyes, vestibular system, and breath all have to handshake in real time. | Choreographed animal-flow reels with no constraint, no load, no breathing rule, and no transfer into getting down, up, carrying, sprinting, or playing. |
near-enemy vanity exercises
The fake version looks adjacent and trains the wrong adaptation.
A near enemy is not merely useless. It is an adjacent-looking practice that reinforces the original pathology: mirror validation, quantified stress, intensity addiction, identity theater, fragile specialization, or wellness consumption.
- If the exercise mainly improves how you look in a mirror but not how you breathe, carry, walk, rest, or play, it is accessory work pretending to be root work.
- If the metric rewards cheating range, speed, load, or recovery, the metric is training the shadow system.
- If a practice creates more dependence on devices, specialists, supplements, or identity performance than ordinary embodied agency, it is modernity wearing a wellness costume.
implementation protocol
A simple week beats a heroic quarter.
The actual operating system is a small recurring loop: daily minimum, strength spine, walking base, floor play, and tiny power exposure only when tissues are ready.
18-25 minutes, almost every day
Daily minimum viable inoculation
- 2 minutes: 90/90 breathing or crocodile breathing to downshift.
- 5 minutes: squat sit, hang, spine wave, and foot tripod as range restoration.
- 8 minutes: one push, one pull, one hinge or split-squat pattern at easy quality.
- 5-10 minutes: walk outside without turning it into a productivity podcast prison.
Leave feeling more available to life than when you started.
2-3 days weekly
Strength spine
- Hinge or squat pattern for load-bearing strength.
- Push-up plus and strict row/pull ladder for shoulder balance.
- Loaded carry to integrate grip, trunk, gait, and breath.
- One single-leg pattern so symmetry is tested instead of assumed.
Progress load only when positions, breath, and next-day joints remain boring.
3-7 days weekly
Flow, play, and aerobic base
- Zone-2 walk or easy ruck as the metabolic background process.
- Crawling and floor get-ups as the movement integration test.
- Tiny dose jumps, throws, or short hill accelerations when tissues are warm and sleep is good.
- One social or playful session: court, trail, dance, climbing gym, martial arts, or park games.
Happiness is trained partly by rejoining terrain, people, rhythm, and weather.
standing on one foot
Keep the movement that makes you harder to domesticate and easier to live with.
Squat enough to rest, hang enough to open, hinge enough to lift, push and pull enough to own your shoulders, carry enough to become useful, breathe enough to downshift, walk enough to metabolize life, crawl enough to stay playful, and sprint or throw just enough to remember you are not a spreadsheet with legs.