Overhead motion is everywhere — in sport and in life. This episode is a practical deep dive on shoulder pain with Dr. Tyler Nelson, who works primarily with climbers but applies the same principles across overhead athletes and active adults: build tolerance with smart progressions, manage volume, and avoid getting trapped chasing “perfect fixes.”
What to expect
This is more technical than a typical Ageless Athlete episode — but it stays grounded. You’ll get:
a clearer way to think about overhead shoulder pain (without spiraling into anatomy anxiety)
how to scale training while symptoms settle (instead of fully shutting down)
how to rebuild overhead strength and range over time with progression
Practical takeaways
Overhead pain isn’t automatically “dangerous.” Often the move is: modify the dose, don’t panic.
Capacity beats perfection. Many mechanics narratives become a distraction from what matters most: what your shoulder can tolerate week to week.
Progress by angle before chasing full overhead volume. A simple ladder: horizontal pulling → angled pulling → true overhead (and for climbers: steeper angles → less steep → vertical over months).
Every drill is still load. It’s easy to accidentally stack too much “rehab” on top of training.
You don’t need a forever routine. Once things feel normal, the goal is a shoulder that holds up in real life — not a lifelong checklist of correctives.
Watch the video version (recommended for this episode)
Many of the movements and drills Tyler references are easiest to understand visually. You can watch the full video episode here:
https://www.youtube.com/@agelessathletepodcast
About Dr. Tyler Nelson
Tyler is a clinician and educator focused on upper-extremity injuries. He works mostly with climbers, but his framework translates cleanly to anyone training or working overhead.
Connect with Tyler
Camp4 Human Performance (C4HP): https://www.camp4humanperformance.com/
About Tyler: https://www.camp4humanperformance.com/about
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/c4hp/
References (optional further reading)
Scapular dyskinesis and shoulder injury risk (systematic review/meta-analysis): https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33211975/
Rotator cuff–related shoulder pain framework (Lewis 2016): https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27083390/
Scapular dyskinesis clinical assessment reliability/limitations: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7646607/
Friendly note
This episode is educational and not medical advice. If you’ve had a major traumatic injury, dislocation, progressive neurologic symptoms (numbness/weakness), or severe loss of function, consider evaluation by a qualified clinician.
📰 Subscribe to the Ageless Athlete newsletter !
1-2x a month, no spam. We share behind-the-scenes reflections, longevity tips, and





