True Potential Exercise & Rehab

True Potential Exercise & Rehab Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from True Potential Exercise & Rehab, Medical and health, 2/355 Barrenjoey Road, Newport.

TLDRIn the first 1–4 weeks of training, your body is adapting rapidly — just not in ways you can see.Early progress is p...
17/02/2026

TLDR

In the first 1–4 weeks of training, your body is adapting rapidly — just not in ways you can see.

Early progress is primarily neurological and biological, not structural. Your nervous system improves muscle activation and coordination. Protective inhibition reduces. Technique sharpens. Gene expression shifts. Insulin sensitivity improves. Protein turnover increases. Tendons begin adapting. Inflammation becomes better regulated.

These changes lay the foundation for future strength, resilience, and visible results.

If things feel heavy, awkward, or slower than expected, it doesn’t mean training isn’t working. It means the groundwork is being built.

Early adaptation is invisible.
Visible progress is delayed.
Consistency bridges the gap.

Last week we explored why early training often feels harder before it feels rewarding and why that experience is not a sign that something is going wrong. This week builds directly on that idea. Because while progress can feel frustratingly invisible early on, your body is making meaningful biologic...

TLDREarly training often feels harder because it’s working, not because it isn’t.In the first few weeks, effort is high ...
01/02/2026

TLDR

Early training often feels harder because it’s working, not because it isn’t.

In the first few weeks, effort is high while visible feedback is low. Your nervous system is learning new patterns, and your body is inefficient at unfamiliar tasks. Fatigue, soreness, and doubt tend to spike before results show up. That mismatch can lead people to question whether they should continue.

What’s actually happening early on:
- Strength improves first through neural adaptation, not visible muscle change
- Fatigue comes before fitness as movements cost more energy when they’re new
- Soreness peaks early, then drops as tissues adapt to repeated exposure
- Self-doubt often reflects delayed feedback, not poor progress

This phase isn’t about pushing through pain or proving toughness. It’s about building capacity:
- Teaching your nervous system how to move efficiently
- Gradually increasing tissue tolerance
- Learning what your body can handle right now
- Setting expectations that match real physiology

If it feels harder than expected, that doesn’t mean it’s failing. Often, it means the foundations are being laid before the rewards show up. Consistency survives when expectations are realistic, and that’s what enables real progress.

If you have started training recently and thought, “Why does this feel harder than I expected?” you are not doing anything wrong.For many people, the early phase of training is more uncomfortable, more fatiguing, and more mentally demanding than later stages. That can be confusing, especially wh...

TLDRYou don’t need perfect health, perfect motivation, or perfect weeks to make progress.What you need is a version of t...
27/01/2026

TLDR

You don’t need perfect health, perfect motivation, or perfect weeks to make progress.

What you need is a version of training that fits your current reality and can be repeated.

A lot of people don’t start because the guidelines feel overwhelming, pain feels like a stop sign, or they think short sessions “don’t count.” But your body doesn’t respond to plans on paper, it responds to the stimulus you actually repeat.

If you want progress that lasts, think smaller and more consistent:
• Start with the minimum you can realistically repeat, not the maximum you wish you could do
• Use short sessions if that’s what fits your life right now, they still create real adaptation
• Train around pain with smart load and exercise choices instead of waiting for perfect health
• Increase challenge gradually so your body keeps adapting as you get stronger
• Attach training to routines you already do, so it doesn’t rely on motivation
• Train with others when you can, shared routines make consistency easier

Momentum isn’t built by waiting for the right conditions. It’s built by starting where you are and repeating what you can manage until both your body and your confidence catch up.

Over the past few weeks, we have talked about setting realistic direction, designing systems that do not rely on motivation, and why consistency shapes both your identity and your body. All of that is useful, but it can still leave one big question unanswered.What if you are tired, busy, in pain, or...

TLDRConsistency is not just a mindset issue, it is how both identity and physical capacity are built. Who you become is ...
19/01/2026

TLDR

Consistency is not just a mindset issue, it is how both identity and physical capacity are built. Who you become is shaped by what you repeatedly do, and your body only adapts to what it is exposed to regularly. Long gaps followed by big bursts of effort feel productive, but they increase injury risk and often erase progress.

If you want training to actually stick and keep working for your body, focus less on perfect weeks and more on repeatable habits:
• Build identity through action, not outcomes or motivation
• Treat training as part of self-care, not self-punishment
• Aim for steady exposure rather than sporadic intensity
• Expect breaks, but restart with appropriate loads
• Avoid big spikes after time off, even if you feel good
• Prioritise routines you can sustain when life gets busy

Consistency is where psychology and physiology meet. Small, repeatable actions done over time change how you see yourself and how resilient your body becomes.

Over the past two posts, we have explored how to set goals that actually fit real life, and why relying on motivation and willpower is a losing game once stress, fatigue and busy schedules kick in. That gives us direction and a way to design better systems. But there is another layer that often gets...

TLDRA good plan is important, but it’s not what keeps you going when life gets busy.What usually knocks people off track...
15/01/2026

TLDR

A good plan is important, but it’s not what keeps you going when life gets busy.

What usually knocks people off track isn’t lack of motivation, it’s that their routines only work when energy is high and stress is low. When fatigue and pressure rise, your brain shifts into protection mode, not progress mode.

If you want habits that actually stick, focus less on forcing motivation and more on building support underneath it:

• Expect motivation to fluctuate and plan for lower-energy days
• Make the “good choice” easier through simple routines and environment
• Use shorter or easier sessions instead of skipping completely
• Reduce decision-making when you’re tired or stressed
• Treat lapses as feedback, not failure
• Restart calmly instead of trying to “make up for lost time”

Consistency isn’t built by pushing harder. It’s built by making the behaviour easier to repeat when conditions aren’t ideal.

