05/12/2026
For the last few years I’ve been developing a movement practice rooted in real life, real environments, and consistency.
My approach combines bodyweight training, yoga, cycling, walking, breath work, mobility, and recovery while using the and the city itself as the training ground.
I’m not interested in separating movement from life.
I train in parks, on hills, near murals, through traffic, beside trains, under bridges, and across neighborhoods. Some days the pace is intense. Some days the work is slower and focused on recovery and regulation. Learning when to push and when to slow down is part of the practice.
A lot of my methodology was developed through lived experience. Recovery, social anxiety, instability, endurance training, long rides through , and learning how to reconnect with my body in real world environments instead of controlled spaces.
I keep the training simple and accessible:
bodyweight exercises, cycling, walking hills, mobility work, breath work, sun salutations, and consistent movement.
No extreme fitness culture.
No trying to be perfect.
No pretending recovery and training are separate things.
I’m strength oriented more than flexibility oriented, so my yoga practice reflects that. I use yoga as a tool for recovery, awareness, mobility, regulation, and sustainability. The goal isn’t to force the body. The goal is to build a stronger relationship with it.
One day we may ride the east side.
Another day we may train on the west.
Some days may focus on endurance.
Others may focus on slowing down and reconnecting.
What matters most is consistency and learning how to move through life with more awareness, confidence, resilience, and joy.
This is more than exercise for me.
It’s a lifestyle and a practice that has helped me rebuild myself physically, mentally, and socially.
Now I’m ready to begin sharing it with others.
-Karate Mane Jones