The progression decision most clinicians make automatically

Why readiness is often assumed — and how that assumption affects retention, confidence, and predictability.

In most sessions, there’s a moment where a decision gets made:

Do we progress… or hold?

That decision is rarely careless.
But it’s often implicit — based on what worked last time, what didn’t flare, or what feels reasonable.

This short video explains:

  • where that decision actually happens
  • why it’s rarely named or taught
  • and how making it explicit changes outcomes and confidence

When readiness isn’t clearly recognized, progression can outpace what a system can absorb — even when the care itself is good.

Over time, that shows up as:

  • inconsistent progress
  • flares that don’t quite make sense
  • visits that feel harder to predict
  • and patients who quietly disengage

The Client Readiness Lab exists to make this decision layer explicit — not by adding techniques, but by clarifying judgment in real clinical situations.

Enrollment details will be shared shortly.

If this doesn’t feel relevant to your work, no action is needed.

— James

This material is intended for licensed physical therapists working in face-to-face clinical settings.

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