Earlier this week, I shared a framework for setting goals for 2026 that focuses less on perfection and more on direction, values, and building habits that fit real life. That’s the planning side of the equation. But having a good plan is only half the battle. The part that usually trips people up ...

You don’t have to do this alone.Our 6 & 12 week Exercise Kickstarts give you expert guidance, personalised exercise, and...
14/01/2026

You don’t have to do this alone.
Our 6 & 12 week Exercise Kickstarts give you expert guidance, personalised exercise, and the confidence to move well again.
Call today or book online — limited places available.

TLDRIf motivation worked, most people wouldn’t struggle with consistency.What usually derails good intentions isn’t lack...
12/01/2026

TLDR

If motivation worked, most people wouldn’t struggle with consistency.

What usually derails good intentions isn’t lack of ambition, it’s lack of structure. Plans that rely on willpower tend to fall apart when work gets busy, energy drops, or stress is high.

A more sustainable way to approach 2026:
• Choose a year-defining theme that reflects who you want to become
• Set outcome goals, but also capability goals like consistency and confidence
• Schedule recovery and personal time before the calendar fills up
• Clarify your values so decisions stay aligned when life gets messy
• Turn goals into small, repeatable habits that fit your real week
• Decide your “bare minimums” so you never fully stop
• Review and adjust quarterly instead of restarting from scratch

Long-term progress isn’t built on perfect streaks.
It’s built on systems that still work when motivation is low.

I’ve shared the full framework and practical examples in the blog below if you’d like to apply this to your own goals for 2026.

Here’s to momentum over burnout. Your journey. Your pace.

Over the years, I’ve tried a multitude of different goal-setting methods. Colour-coded spreadsheets, ambitious timelines, extremely optimistic to-do lists… you name it, I’ve probably had a crack at it.Like most people, I’ve also learned, usually the hard way, that complexity doesn’t always...

Each year, I experiment with different ways of reflecting on the year that’s passed before turning my attention to what ...
09/01/2026

Each year, I experiment with different ways of reflecting on the year that’s passed before turning my attention to what comes next. This is the framework I used to review 2025. I’m sharing it in case it helps you slow down, take stock, and make sense of the year you just lived. You are welcome to use it, adapt it, and ignore anything that doesn’t resonate.

This is a reflection only. No planning. No goal setting. No performance pressure.

This review is about honesty, not optimisation.

Happy reviewing,
Jono

Each year, I experiment with different ways of reflecting on the year that’s passed before turning my attention to what comes next. This is the framework I used to review 2025. I’m sharing it in case it helps you slow down, take stock, and make sense of the year you just lived. You are welcome t...

Interesting framing on "new year, new me".TLDRHuman behaviour is governed by neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to reo...
08/01/2026

Interesting framing on "new year, new me".

TLDR
Human behaviour is governed by neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to reorganise itself in response to repeated experience.
- Habits persist because they are encoded in highly myelinated neural pathways, making them fast, efficient, and automatic.
- These pathways minimise energy expenditure and allow the brain to predict future behaviour based on past patterns.
- Rapid change fails when new behaviours are layered onto old neural architecture without enough repetition, attention, or environmental support.
- Identity itself is neurologically encoded. Actions that contradict self-concept provoke resistance until enough behavioural evidence accumulates to update the brain’s predictive model.

Neuroplastic change is most effectively driven by manageable discomfort, focused attention, and adequate recovery.
- Effort and challenge trigger neuromodulators that signal the brain to adapt.
- Sleep consolidates these short-term changes into long-term structural rewiring.
- There is no universal timeline, complex behaviours may take months or years of consistent repetition before they feel automatic.
- Early resistance is not failure, it reflects competition between old and new neural pathways.

Practical Application
Progress is built through consistency over intensity. Showing up often, accepting imperfect sessions, training at the edge of current capacity, and shaping environments so the desired behaviour becomes the path of least resistance. Sustainable health, strength, and confidence emerge not from willpower, but from patiently rewiring the systems that drive behaviour.

This framework doesn’t radically change what we do, but it should change how we judge ourselves. Behaviour change is hard, not because of laziness or lack of discipline, but because of biology, and everyone encounters this resistance.

Why your brain fights change and how to win the battle through neuroplasticity

Wrapping up 2025, THANK YOU for your incredible support in 2025!2025 has been a whirlwind, turning a lifelong dream into...
25/12/2025

Wrapping up 2025, THANK YOU for your incredible support in 2025!

2025 has been a whirlwind, turning a lifelong dream into reality by opening a clinic in our hometown and meeting so many of you along the way. In just our first month, we’ve already seen clients move better, feel stronger, and regain confidence in their bodies.

Over the Christmas break, keep it simple:
• Enjoy food without guilt — connection matters
• Move every day (even a 10-minute walk makes a difference)
• Prioritise protein, hydration, and sleep
• Aim for balance, not perfection

The goal over Christmas isn’t progress, it’s enjoyment and returning refreshed, not needing to “start again”.

We reopen on Monday, January 5. We can’t wait to continue supporting your health, movement, and performance in 2026.

Here’s to moving with confidence, building real strength, and creating lasting health in 2026.

True Potential is an Exercise Physiology practice in Newport. Exercise physiologists don’t just give you workouts — they...
19/10/2025

True Potential is an Exercise Physiology practice in Newport. Exercise physiologists don’t just give you workouts — they prescribe evidence based exercise programs tailored to your health needs, whether you’re recovering from injury, managing a chronic condition, or looking to improve your performance 💪🏼
It’s Your Journey, Your Pace.
Stay Tuned.

29/09/2025

Address

2/355 Barrenjoey Road
Newport, NSW
2106

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when True Potential Exercise & Rehab posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram