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Train what you’re bad at: The unexpected path to balance, strength and achievement
When we think about improving our performance, whether in sports, fitness, or life, most of us instinctively focus on what we’re already good at. It feels natural. Comfortable. Rewarding. But what if the real key to progress isn’t sharpening your strengths… but confronting your weaknesses? This is something I’ve learned firsthand. From Limitations to a Marathon Finish Line Running has always been part of my life, but only to a certain point. As a teenager, 5 to 7 kilometers was my limit. That was where my body felt comfortable, and I never really pushed beyond it. Around the age of 20, everything changed. After years of ballet, I had to stop due to injury and overuse, especially in my legs and feet. Ballet is incredibly demanding, and my body simply couldn’t sustain it. What surprised me most was that even after I stopped dancing, I struggled with running too. My body had developed imbalances that made even moderate activity difficult. For a long time, I accepted those limitations. But
18. maj 2026
The Biggest training mistakes I see after 40 (And how to avoid them)
There isn’t just one mistake that everyone makes when it comes to training after 40. Life is more complex than that. But there are clear patterns I see again and again, mistakes that quietly hold people back, lead to injuries, or simply stop progress altogether. If you recognize yourself in any of these, that’s not a problem. It’s an opportunity to adjust and move forward in a smarter way. 1. Training Like You’re Still 25 One of the most common mistakes is continuing to train exactly like you did when you were younger. Same exercises. Same structure. Same intensity, or sometimes even less, because you assume you’re not as strong anymore. But here’s the reality: your body after 40 doesn’t need less, it needs different. Doing the same type of training 3–5 times a week without variation doesn’t give your body what it needs anymore. Recovery takes longer, and adaptation requires more thoughtful stimulus. What to do instead: Vary your training (strength, cardio, mobility) Change intensity a
11. maj 2026
From Lying to Lunges: How to progress your pelvic floor trainingsafely
Pelvic floor training is often reduced to one simple cue: “just squeeze.” But in reality, it’s much more nuanced than that. If you’ve ever felt unsure whether you’re actually activating your pelvic floor, or wondered why exercises don’t seem to work, you’re not alone. The missing piece is often connection, not effort. Why Starting Lying Down Matters Before you can strengthen your pelvic floor, you need to feel it and understand it. That’s why everything begins lying down. When you’re on your back: Your body is fully supported by the floor There’s minimal pressure on the pelvic floor Other muscles (like your abs, back, and inner thighs) are less likely to compensate You get clear feedback if you start moving your pelvis or spine instead of isolating the pelvic floor This position creates the ideal environment to: Notice the difference between contracting and relaxing Avoid overusing muscles like the rectus abdominis or glutes Build a genuine mind–muscle connection Because here’s the tru
8. maj 2026
Small Changes. Big Effects.
Ønsker du at læse bloggen på dansk - se længere nede på siden. When you want change, the instinct is often to do more. More exercises. More effort. More intensity. But more is rarely the answer. Doing it right is. We know from research on behavior change that big, complicated changes don’t do well. When things feel overwhelming or unclear, we stop or never start. Not because we don’t want the result, but because the path there is too much. Real change happens when you make it simple. Precise. Understandable. And most importantly, when it fits into the life you already live. It’s not about doing more. It’s about doing it differently. Your pelvic floor and your core are not muscles that respond well to “just do more.” They respond to timing. Coordination. Awareness. Telling yourself to “squeeze as much as you can, as often as you can” will not create the result you’re looking for. Because if you don’t understand: what to activate when to activate it how it should feel …then your body wil
27. april 2026
When does exercise get easier? (and why it sometimes doesn’t)
You’re doing the workouts. You’re consistent. You’re showing up. And yet… it still feels hard. That’s one of the most common frustrations I hear, from runners, from clients in the studio, and from people doing strength training week after week: “Why doesn’t it get easier?” Let’s be clear about one thing first: Your body absolutely can get stronger, fitter, and more capable as you get older. But the way you need to train to get there changes. Your body changes and that’s not a limitation As we get older, the body doesn’t stop adapting. But it does require a clearer stimulus. You don’t get stronger by repeating the same thing over and over at the same level. You get stronger when you ask your body for more. That means: Adding load (heavier weights) Increasing intensity (faster pace, more control) Challenging coordination and stability Progressing gradually over time If you don’t do that, your body has no reason to adapt. And that’s when things slowly start to feel harder… not easier. Why
19. april 2026
Why Lower Back Pain Keeps Coming Back
Have you ever experienced lower back pain that seems to come back again and again? It can almost feel like it’s haunting you. Things go well for a while, and then suddenly, boom, it’s back. Have you thought about what you could do to stop it from returning and making life miserable? The truth is, around 80% of people will experience lower back pain at some point in their lives, and many of us will go through recurring episodes. Usually, back pain starts because something happens in the lower back. It could be a small tear in a disc, a bulging disc, a disc prolapse, or a muscle that has been overloaded, anything from a mild strain to a more serious injury. Whatever the cause, it is still an injury, and like any injury, your body will work hard to heal it. The good news is that the body is excellent at healing. The challenge, though, is that the area may never return to exactly how it was before—and your body notices that. This can be both helpful and unhelpful. On the positive side, you
12. april 2026
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