The Balance Breakdown

February 24, 20261 min read

Feet, Ankles & Total-Body Stability

Why Your Balance Might Be Off (and What to Do About It)

Balance isn’t a “senior” problem.

Balance is an everybody problem.

You can be training hard, eating well, and staying active—but if your balance is off, it can quietly limit how well you move and increase your injury risk.

And balance isn’t just standing on one leg in the gym.

It shows up when you:

• Cut or pivot during sports
• Hike on uneven ground
• Step off a curb
• Lunge, reach, or react quickly

Balance is movement control.

The Overlooked Foundation: Your Feet & Ankles

Here’s what most people miss:

Your feet and ankles are your base of support.

They’re the first point of contact with the ground.

When they’re stiff or weak, your body compensates higher up:

• Knees collapse
• Hips shift
• Lower back absorbs more stress

Over time, that compensation adds up.

That’s why one of the first places we look with adults who struggle with balance—or even nagging lower-body aches—is the ankle.

Start with Mobility

Improving ankle mobility can:

✅ Increase range of motion
✅ Reduce stiffness in the lower legs
✅ Decrease knee and hip compensation
✅ Improve total-body stability

Here’s a simple drill to try:

🎥 Prone Ankle Mobility

How to Use It

• 2–3 sets
• 10 reps per leg
• Slow, controlled motion

Add it to your warm-up, cool-down, or mobility circuit.

Small change. Big carryover.

Final Thought

Good movement starts from the ground up.

If your foundation improves, everything above it benefits.

Stay strong.
Stay balanced.

Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team

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