Cue The Burn

Mark M Lusk, DPT

Cue the Burn is a podcast for the performers, the athletes, and the hard-driving humans who never stop showing up. Hosted by Mark Lusk—a manual physical therapist, former professional dancer, educator, and still-grinding NYC athlete over 50—this show explores what it takes to move well, perform strong, and stay fired up through every chapter of your training and your life. From evidence-based insights to raw, real-world stories, each episode blends science, strategy, and sweat to help you stay resilient, curious, and relentlessly lit from within. Because when there’s nothing left to burn

Épisodes

  1. 11 mai

    EP12 - Stronger Than Your Show

    Every Broadway performer knows 8 shows a week is demanding. But what most don't realize is that it's not the show itself that breaks them — it's the moment something unexpected gets stacked on top of an already maxed-out body. A swing track. A press event. A nine-show week. A put-in rehearsal on your day off. That extra 5% is where injuries are born. In this episode, Mark Lusk introduces a concept that has shaped both his clinical practice and his own comeback from serious knee surgery: being stronger than your show. Coined by his mentor Jenny Green of Physio Arts, this philosophy goes beyond just surviving your contract. Mark breaks down the difference between functional capacity, durability, and athletic resilience — and why performers who treat their performance as their conditioning are always one unexpected event away from injury. He unpacks the Five Pillars of Athletic Resilience translated directly to Broadway life, then delivers a four-tool Burn Toolkit with immediately actionable strategies for building the buffer that keeps you strong in month 10 of your contract — not just month one. Key Takeaways Your show is not what injures you — it's living at 95% capacity when something unpredictable gets addedPerformance is expression; conditioning is preparation — they are not the same thingFunctional capacity, durability, and athletic resilience are three distinct things every performer needs to understand and trainAthletic resilience is the savings account that keeps a surprise from becoming a crisisThe Five Pillars of Athletic Resilience for Broadway: mobility, neuromuscular control, strength, capacity, and recoveryPerformers consistently overvalue flexibility and undervalue strength — and only strength train when injuredChapter Timestamps[0:00] Why your show isn't what injures you — it's the 5% overflow [1:31] Introducing today's topic: Physical capacity and durability [2:01] Mark's 17-year clinical perspective and personal dance career [2:45] The MVMT mission: Return performers better than when they started [3:05] Defining functional capacity, durability, and athletic resilience [3:42] All the "extras" Broadway puts on your body that count as load [4:13] The rent and savings analogy — What athletic resilience actually looks like [4:34] How Mark's knee surgery changed his approach to training [5:03] Where performers miss the mark — The five most common mistakes [5:36] The Five Pillars of Athletic Resilience translated to Broadway [7:19] The Burn Toolkit: 4 immediate strategies to build your buffer [9:16] Closing thoughts — build a body that's stronger than your show Resources MentionedMVMT Physical Therapy: www.mvmtpt.comSocial: @MVMTPTPhysio Arts / Jenny Green: Broadway PT clinic that originated the "stronger than your show" philosophyWho This Episode Is ForBroadway performers and stage artists navigating the physical demands of a long runPerformers who assume dance class is enough conditioning — and are getting injured as a resultAthletes and movers who only strength train when something hurtsCoaches, choreographers, and clinicians working with performing artistsStage managers and directors trying to understand why performers break down mid-contract

    10 min
  2. 28 avr.

