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Shawn M Flot

About Shawn M Flot

Beyond pain relief there is potential to do more

January 4, 2026 by Shawn M Flot

After more than 30 years as a movement and breathing specialist, I’m making a fundamental shift in how I work with people—and I want to share why.

What I Used to See

For three decades, people came to me with pain. 
Knee pain. Back pain. Shoulder pain. Hip dysfunction. Chronic tightness. Recurring injuries. They came because something hurt or broke down. And I helped them—we’d identify the problem, address the dysfunction, reduce the pain, get them back to “normal.”

But here’s what troubled me: people only showed up when something was wrong.

They waited until pain forced them to seek help. They invested in their bodies only when breakdown demanded it. They thought about their physical capacity only in terms of what hurt rather than what was possible.

And even after we resolved their immediate issue, most returned to the same patterns that created the problem in the first place—because we never built something beyond pain relief.

The Realization

This past summer, I spent 18 days hiking the John Muir Trail—252 miles through the Sierra Nevada, and summiting Mt. Whitney along the way.

And on Day 18, experiencing Yosemite for the first time taking the long arduous decent into the valley, I felt so strong. Not “pain-free” or “managing well”—genuinely powerful, capable, energized.

And it hit me: I had built this capacity not because anything hurt, but because I understood what was possible.

I didn’t wait for my knees to fail before learning efficient movement patterns.

I didn’t wait for breathing problems before developing respiratory efficiency.

I didn’t wait for breakdown before building resilient systems.

I had invested in my body’s potential, not just its problems.

The Pattern I Keep Seeing

Most people approach their physical health like they approach their car: they wait for the warning signals from the car’s check system, even though they felt something odd with it before the warning, or worse the breakdown. But your body isn’t a machine that breaks down and needs repair. It self-regulates and adapts to the necessary demands and sometimes this has a consequence that goes unnoticed.

What if instead of waiting for pain to force action, you invested in what your body could become?
What if instead of managing limitations, you built capabilities you didn’t know you had?
What if the question wasn’t “What hurts?” but “What’s possible?”

The Pivot

I’m pivoting my entire practice from pain-focused intervention to capacity-focused development.

The old model:

  • You came when something hurt
  • I helped fix the immediate problem
  • You left when pain subsided, because that was the goal
  • You returned when the next issue appeared

The new model:

  • You come because you’re ready to build
  • We develop robust foundational systems
  • You discover capabilities beyond what you imagined
  • You invest in potential, not just problems

This isn’t about denying that pain exists or matters. Pain is real, and addressing it is important. And for at least 25 years I have recognized and experienced many peoples’ pain points where not where the issues were needing to be addressed.

But pain is often just your body’s way of saying: “You’ve exceeded your current capacity. It’s time to build more.”

What Capacity Building Looks Like

Instead of asking “Where does it hurt?”, I’m asking: “What’s not contributing to the things you want to do that pain has its limitation on you.” and
“What do you want to be capable of?”

Do you want to hike with your grandchildren without your knees screaming?
 Do you want to finish your work weeks feeling energized instead of depleted?
 Do you want to pick up new physical activities in your 50s and 60s instead of giving them up?
 Do you want to age with vitality, strength, and independence?

These goals require building capacity, not just eliminating pain. They require:

Structural foundations that make movement efficient instead of compensatory

Respiratory development that regulates your nervous system and fuels your energy

Systemic resilience that creates surplus instead of operating at your limits

From Reactive to Proactive

Here’s the fundamental difference:

Reactive approach: Wait for breakdown → Fix the problem → Return to previous patterns → Wait for next breakdown

Proactive approach: Build robust systems → Expand capabilities → Discover new potential → Continue developing

Most people spend decades in the reactive cycle, addressing pain after pain, limitation after limitation. But there’s another way: Invest in what your body can become before breakdown forces you to.

The Invitation

I’m no longer operating as a medical practitioner. Rather I am using my 30+ years of clinical experience and depth of knowledge both scientifically and what I’ve gain working with people as a PT, to practice health care but support health and capacity, instead of deficit and dysfunction. I’m working with people who recognize that their bodies have extraordinary potential—and they’re ready to invest in developing it.

Whether you’re an athlete seeking performance, an active parent wanting to keep up with life’s demands, or someone committed to aging powerfully instead of declining quietly—the opportunity is the same:

Build capacity now. Don’t wait for pain to force your hand. Because the truth is, in my experience: by the time pain shows up, you’ve been operating beyond your capacity for a while. Your body has been compensating, adapting, struggling.


Why wait for that moment?
Why not build the foundations that make pain irrelevant in the first place?

