The Her Body Baseline
Free guide · general education, not personal medical care
A 7-Day Movement, Strength, and Recovery Check-In
Before you change anything, see it clearly. For seven days you’ll observe — not fix — your movement, energy, sleep, and recovery. At the end you’ll pick one realistic weekly structure to test. That’s the whole job.
Three ground rules, so this stays useful:
- This is observation, not judgment. A week with zero workouts is data, not a failure.
- Nothing here is a diagnosis. This guide can’t score your hormones, type your body, or interpret symptoms — and it doesn’t ask for your weight, measurements, or calories.
- This is general education, not personal medical care. The last section lists the situations where a guide should hand you off to a professional. Take it seriously.
1. What are you actually trying to change?
Most fitness plans fail at the goal, not the workouts. “Tone up” and “fix my metabolism” aren’t goals — they’re marketing phrases wearing a goal costume. Behaviors are goals. Pick one or two below (write in your own if it’s truly a behavior):
- ☐ Become stronger
- ☐ Move more consistently
- ☐ Improve cardiovascular fitness
- ☐ Feel less intimidated by exercise
- ☐ Establish a manageable routine
- ☐ Understand my energy and recovery patterns
- ☐ Reduce all-or-nothing exercise habits
- ☐ My own (a behavior, not an outcome): ______________________________
Notice what’s not on the list: weight targets, hormone promises, symptom cures. Not because those concerns aren’t real — because a checklist can’t deliver them, and pretending otherwise is how the wellness industry keeps you starting over every Monday.
2. The three tools
Nearly everything on your feed is some mix of three tools. They overlap, but they are not interchangeable — each develops something the others mostly don’t.
| Tool | What it mainly develops | What it doesn’t replace |
|---|---|---|
| Walking & cardio | Cardiovascular fitness, daily movement, endurance | Muscle and bone loading from resistance work |
| Resistance training | Strength, muscle, bone loading | Cardiovascular capacity from sustained effort |
| Pilates, mobility & control | Control, coordination, trunk endurance, range of motion | Progressive overload or sustained cardio |
That’s why “which one is best?” is the wrong question. The right question — the one this week answers — is: what mix do you currently have, and what’s missing for the goal you circled above?
3. Current-week snapshot
Fill this in for a typical recent week — not your best week, not your worst. Honesty beats optimism here.
| Question | Your answer |
|---|---|
| Intentional movement sessions last week (any kind) | __________ |
| Days with a deliberate walk | __________ |
| Strength-training sessions | __________ |
| Pilates / mobility sessions | __________ |
| Typical hours available for sleep (opportunity, not perfection) | __________ |
| How recovered do you generally feel? (1 = running on fumes, 5 = fresh) | __________ |
| What most often interrupts exercise? (schedule, energy, boredom, soreness…) | __________ |
| Equipment you actually have access to | __________ |
| Longest session you’d realistically do | __________ |
No weight, no measurements, no calorie math. Those numbers change daily for reasons that have nothing to do with your routine, and this week is about the routine.
4. The seven days
Each day, take two minutes — ideally at the same time — and jot the day’s line. Use the table, or copy the prompts into your notes app. There is no passing grade.
Daily prompts:
- Movement: what did you do, roughly how long? (“none” is a valid answer)
- Energy: before and after moving — better, worse, same?
- Soreness: anywhere notable? mild / moderate / a lot
- Sleep: how was last night — rough, okay, solid?
- Enjoyment: did any part of moving feel good?
- Friction: what made moving easier or harder today?
- Optional: anything cycle-related you want to note (only if useful to you — no tracking required)
| Day | Movement & duration | Energy before → after | Soreness | Sleep | What helped / got in the way |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | |||||
| 2 | |||||
| 3 | |||||
| 4 | |||||
| 5 | |||||
| 6 | |||||
| 7 |
End-of-week review (three questions):
- Which day was moving easiest — and what made it easy?
- Where did energy and sleep line up (or collide) with movement?
- Knowing this, how many sessions per week are actually realistic right now?
5. Build next week
Pick the framework that matches your honest answer to review question 3 — not the one that matches your ambition. These are schedule frameworks, not prescriptions; swap the activities for ones you have access to and don’t hate.
Two-day minimum routine — the floor that keeps the habit alive:
- Day A: one strength session (20–40 min)
- Day B: one walk or cardio session (20–40 min)
- Everything else: optional bonus, not homework
Three-day balanced routine:
- Day A: strength
- Day B: walk / cardio
- Day C: strength or Pilates/mobility — whichever your soreness and schedule prefer
Four-day active routine:
- Day A: strength
- Day B: walk / cardio
- Day C: strength
- Day D: Pilates / mobility / longer walk
Whichever you pick, also write down your minimum week — the smallest version you’ll still count (for many people: one strength session + one walk). Busy weeks get the minimum, not a restart from zero.
6. When a general guide is not enough
A one-size guide has honest limits. Put this list somewhere you’ll see it, and book a qualified professional — clinician, physiotherapist, or registered dietitian — rather than pushing through, if any of these apply:
- Severe or persistent symptoms of any kind
- Chest pain, fainting, or significant shortness of breath
- An injury, or pain that changes how you move
- Unexplained major changes in weight, energy, or cycle
- Pregnancy or recent postpartum — get individual clearance before changing exercise
- Exercise restrictions from a physician
- A history (medical, surgical, or with food and exercise) that needs individualized guidance
This guide cannot tell you whether a symptom is dangerous. That is a feature, not a gap: the answer belongs to someone who can examine you. In an emergency, call your local emergency number now.
7. You now know what your week looks like
That’s genuinely the hard part — most people change plans for years without ever measuring the week they actually live. The next step is building a 30-day plan around your schedule, preferences, and available equipment: one goal, a weekly schedule, a minimum-week fallback, and a simple progression rule. That’s exactly what Build Your Body Plan, our 30-day workbook, walks you through — find it at herbodymanual.com/learning-path when you’re ready.