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Mobility And Flexibility Routine

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install mobility-and-flexibility-routine
Description
Creates a personalized mobility and flexibility routine with sport-specific warm-ups, post-activity stretches, daily movement snacks, and progression guidance.
README (SKILL.md)

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 (\x3C 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
Usage Guidance
Before using it, remember it gives educational mobility guidance rather than medical care. Stop any movement that causes sharp pain and consult a qualified professional if you have injuries, chronic pain, hypermobility, joint replacements, or spinal issues.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: mobility-and-flexibility-routine Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle is a purely instructional prompt-flow designed to guide an AI in creating mobility and flexibility routines. It contains no executable code, scripts, or external dependencies, and explicitly disables network and credential access in `skill.json`. The instructions in `SKILL.md` include extensive safety disclaimers and medical warnings, and there are no signs of prompt injection or malicious intent.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose and contents are coherent: it asks for sport/activity, tightness, available time, and sedentary patterns to generate mobility and stretching guidance.
Instruction Scope
Instructions are limited to creating warm-ups, stretches, daily movement snacks, and progression guidance, with explicit boundaries against diagnosis, treatment, pain, and aggressive assisted stretching.
Install Mechanism
No install spec, binaries, environment variables, APIs, credentials, or executable files are present; metadata declares document-only/no-code behavior.
Credentials
The skill does not request local file, system, network, account, or device access, which is proportionate for an instruction-only fitness guidance skill.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background behavior, credential use, privileged access, or cross-session memory behavior is described in the artifacts.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install mobility-and-flexibility-routine
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /mobility-and-flexibility-routine
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
- Initial release of the Mobility & Flexibility Routine skill. - Generates personalized mobility plans tailored to sport, activity, and user needs. - Includes dynamic warm-up, post-activity stretches, and daily “movement snacks.” - Integrates progression guidance from passive stretching to active mobility. - Emphasizes safety, boundaries, and when to seek professional help.
Metadata
Slug mobility-and-flexibility-routine
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is 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. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 11 downloads so far.

How do I install Mobility And Flexibility Routine?

Run "/install mobility-and-flexibility-routine" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Mobility And Flexibility Routine free?

Yes, Mobility And Flexibility Routine is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Mobility And Flexibility Routine support?

Mobility And Flexibility Routine is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Mobility And Flexibility Routine?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.0.

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