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How we think about breaks in American remote teams

We treat active breaks as shared choreography: visible timing, explicit invitations, and language that keeps dignity intact. This page explains our approach—not a promise of business results.

Advertising and editorial alignment

If you clicked a search or display ad, the landing experience should match the ad’s topic. We do not use “before/after” health claims, fear-based copy, or personalized calls to action. See program and advertising disclosures.

Why pacing beats intensity

Most remote fatigue in the U.S. comes from context switching, not from a lack of motivation. Sequences prioritize predictable transitions so people can plan attention instead of reacting to sudden shifts.

Consent in short, plain sentences

Every cue includes an alternative. Standing suggestions always list a seated parallel. Breathing prompts are optional. Facilitators read from one shared script so tone stays steady when hosts rotate.

Where we draw the line

We do not diagnose, label energy, or position breaks as replacements for occupational health, ergonomics assessments, or medical care. Content stays within general-education movement guidance for typical office populations.

Diagram of ordered session lanes

Pick your lens

Same program backbone—three ways teams usually evaluate it internally.

We document facilitator language, opt-out paths, and how participation signals are reported only at the aggregate level your org controls.

Want script samples and timing grids? Use the form and name the module you are vetting.

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