What’s Next

Over the coming months, I’ll be sharing what capacity building actually looks like—how breathing and movement form the foundation of human potential, how to develop systems instead of just strengthening muscles, and what becomes possible when you invest in capability rather than just managing problems. This pivot represents a fundamental shift: from helping people escape pain to helping people discover potential.

The question is: Are you willing to invest in what’s possible before breakdown demands it?


Shawn M. Flot is a Physical Therapist with over 30 years of experience as a movement and breathing specialist. As a Master Instructor in the Oxygen Advantage method and one of only six Master Breathing Instructors in the United States, he brings deep expertise in respiratory physiology to human performance. After decades helping people with pain relief as their goal, he now focuses exclusively on helping people build the capacity that makes pain irrelevant—before it shows up.

Filed Under: Moving Into Harmony

The Breath: Your Best Companion in Healing, Health & Performance

December 12, 2025 by Shawn M Flot

In every moment of your life, your breath exists. From your first cry to this very moment, your breath has been your constant companion, and there to do for you what you do. Yet how often do you pause to consider this remarkable process that bridges your conscious and unconscious being? your physical activity and your physiology? your health and your performance?

How frequently do you recognize that within your breath lies perhaps the most powerful tool for health, transformation and performing well with all activities you do?

The One Thing You Can Control – Your Breath

In a world that feels more and more overwhelming, your breath offers something unique – it’s the one aspect you can consciously influence to change the state you are in. While your heart beats and your digestive system functions without your direct input, the breath stands at the crossroads of automatic and voluntary control. This unique position makes it a powerful gateway to influence your physical, mental and emotional well-being, and the state of your physiological health.

Beyond Just Breathing

Many, I work with initially, think of breathing as a simple in-and-out process, but it’s far more integrated. Your breathing pattern is both a mirror and a modifier of your internal state. When you’re stressed, your breath reflects this through rapid, shallow patterns. When you’re at ease, your breath flows with natural rhythm and depth. And there is a pause as your breathing becomes more healthy and functional to the activities you do. But here’s the fascinating part – this relationship works both ways. By consciously working with your breath, you can actually shift your internal state, and your breathing signals to your brain what is needed in the moment – run or relax.

Three BIG Benefits of the Breath Practice

Understanding breath’s potential begins with recognizing its three core capacities:

Self-Regulation: Your breath is an always-available tool for managing your internal state. Like a skilled sailor adjusting their sails, you can learn to use your breath to navigate life’s challenges, finding your center even in challenging and turbulent times.

Self-Healing: Your body holds innate capacities for recovery, renewal and regeneration. Breathing practices can activate these natural healing mechanisms, supporting everything from better performance, to better sleep, to enhanced immune function.

Resilience: Through awareness and attention to your breathing and the outcomes of your practices, you develop not just momentary calm but lasting adaptability. Adaptability in a broader range. This isn’t about achieving a permanent state of ease – it’s about building the flexibility to move through life’s challenges with greater capacities and confidence.

The Intelligence of Your Body

Your body’s intelligence of integrated systems are intricately connected through breathing. From the core-base stability that grounds you to the intricate dance of your nervous system, from what comes in to what is released, your breath influences it all. The simple act of nasal breathing, for instance, triggers the release of nitric oxide, supporting healthy blood flow and immune function. Your lower belly breathing center (known traditionally as the Lower Dantien) serves as both a physical anchor and an energetic foundation for stable, sustainable breath patterns.

Starting Your Journey

The beauty of training the breath lies in its accessibility. You don’t need special equipment or a particular setting – your breath is always with you. All you need is your attention and a developed felt sense. Begin by simply noticing: Where is your breath moving? What’s its quality? How does it feel is key to knowing if it’s healthy or not. Then feeling how it changes throughout your day with the different demands you face is such an incredible learning tool? This awareness itself is transformative.

As you develop this relationship with your breath, you’ll discover it becomes a reliable companion in:

  • Managing stress responses – turning them from negative to positive stressors
  • Supporting quality sleep – best recovery bests the previous demands
  • Enhancing mental clarity – relaxed focus produces learning and meaningfulness to what you learn to use in your life
  • Building physical stamina – to endure life’s known and unknown challenges
  • Creating emotional balance – for better relatedness to those that are important in your life, and how to not allow the breath to give you away.

An Invitation

Whether you’re navigating demands that produce stress, recovering from the conditioning of the trauma(s) you’ve faced, or simply seeking greater health capacities, your breath offers a path forward. It’s not about achieving perfect breathing – it’s about developing a relationship with this fundamental life force activity that supports your journey of growth, healing and performing well in your life.

Start simply. Take moments through your day to feel your breath. Notice where it moves in your body. Observe its rhythm and behavior without trying to change anything – this is a HUGE skill. This simple act of attention begins a profound journey of discovery.

Upper Chest Middle Chest Lower Belly Natural Breath Wave Inhale Exhale Head floating Shoulders relaxed Sit bones grounded

Remember, every breath offers a new beginning. Every exhale is an opportunity to let go, and every inhale brings fresh possibility. Your journey with your breath is uniquely yours, but you don’t have to walk it alone. Consider joining me for a deeper exploration of these practices in an upcoming course I am teaching through OLLI@SOU, where I will be guiding curious people like yourself through practical tools for harnessing your breath’s potential through trauma, stress to enhance your resilience and immunity.

Author’s note: Interested in exploring these concepts further? I have a few six-week self study courses coming in 2026. Contact me to learn more

Filed Under: Oxygen Advantage, The Breath

The truth about your breathing – the diaphragm Part 2

July 9, 2025 by Shawn M Flot

Breathing is based on the ability to exchange gases. This exchange is accomplished by pressure and fluid dynamics.

The vital exchange of what is in the outside air, and the process of those essential ingredients for you to survive, AND to live efficiently in all activities you do. Health doesn’t happen. Health is a uncovering to continuously reveal the powers and capacities behind how you roll in life with your body and mind. And this requires Oxygen.

Oxygen is a gas.
Carbon Dioxide is a gas.
And so is Nitric Oxide.
These are very important for life to be energized and supported. One is essential for all biological processes in life, and one is produced inside the lining of your nose, from the interaction with Oxygen. The other gas of importance in the exchange for life is Carbon Dioxide – a byproduct of your energy production.

So why you ask is the diaphragm important in this process called Respiratory Physiology?

Because gas moves to and from by pressure, availability and permeability.

And when the diaphragm contracts before you engage with your inhalation. I hope you picked this up! Your diaphragm begins to contract BEFORE you ride the incoming breath, or consciously engage with the incoming air. This contraction sets up a cascade of actions by other muscles, tissues, joints and vessels based on a pressure gradient.

The diaphragm creates a larger space in the rib cage where your lungs are. As the diaphragm contracts:

  • it moves down,
  • muscles in between the ribs assist in up-lifting (a bucket handle analogy is often used for the ribs).
  • neck muscles assist in anchoring/stabilizing the head on the neck, and mobilizing the neck and upper ribs.
  • the spine “elongates” or flattens its curves - the upper spine, or thoracic spine, lessens it’s backward curvature = kyphosis, and the low back, or lumbar spine lessens it’s forward curvature = lordosis.
  • the glottis contracts to generate a pressure gradient so air doesn’t escape (or go into the lungs). My friend Mary Massery’s studies into the “pop can dynamic of postural control” is brilliant in another awe of the diaphragm’s potential in human development, mobility and movement.
  • the dilator muscle of the throat, in the pharynx and laryngeal region, contract to open up the airway.
  • membranes of the small air sacs, alveoli – “grapes”, and lower smaller airways dilate (with the help of Nitric Oxide) for greater profusion across a barrier – the endothelial layer – for gas exchange.
  • the pelvic floor moves downward to accommodate for the building internal pressure of the abdomen and pelvic cavities.
  • certain parts of the blood circulation gain pressure, while other parts decrease pressure to accommodate for the powerful force of the blood; and this is influenced by the diaphragm, the connective tissues around all organs and other tissues for proper fluid dynamics.

And all of these coordinated activities like a symphony, create a maximal function for the outside air to move into all the spaces of the lungs with the greatest ease and least amount of energy required. Yes breathing is one of the energy consumers of your body.

The most important factor is the diaphragm’s contraction creates greater space. With greater space the pressure inside your lungs – which is already sub-atmospheric pressure, meaning it is less than the pressure outside. With an increase in pressure gradient, air moves easier along the gradient from higher to lower. This allows for the greatest efficiency of breathing to occur. And this is true in the opposite way to easily and efficiently release what is not needed in the system as eliminating from the lungs.

I hope you can begin to appreciate what all happens in the act of each breath you are given. All the above mentioned drive all activities in coordinated functions. And the health of each cell, and each tissue function, is dependent on this very important cascade of actions.

Did you know that they way you breathe can be affecting the health of your spine – neck, upper back and low back – too?

Contact me for a full-system approach to how your breathing impacts your health and well-being.

Filed Under: Insights, Moving Into Harmony, Oxygen Advantage, The Breath, Yoga

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