Warmups and Getting in Sync
- John Winston
- Mar 24
- 5 min read
Warmups are often treated like a formality. Something to “get out of the way” before the real work begins. A few arm swings, some light jogging, maybe a quick stretch—done, but under the surface, something much more interesting is happening. Warmups aren’t just physical—they’re neurological. They’re about getting in sync. The question isn’t just whether your body is warm. It’s whether your system is ready.
Readiness isn’t just about muscles or heart rate. It’s about nervous system regulation, sensory calibration, mental state alignment, and signal clarity between brain and body. When a warmup is done right, it doesn’t just prepare the body for movement—it tunes the instrument.

What Is “Readiness,” Really?
True readiness is when your nervous system, musculoskeletal system, and perceptual systems are fully synchronized. That means your brain is anticipating movement with accuracy, your muscles are responding with precision, and your senses are filtering relevant information with clarity.
Think of it like switching modes. Most of the day, we operate in a default state—mental multitasking, light distraction, emotional background noise. Performance, on the other hand, demands single-channel engagement, and warmups help create that shift. They down-regulate noise and up-regulate signal (i.e. what’s important and what’s not).
Athletes often describe it as a feeling. “I felt sharp,” or “I was dialed in from the start.” That feeling comes from the nervous system being primed, not panicked. The right kind of warmup nudges you into that zone—not too hyped, not too relaxed, but alert and grounded.
Brain-Body Conversation
The nervous system is in constant communication with the rest of the body…and the body with the nervous system. Every step, jump, or shot is preceded by a conversation: “Are we safe? Are we ready? Do we know what’s coming?” Warmups help clarify the answers.
For example, light, rhythmic movement increases blood flow not just to the muscles, but to the prefrontal cortex and cerebellum, areas involved in decision-making and motor coordination. This is part of why you feel more mentally focused after warming up—not just physically looser.
There’s also a recalibration of your proprioceptive system—your body’s sense of where it is in space. When you start moving, your joints, muscles, and connective tissues begin firing signals back to the brain saying, “Here’s where I am.” This feedback loop tightens up as you move more, sharpening coordination and reducing the likelihood of missteps or overcorrections. It’s not just physical—it’s neuromechanical alignment.
Mood, Movement, and Momentum
One of the most underrated aspects of warmups is their impact on emotional state. Movement changes mood, and just a few minutes of dynamic motion can lower cortisol, release dopamine, and quiet inner noise. That’s not just about feeling good—it’s about accessing the parts of your brain responsible for confidence, flow, and precision.
Have you ever noticed how sluggish warmups often lead to sluggish starts? How starting fast and loose makes everything feel smoother? That’s the emotional layer of performance coming online. Your brain uses mood as a reference point for risk assessment and motor output. If you feel unsure, your body tightens. If you feel clear, your body opens up. A good warmup bridges that gap, not by forcing positivity but by anchoring the body in rhythm.
This is also where music, movement quality, and environmental cues matter. They’re not fluff—they’re inputs that influence your nervous system’s perception of the task ahead. When a warmup feels intentionally crafted, your system begins to take the moment more seriously.
Coordinating the System
The best warmups aren’t random—they’re progressive. They start general and become specific. This isn’t just about gradually elevating heart rate—it’s about layering signal precision. Light movement opens the gate, joint mobilization wakes up the proprioceptors, tempo work begins refining motor timing, and sport-specific movements prime the actual performance circuits.
This sequencing allows the brain to build a map. It starts predicting what’s coming and begins fine-tuning the motor patterns that will be needed later. This is where drills, technical rehearsal, and visual focus come into play.
There’s a reason why athletes often feel sharper after doing familiar drills, even when they don’t feel fully “on.” Those drills tap into well-rehearsed neural pathways, bringing them online and reducing cognitive strain when it matters most.
From Warmed Up to Tapped In
There’s a sweet spot where your body is activated, your brain is focused, and your breath is steady. That’s not just warmed up—that’s tapped in, which also opens an entry point to flow. That opening often starts in the warmup—long before the performance itself.
Athletes who consistently perform well often have personalized warmup routines that double as mental rituals. While sometimes explained by athletes as superstition, these rituals are actually made up of sequences that reinforce a sense of control, familiarity, and rhythm. The nervous system responds to that with stability and clarity.
One scientifically supported method for reinforcing this is something called pre-performance breathing, where athletes incorporate short rounds of box breathing (inhale-hold-exhale-hold for 4 seconds each) during their warmup transitions. This small intervention has been shown to reduce sympathetic arousal, boost vagal tone, and sharpen motor coordination—basically telling the body, “We’re good. Let’s do this.” When paired with a quick movement cue—like a technical drill or sprint start—the result is a mind-body system that’s in sync, not just active.
Why Warmups Matter
Warmups aren’t just about getting loose. They’re about aligning systems—mental, physical, emotional, and sensory. They prepare you to respond, not just act. They give your nervous system a reference point for what’s about to happen. When that happens consistently, your performance becomes more repeatable, less fragile, and more resilient.
More importantly, a good warmup creates a transition—from your day to your performance, from distraction to intention, from scattered to clear. In a world where most of us are juggling dozens of tabs in our brain at any given time, that transition isn’t a luxury. It’s essential.
You can feel the difference, and when you learn to tune into that feeling—not just physically, but across your whole system—you’re no longer “warming up.” You’re syncing in.
References
Bishop, D. (2003). Warm up I: Potential mechanisms and the effects of passive warm up on exercise performance. Sports Medicine, 33(6), 439–454.
McGowan, C. J., Pyne, D. B., Thompson, K. G., & Rattray, B. (2015). Warm-Up Strategies for Sport and Exercise: Mechanisms and Applications. Sports Medicine, 45(11), 1523–1546.
Behm, D. G., & Chaouachi, A. (2011). A review of the acute effects of static and dynamic stretching on performance. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 111(11), 2633–2651.
DiMenna, F. J. (2010). Warm-up and stretching in the prevention of muscular injury. Strength and Conditioning Journal, 32(2), 87–91.
Porges, S. W. (2007). The polyvagal perspective. Biological Psychology, 74(2), 116–143.
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