    EP11 - Desk-to-Dumbbell Transition

    It's 6 p.m. on a Tuesday. You've spent nine hours hunched over a laptop, and now you're sprinting to a 50-minute HIIT class. Your brain is ready. Your body? Still in office mode. That gap — between sedentary work and high-intensity training — is where injuries are born. And a two-minute warm-up isn't going to save you. In this episode, Mark Lusk breaks down exactly what prolonged sitting does to two of the most critical areas of your body — your psoas (deep hip flexors) and your thoracic spine — and why the standard pre-class warm-up is like trying to defrost a turkey in 30 seconds. He introduces the concept of movement snacks: short, intentional bursts of movement throughout your workday that act as small deposits in your movement bank, so you're not paying injury interest at 6 p.m. And in the Burn Toolkit, he delivers three practical, desk-friendly tools you can start using today to make that desk-to-dumbbell transition safer, smarter, and more sustainable. Key Takeaways Eight to nine hours of sitting causes real physiological changes — not just stiffness — that can't be undone with a two-minute warm-upThe psoas muscle stays in an adaptively shortened state after prolonged sitting, increasing your risk of strains, pulls, and low back pain when you go straight into explosive movementThe thoracic spine's primary job is rotation — and when it's stiff from desk posture, your neck, shoulders, and low back pay the priceA proper warm-up must do three things: elevate core temperature, increase joint and tissue elasticity, and prepare you for the specific demands of your workoutMovement snacks — brief, intentional movement breaks throughout the day — are more effective than trying to undo hours of sitting in one pre-class windowMobility equity built throughout the day means you don't have to pay injury interest at the gymYour athletic journey doesn't start at the gym floor — it starts at your desk Chapter Timestamps  The danger zone: Going from desk to HIIT class without bridging the gap  [1:05] Welcome to Cue the Burn — today's topic: the desk-to-dumbbell transition  [1:44] What actually happens to your body after 8–9 hours of sitting  [2:37] Why a tight psoas puts your lumbar spine at risk during explosive movement  [3:50] The thoracic spine: How desk posture kills rotational mobility  [3:30] Why the 2-minute warm-up is like defrosting a turkey in 30 seconds  [4:23] Introducing movement snacks — Small deposits in the movement bank and how they prevent the 6 p.m. shock  [5:01] Tool #1 — Scapular Reset / Brueger's Relief Position [6:18] Tool #2 — The 5-Minute Bridge: cat-cow, bird dog, glute bridges  [7:08] Tool #3 — Thoracic Threading in your office chair  [7:41] How to actually make movement snacks stick: Calendar, notifications, just do it  [8:03] Closing thought — Your athletic journey happens throughout the whole day Resources Mentioned  MVMT Physical Therapy: www.mvmtpt.com  Social: @MVMTPT Who This Episode Is For Office workers and remote employees who train after work and keep getting hurtCrossFitters, HIIT athletes, and runners going straight from desk to workoutAnyone whose warm-up consists of "I stretched for two minutes and hoped for the best"Athletes dealing with recurring hip flexor tightness, low back pain, or shoulder issuesCoaches and clinicians looking for practical desk-mobility language to give desk-athlete clients

    9 min
  3. 20 avr.

    EP10 - One Is Greater Than Zero

    What happens when life gets in the way of your rehab plan — and suddenly doing none of it feels easier than doing some of it? For most athletes, gym-goers, and people navigating injury, that moment is where progress quietly dies. Not because they're lazy. Not because they don't care. But because no one ever told them that rehab isn't pass/fail. In this episode, Mark Lusk introduces the most powerful mindset shift he brings into every session with his patients: 1 is greater than 0. Drawing from his clinical experience and a story about a professional dancer who ghosted her rehab — until one small change turned everything around — Mark breaks down why perfection is the enemy of progress, and how a single exercise, stretch, or rep is always worth doing. He also delivers a packed Burn Toolkit with eight practical strategies you can use today to build momentum, beat the guilt cycle, and keep showing up — even on your worst days. Key TakeawaysThe guilt and shame around skipping rehab homework is one of the biggest barriers to recovery — and it's completely avoidableRehab is not pass/fail — the body doesn't need 100% compliance to heal, but it does need consistency and intentionOne exercise done is infinitely more valuable than six exercises skippedSmall, attainable goals build confidence and healthy habits — big goals without structure breed shame and dropoutHabit stacking — attaching exercises to existing routines — is one of the most effective ways to stay consistentMissing a day isn't failure, it's data — adjust, don't abandonThe body doesn't care when you get it done, only that you get it doneThis mindset applies beyond rehab — to gym routines, business tasks, and life managementChapter Timestamps[0:00] The pressure athletes feel to do every single exercise — and the guilt when they don't [0:17] Introducing the mindset shift: 1 is greater than 0 [1:18] What "1 is greater than 0" actually means for rehab [1:27] What Mark hears every session: The homework admission [2:22] Rehab isn't pass/fail — there's no gold medal for bridging [2:59] The professional dancer who ghosted her rehab — and what changed [3:41] The same pattern shows up in fitness and gym goals [4:18] The Mount Kilimanjaro principle — every mountain, one step at a time [5:24] The body doesn't care when — it just needs you to show up [5:48] The Burn Toolkit: 8 strategies to keep moving even on hard days [9:08] Closing thoughts — you don't need to be perfect, you just need to keep showing up Resources MentionedMVMT Physical Therapy: www.mvmtpt.comSocial: @MVMTPTWho This Episode Is ForAthletes and performers navigating injury rehab who keep falling off their programAnyone who has ever quit a gym routine after missing one workoutPeople who feel shame or guilt around "not doing enough"Coaches and clinicians looking for practical language to reduce patient dropoutAnyone who's ever let perfect be the enemy of good

    10 min
  4. 13 avr.

