Most people think they need a stronger core.
So they add more:
planks at the end of sessions
ab circuits that burn like hell
a few sets of sit-ups for good measure
They leave feeling like they've "done something."
And yet…
their lower back still tightens up by the afternoon
their hips still feel jammed
their posture still slowly collapses as the day goes on
At some point, it stops making sense.
Because if the core is getting stronger… why doesn't the body feel more supported?
The Problem Isn't Effort — It's Understanding
The idea of "core strength" has been flattened into something overly simple.
Abs = core
Burn = working
Shake = effective
But your core isn't just a set of muscles to fatigue.
It's a coordination system.
It has to manage pressure, transfer force, and keep your body organised while you move through space — not just while you're lying on the floor trying to survive a plank timer.
And that changes everything.
What Your Core Is Actually Doing All Day
Every time you:
walk
reach
turn
pick something up
your body is constantly managing pressure between your ribcage and your pelvis.
That pressure is what gives you:
stability without rigidity
movement without collapse
strength that actually transfers through your body
When it's working well, you don't notice it.
When it's not, you feel it everywhere:
tight lower back
overworked hip flexors
neck and shoulders constantly "on"
And here's the key point most people miss:
your core doesn't fail because it's weak — it fails because it's not coordinating properly.
Why Traditional Core Training Doesn't Carry Over
Think about how most people train their core.
They lie on their back or hold a static position
they brace hard
they try not to move
That might build local strength.
But real life isn't static.
You don't walk, run, or train while:
lying flat
holding your breath
locking everything down
So your body ends up with strength it doesn't know how to use.
It's like training your arms in isolation and expecting it to magically improve your throwing mechanics.
The connection is missing.

The Over-Bracing Trap
A lot of people who "train core" well end up here.
They've learned to:
brace hard
lock their ribs down
clench everything to feel stable
And it works… temporarily.
They feel solid.
But underneath that, something else is happening.
Breathing becomes restricted
rotation disappears
the body starts moving as one rigid block
That rigidity has a cost.
Because movement relies on alternation and rotation, not just stiffness.
So over time, the body finds other ways to move:
through the lower back
through the hips
through the neck
And that's where discomfort starts to build.
The Missing Ingredient: Rotation
This is where things start to click.
Your core isn't just there to resist movement.
It's there to manage and control movement, especially rotation.
Every step you take involves:
your pelvis rotating one way
your ribcage counter-rotating the other
your body transferring force between them
That's normal, healthy human movement.
If that system isn't working:
you lose efficiency
you lose fluidity
you start overusing certain areas to compensate
And no amount of planks will restore that.
What Proper Core Function Feels Like
When your core starts working the way it's supposed to, people notice things like:
walking feels smoother and less effortful
their lower back stops tightening for no reason
they don't feel the need to constantly "hold themselves up"
their breathing feels easier, not restricted
It's not dramatic.
It's not a massive pump or burn.
It's subtle — but it carries over into everything.
Why This Matters More Than You Think
Because your core sits at the centre of everything you do.
If it's out of sync:
force doesn't transfer well
movement becomes inefficient
tension builds in places that shouldn't be working that hard
And over time, that shows up as:
recurring niggles
persistent tightness
a body that just feels "off" no matter how much you train

The Shift That Changes Everything
Instead of asking:
"How do I strengthen my core?"
Ask:
"How do I get my core to work with the rest of my body?"
That question leads you toward:
movement instead of isolation
coordination instead of contraction
integration instead of fatigue
And that's where things start to stick.
The Bottom Line
Your core isn't the problem.
The way you're training it might be.
Because if it doesn't carry over into how you move, it doesn't really count.
If You Want It to Actually Work
At Functional Patterns Brisbane, core training isn't something you tack on at the end.
It's built into:
how you stand
how you walk
how you produce and absorb force
So instead of just getting stronger, your body gets more organised.
And that's what actually holds.
Book an assessment if you want to feel the difference, not just train it.