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Feature · Foundations

Calisthenics for absolute beginners

Most calisthenics apps assume you can already do a push-up. Some of them ask, at onboarding, whether you can hold a 30-second active hang — as if that were the floor. If you're reading this, your floor is probably lower, and that's fine. It's the entire reason the Foundations cycle exists.

Foundations is ZenMotion's ten-week adaptive program for people starting from zero. It runs three short sessions a week. The first push movement is wall push-ups. The first pull movement is scapular pulls. The first squat movement is a supported squat with a chair. Every session, you climb — or hold, or step down — and the app decides.

Five parallel progression ladders, not one linear program

Traditional beginner programs treat you as one strength number. If you can't do the "beginner workout," the fix is to do easier reps of the same exercises. If you can do the beginner workout, congratulations, you graduate to intermediate.

Real beginners aren't one number. Someone who's never lifted might have a decent squat from years of walking, a middling core from sitting all day, and no pulling capacity at all. Foundations respects this. Every session pulls exercises from five separate ladders — one each for push, pull, squat, hinge, and core — and each ladder tracks your progression independently.

Here's what the ladders look like:

Push ladder (7 rungs)

Wall push-up → incline push-up on a desk → knee push-up → floor push-up → decline push-up → pike push-up → diamond push-up. Most people spend the first four weeks between rungs one and three. Anyone stuck at wall push-ups for a full ten weeks still ends the program stronger than when they started, because volume climbs even when the rung doesn't.

Pull ladder (7 rungs)

Scapular pull (bar, light) → dead hang → active hang → negative pull-up → assisted pull-up → chin-up → full pull-up. The pull ladder is the slowest — pulling strength develops last for most beginners, and that's expected, not a red flag.

Squat ladder (6 rungs)

Supported squat (holding a chair) → bodyweight squat → tempo squat → cossack squat → split squat → Bulgarian split squat. The squat ladder tends to move fastest because most adults already have functional lower-body strength.

Hinge ladder (4 rungs)

Glute bridge → single-leg glute bridge → good morning → single-leg Romanian deadlift. The hinge pattern is the one nobody trains until their back hurts. Foundations builds it early.

Core ladder (5 rungs)

Dead bug → bird dog → plank → side plank → hollow body hold. Every rung teaches bracing before it teaches endurance.

How the app decides when to bump you up

Rung progression follows one rule: crush twice, then bump. When you hit the top of the target rep range with clean form across every set, and you've done it once before at the same rung, the app promotes you to the next rung the following session. One crushed session on its own doesn't count — that could be a lucky day. Two in a row is a signal.

Stepping down works the same way but faster. Any session where you can't hit the bottom of the range with form triggers the app to consider a step down. Two failed sessions in a row and you drop a rung, no shame attached. The point is to train at your actual capacity, not your ambition.

A typical week

Three sessions, each 20 to 30 minutes. The sessions rotate:

  • Session A — upper body focus. Push movement, pull movement, one accessory (usually a hold or a shoulder mobility drill).
  • Session B — lower body focus. Squat, hinge, one accessory (usually a hip mobility drill or single-leg balance).
  • Session C — full body. One push, one pull, one squat, plus a longer core block.

Every fourth week is a deload — target reps drop by 20% while sets stay the same. That gives your tendons, joints, and central nervous system time to consolidate before the next push. Read more about deload weeks →

What happens if you miss a week

Life happens. If your last completed workout was seven or more days ago, the first session back scales targets down by 20% with an "Easing back in" banner. Then normal targets resume the session after that. There is no streak to lose and no penalty. Detraining from a one-week break is small; the point of the soft landing is not to trigger a tendon flare-up on session one back.

What comes after Foundations

When you can do floor push-ups, negative pull-ups, and hold a full plank — usually somewhere between week seven and week twelve, depending on your starting point — the app detects graduation. You get offered three paths:

  1. Pick a skill. Move to a Skill Focus Split for muscle-up, planche, front lever, handstand, or one of the other advanced skills. This is the path for people who want a specific target.
  2. Add days. Move to a 5-day strength split for people who want more volume and general strength across push, pull, and legs, without a specific skill focus.
  3. Keep going. Stay on Foundations if it's working. The ladders extend past the "standard graduation" point for a reason — some people want to consolidate for another cycle before adding complexity, and that's a legitimate choice.

Foundations is the bridge, not the destination. But the bridge is where a lot of well-meaning beginner programs collapse, so this one is worth walking carefully.

Free to try, free to fail out of

ZenMotion is free to download. The Foundations cycle is included, along with three months of free access to premium features. If it's not for you, you cancel — no data lock-in, no email spam.