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Your Daily Routine

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Every exercise attached to something you already do. Built on habit stacking from Atomic Habits — the new behavior rides on top of existing ones so it runs on autopilot, not willpower.

The core idea

"After [CURRENT HABIT], I will [NEW HABIT]."

You don't need motivation to brush your teeth — it's welded to waking up. Every exercise below gets welded to something you already do. The cue is free, the decision is already made, and you never have to remember. When it works, it stops feeling like rehab and starts feeling like "just what I do when I make coffee."

Progression

The Exercises

Six movements. Each has a clear boundary. All serve the same chain: calf → Achilles → heel bone → plantar fascia.

Dosing cheat sheet — the limits matter
Ankle mobility No limit — do whenever
Isometric holds 5 sets, 1-2× per day
Toe scrunches / short-foot No limit — do whenever
Tennis ball roll 1-2× per day
HSR heel raises 3× per week MAX — never daily
Foam roll calves 1× per week

Green = go hard. Blue = has a daily dose. Yellow = real tendon load, respect the cap. Red = more is genuinely worse.

In-Bed Ankle Mobility
UNLIMITED
10circles/dir 10toe flexes ~90stotal
Ankle circles 10 each direction Toe flex/extend 10 reps, spread wide pillow

Why: Both your Achilles and plantar fascia stiffen overnight. Your first steps load cold, shortened tissue. This primes the chain before weight-bearing — ankle circles restore synovial fluid, toe flexion wakes up the plantar fascia, and light calf engagement activates the muscles that protect the tendon.

How: Lying on your back, foot off the mattress edge or propped on a pillow. Slow ankle circles (10 each way), then toe curls and spreads (10 reps), then gently press toes down like a gas pedal and hold 5 seconds (light calf engagement) × 5.

More is fine. This is zero-load mobility work. Do it in bed in the morning (most important), but also on the couch, lying on the floor, whenever. No cap. The morning session matters most because that's when tissue is coldest.

10
Circles/dir
10
Toe flexes
~90s
Total time
Isometric Calf Holds
DAILY
5sets 45shold 1-2×/day
START HOLD 45 SEC ~2" Flat ground only — NOT off a step edge (protects insertion)

Why: Sustained contraction stimulates collagen production without shearing forces. Triggers a pain-reducing effect via descending inhibition — the load signal overrides the pain signal. Research shows 45-second holds can reduce tendon pain for hours afterward. This is your foundation exercise.

How: Stand on both feet, rise up onto toes (not max height — about 2 inches), and hold. Keep it on flat ground. If 45 seconds is too much, start at 20 and build up. Light hand touch on a wall or counter for balance is fine.

Dose: 5 sets, once or twice a day. Not more. Isometrics are low-risk but they are real tendon loading. In the first 2 weeks (acute/painful stage), you can do 2 sessions per day — morning + evening. Once pain settles, drop to 1 session per day. Don't scatter sets randomly throughout the day — do them as one block so the tendon gets a clear load signal followed by recovery.

5
Sets / session
45s
Hold
1-2×
Sessions / day
Toe Scrunches & Short-Foot
UNLIMITED
times/day 10-20reps/set ~60s/set
TOE SCRUNCHES relaxed arch lifts towel (optional) SHORT-FOOT relaxed arch domes up toes stay flat — only arch lifts

Why: Strengthens intrinsic foot muscles and the plantar fascia without stressing the Achilles insertion. These are your unlimited-rep outlet — do them as many times a day as you want. They build the support system under the arch that takes load off the heel.

How: Toe scrunches: Curl toes to grip the floor (or a towel), pulling the ball of the foot toward the heel. 10-20 reps. Short-foot: Keep toes flat on the ground, try to shorten the foot by doming the arch upward. Hold 5 seconds × 10. Shoes on or off, seated or standing.

Truly unlimited. No cap. Go as hard as you want. These use intrinsic foot muscles, not the Achilles. There is no remodeling window to respect, no recovery concern. 5 sets, 50 sets — doesn't matter. This is where you channel the energy on rest days between HSR sessions. The more the better.

Times / day
10-20
Reps / set
~60s
Per set
Tennis Ball Roll
DAILY
2min/foot 1-2×/day ~4msession
BALL plantar fascia Roll heel to toe, gentle pressure Do this seated Gentle pressure only Keep by desk or couch

Why: Rolling provides gentle mechanical input to the plantar fascia, breaking up tension and improving blood flow. Targets the fascia directly without stressing the Achilles insertion. Low risk, high return. No freezing needed — just keep a tennis ball by your desk or couch.