    EP9 - The Resilience Framework

    What separates athletes who are still strong and moving well in their 60s and 70s from those who burn out, break down, or quietly stop training altogether? It's not genetics. It's not talent. It's athletic resilience — and it's completely buildable. In this episode, Mark Lusk, DPT draws from his own journey as a former professional dancer who survived a major injury and surgery in his early 20s, and has spent the decades since designing a body that still performs at 53. He breaks down the five pillars of athletic resilience — the framework he sees in every athlete who keeps thriving long-term — and explains exactly why most athletes over 40 keep hitting the same wall. If you've been training hard but not training smart, this episode will change the way you think about your body and your long game. Key TakeawaysAthletic resilience is your body's capacity to absorb stress, recover, and adapt — not just how hard you can push Injuries, burnout, and decline are not inevitable parts of aging — they're common when athletes neglect the five pillars Movement quality comes before strength — you can't strengthen your way out of a mechanical dysfunction Strength is not just performance, it's structural armor — and it protects your joints, tendons, and bones as you age Recovery is not passive — it's where adaptation actually happens, and sleep, nutrition, and stress regulation are the three key drivers Most injuries don't happen because athletes are weak — they happen because load changes too fast Aging alone isn't the problem — inactivity is Pain is data — treat it as information early, not inconvenience Chapter Timestamps[0:00] The goal of training isn't a season — it's a lifetime [1:08] Why athletic resilience matters — Mark's personal story [1:47] What is athletic resilience? The high-performance car analogy [2:54] Pillar 1: Movement Quality — why manual therapy matters [4:03] Pillar 2: Strength Capacity — the engine behind longevity [5:19] Pillar 3: Recovery Systems — the most underestimated pillar [6:34] Pillar 4: Load Management — where most injuries actually happen [7:16] Pillar 5: Longevity Mindset — the psychological game [7:51] The 3 patterns that keep athletes stuck [8:46] Burn Toolkit — practical steps to start today [9:50] Closing thoughts — train hard, recover well, think in decades Resources Mentioned5-Minute Mobility-Stability Flow (in show notes)MVMT Physical Therapy: www.mvmtpt.comSocial: @MVMTPTWho This Episode Is ForAthletes over 40 who keep running into the same injuriesCrossFitters, runners, and performers navigating high training demandsAnyone who trains hard but struggles to recoverCoaches and trainers looking for a longevity framework to share with clientsAnyone who's ever wondered if their best years are behind them (they're not)

    11 min
  5. 1 avr.

    EP8 - Mobility-Stability Trap

    Ever wonder why you can touch your toes lying down but not standing up? Or why those dancers with incredible splits still complain about tight hamstrings? In this episode, Mark Lusk breaks down the mobility-stability trap that keeps athletes, dancers, and CrossFitters spinning their wheels with endless stretching routines. Mark reveals why that "tightness" you feel isn't actually a flexibility problem—it's your nervous system hitting the brakes because it doesn't trust you to control the range you already have. Drawing from his experience working with Broadway dancers and NYC athletes, he shares the science behind hypermobility versus instability and introduces game-changing strategies like active elongation and loaded mobility training. If you've been stretching religiously but still feel locked up, this episode will flip your entire approach to mobility work. Key TakeawaysTightness is often a stability issue, not a flexibility problem - Your nervous system restricts range when it doesn't trust your control Test before you stretch - If you have range lying down but not standing, you need stability work, not more flexibility Active elongation beats passive stretching - Using opposing muscles to create length is more effective than melting into stretches Load your mobility - Adding light resistance teaches your brain that new ranges are safe and usable Control comes before flexibility - Build the strength to own every degree of motion you're trying to gain Chapter Timestamps[0:00] Introduction - Welcome to Cue the Burn [0:45] The Mobility-Stability Paradox - Why bendy people feel tight [2:38] The Stretch Spiral of Doom - When more stretching isn't the answer [2:50] Hypermobility vs. Instability - Understanding the key differences [4:15] Three Simple Tests - How to identify if you have a stability problem [5:21] Building Stability First - The real secret to unlocking mobility [6:18] Active Elongation Techniques - Using opposing muscles for smarter gains [6:50] Blending Mobility with Strength - Practical exercises that work [8:02] The Burn Toolkit - Quick-fire reminders to take with you [9:13] Closing & Resources - Train smarter, stabilize like a boss Resources Mentioned5-Minute Mobility-Stability Flow (in show notes)MVMT Physical Therapy: www.mvmtpt.comSocial: @MVMTPTWho This Episode Is ForDancers dealing with chronic tightness despite being flexibleCrossFitters with shoulder or hip mobility issuesAthletes who stretch constantly but see minimal resultsAnyone who feels "tight" in movements but has good passive flexibility

    9 min

À propos

Cue the Burn is a podcast for the performers, the athletes, and the hard-driving humans who never stop showing up. Hosted by Mark Lusk—a manual physical therapist, former professional dancer, educator, and still-grinding NYC athlete over 50—this show explores what it takes to move well, perform strong, and stay fired up through every chapter of your training and your life. From evidence-based insights to raw, real-world stories, each episode blends science, strategy, and sweat to help you stay resilient, curious, and relentlessly lit from within. Because when there’s nothing left to burn