A few weeks ago, Helen, 77, smiled at me during a session and said, “I can stand on one foot for 30 seconds now with my eyes open. That kitchen-counter drill you gave me feels easy. I think I’ve got this.”
She was right — she had improved a lot. But then she added, “I still feel wobbly when I turn to reach for something in the pantry or step off the curb.”
Helen had discovered something important.
When a balance exercise stops challenging you, it stops helping you as much. Just like lifting the same light weight every day, your nervous system and muscles adapt and then plateau. The brain says, “I already know this one,” and stops making new improvements.
That’s when it’s time for gentle overload — not by making things scary or risky, but by making them slightly more real-life.
True balance training isn’t just standing still longer. It’s teaching your body to stay steady while you do the things you actually do every day: turning, reaching, stepping, changing direction.
Here are a few simple ways to progress once the basics feel easy:
Add a small movement while balancing (turn your head side to side, reach one arm forward, or gently march in place).
Make the surface slightly less stable (stand on a folded towel instead of hard floor).
Close your eyes for a few seconds (only if you feel safe and have support nearby).
Combine balance with a functional task (stand on one foot while brushing teeth, or balance while putting on socks).
You don’t need fancy equipment. You just need to give your balance system a slightly bigger conversation to handle — one small step beyond “too easy.”
You’ve already built a strong foundation. Now we get to make it useful for real life.
This week, try this gentle progression during one of your usual balance moments (hold onto a counter or wall the first few times):
While standing on one foot (or with feet close together), slowly turn your head left and right 5–6 times, as if checking for traffic. Notice how your standing leg and hips have to work a little harder to keep you steady.
That tiny added challenge wakes up the reactive part of balance — the part that helps you when life throws a quick turn or reach at you.
If it feels good, try it again tomorrow with a small reach of one arm.
If you know someone who says “I already do my balance exercises and they’re easy now”… please forward this to them right now.