How: Sit down, place the arch of your foot on the tennis ball, and roll from heel to just behind the toes with gentle-to-moderate pressure. 2 minutes per foot. Pause on tender spots.

1-2× per day. Morning is the highest-value window (tissue is stiffest). Evening is a good second session. Keep a ball next to wherever you sit — under your desk, by the couch. Zero friction = actually happens.

2
Min / foot
1-2×
Per day
~4m
Per session
Heavy Slow Heel Raises
3×/WEEK
3sets 15→6reps 3sup / 3sdown
WEEKS 1-4 Bilateral 3s up · 3s down WEEKS 3-6 Add weight 3s up · 3s down WEEKS 5+ Single leg 3s up · 3s down

Why: This is the primary remodeling exercise. Slow, heavy contractions give tenocytes a sustained "build here" signal. The slow speed (3 seconds up, 3 seconds down) creates tension through the full range. Flat ground protects the insertion from compressive load. Also loads the plantar fascia through push-off mechanics — one exercise, both structures.

How: Stand on flat floor (NOT a step edge). Rise onto toes over 3 seconds, lower over 3 seconds. Start bilateral (both legs). Progress by adding dumbbells, then transition to single-leg. Touch a wall for balance.

DO NOT do this more than 3× per week. One session per day on those days. This is the hardest boundary. The 48-72 hour gap between sessions is when collagen actually remodels. Doing this daily — or twice in a day — disrupts the remodeling window and can push you backward. More is genuinely worse. Channel the in-between energy into the unlimited exercises (toe scrunches, short-foot, ankle mobility).

3
Sets / session
15→6
Reps (progress)
3×/wk
Max frequency
Foam Roll Calves
WEEKLY
2min/leg /week ~5msession
ROLLER GASTROCNEMIUS Upper calf — roll knee to mid-calf SOLEUS Lower calf — bend knee, roll deeper

Why: Reduces resting tension in the calf muscles that pull on the Achilles. Tight calves = more strain on both the insertion and the plantar fascia. You're not "breaking up scar tissue" — you're reducing upstream tension on the whole chain. 2 minutes of rolling before exercises makes them more effective.

How: Sit on floor, calf on roller, other leg crossed on top for pressure. Roll from just below the knee to mid-calf (gastrocnemius), then bend the knee and roll the lower section (soleus). Pause on tender spots for 10-15 seconds. Both legs, 2 min each.

Once a week is enough. Best time: before a workout or as part of an evening wind-down. It's soft tissue work, not tendon loading, so there's no recovery concern — but the returns diminish fast. One good session per week keeps calf tension in check without eating into time better spent on the daily exercises.

2
Min / leg
Per week
~5m
Per session

Your balance board — hold off for now. Wobble boards push the ankle into dorsiflexion under load, which compresses the insertional zone against the heel bone — the exact thing irritating your tendon. Once the insertion calms down (weeks 5+, morning stiffness consistently low), the board becomes a great proprioception tool. For now, it creates the wrong kind of stress. Shelve it, don't toss it.

Your Day, Mapped

Every new habit chained to something you already do. The formula: After the existing behavior, do the new one. No decisions, no remembering.

Wake up
Wake up, still in bed Ankle circles + toe flexes (90 sec)
Shower
Standing in the shower Isometric calf holds (5 × 45s) — walls for balance
Coffee
Making coffee Isometric calf holds while it brews (5 × 45s)
At desk
Refill water bottle Toe scrunches while standing at the kitchen (20 reps)
Home
Get home from work Isometric calf holds (5 × 45s) — lean on counter
Bedtime
Brush teeth Isometric calf holds while brushing (5 × 45s)
Get into bed Ankle circles + toe flexes (90 sec)

Your Habit Stacks

Each exercise welded to something you already do. The specificity is the point.

90 sec
Stack 1 — Wake Up
After I wake up, still in bed, I do ankle circles and toe flexes before getting up.
First steps hit warm tissue instead of cold, shortened tissue. 90 seconds while still horizontal.
8 min
Stack 2 — Shower
After I get in the shower, I do 5 isometric calf holds (45s hold, 60s rest). Walls for balance.
You're standing, warm water on your calves. Perfect conditions. Lean on the wall. 5 × 45s fits in a normal shower.
8 min
Stack 3 — Coffee
After I start the coffee machine, I do 5 isometric calf holds while it brews.
Lean on the counter. Coffee is the reward. Rise up, hold, rest, repeat — coffee's ready when you're done.
30 sec
Stack 4 — Water Refill
After I refill my water bottle, I do 20 toe scrunches while standing at the kitchen.
Every refill is a free cue. Scrunches are invisible — shoes on is fine. Adds up fast across a day.
8 min
Stack 5 — Home from Work
After I get home from work, I do 5 isometric calf holds. Lean on counter.
Transition moment — you're shifting gears anyway. Get it done before you sit down.
8 min
Stack 6 — Brush Teeth
After I start brushing my teeth, I do isometric calf holds while brushing.
You're standing at the sink for 2+ minutes anyway. Rise up, hold, brush.
90 sec
Stack 7 — Bedtime
After I get into bed, I do ankle circles + toe flexes before sleep.
Primes the chain before overnight stiffening. Reduces morning pain. Bookends the day with the same routine you started with.

The Week

Daily stuff happens every day (it's chained to habits that happen every day). HSR is the only thing with a specific schedule — 3 days per week with at least one rest day between.

Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
Sun
Ankle mobility + isometrics Tennis ball + isometrics HSR heel raises Toe/foot work (unlimited)

Toe scrunches and short-foot happen every day but there's no set count — they ride on your existing stand-up and Spotify cues. The green and blue dots are the anchored daily habits. Yellow is the only one that needs scheduling.

Environment Design

Atomic Habits: "Make it obvious, make it easy." Reduce friction to zero for every exercise. If you have to go find the thing, you won't do the thing.

How This Evolves

The daily habit chains stay the same — the exercises inside them get harder. You never have to build new habits, just progress the load.

Weeks 1-2 — Foundation

Isometric holds: Bilateral, bodyweight, 5 × 45s. If 45s is hard, start at 20s.

HSR heel raises: Bilateral, bodyweight, 3 × 15 reps. Slow tempo (3s/3s).

Everything else: Full dose from day 1 — ankle mobility, tennis ball roll, toe scrunches, foam rolling. These are all low-risk.

Metric: Track morning stiffness daily (1-10, mental note or phone). This is your tendon's report card.

Weeks 3-4 — Add Load

Isometric holds: Try single-leg if bilateral feels easy. Hold dumbbells if not.

HSR heel raises: Add dumbbells. Still bilateral. 3 × 12 reps.

Metric: Morning stiffness should be trending down. If it spikes after HSR days, you added too much weight — back off one step.

Weeks 5-8 — Single Leg

HSR heel raises: Transition to single-leg. Start bodyweight, then add load. 3 × 10 reps, working toward 4 × 6 with heavy weight.

Balance board: Reintroduce for proprioception. Start bilateral (both feet), 30 seconds at a time. If the insertion flares, back off.

Running: If morning stiffness is consistently low, start finding your 24-hour dose (see the explainer for the Silbernagel model).

Weeks 9-12+ — Sport Return

HSR heel raises: Heavy single-leg, 4 × 6 with dumbbells. This is maintenance-level strength.

Add plyometrics: Hops, skipping, jump rope — if pain allows. This is the bridge to sport-specific loading.

Speed work: Last thing reintroduced. Only after you can do 25+ single-leg heel raises matching the unaffected side and run your target distance with no next-day flare.


The Two Rules

📏

The 24-Hour Rule

Check morning stiffness the day after any loading. Same or better = you loaded correctly. Worse = you did too much. Adjust the next session. This replaces guessing with data.

The 48-Hour Rule (HSR only)

Heavy slow heel raises need 48-72 hours between sessions. The exercise creates the signal. The rest is when the building happens. Mon/Wed/Fri or similar. Never consecutive days. Channel the in-between energy into toe scrunches, short-foot, and pull-ups — those don't stress the Achilles.

Habit stacking framework from Atomic Habits by James Clear. Exercise protocols based on Beyer et al. HSR study (2015), Silbernagel pain monitoring RCT (2007), and current clinical guidelines for insertional Achilles tendinopathy. Not medical advice — see a sports medicine provider for personalized guidance.