I AM A MOVEMENT COACH AND PHYSICAL THERAPIST SPECIALIZING IN:

  • Arthritis

  • Old injuries

  • Joint pain

  • Chronic ankle pain

  • Spinal issues

  • Better posture

  • How to bend

  • Athletic performance

  • Painless lifting

  • Knee pain

  • Walking skills

  • Pain-free movement

  • Plantar fasciitis

  • Shoulder issues

  • Scoliosis

  • Barefoot skills

  • Old injuries

  • Bad backs

  • Car sitting

  • Joint instability

My Journey

Pioneer. It’s the one word that describes both my professional career as a physical therapist and my athletic accomplishments spanning several decades.

Truth is, I was not considered an athlete during my childhood. Before I became accomplished in different sports, I was uncoordinated and fell a lot.

I wasn’t able to participate in organized sports, like tennis, because I didn’t even have the upper body strength to hold the racquet. But my desire to be an athlete never waned. And that disconnect – between my athletic aspirations and my actual abilities – served as the fuel for later athletic successes and for the creation of The McCall Method.

While I crossed the finish line in several marathons, I also was counted among the first females competing in the early days of triathlons. During the early 1990s, I was ranked among the top 20 Texas female triathletes. I struggled with injuries during this time and, maybe not entirely coincidentally, I soon became a physical therapist.

I was immediately hired by a group of the top 10 orthopedic surgeons in the entire Southwest. After three years, I felt the need to grow and build my own physical therapy practice. I also entered the emerging world of yoga: first as a practitioner and soon as an instructor. When I saw many of yoga’s shortcomings, the McCall Method soon began taking shape.

My first book, McCall Body Balance Method: Simple Concepts for Ageless Movement, was born in 2001. Then, I started raising eyebrows again: I began to teach how to walk and run barefoot. This radical idea came years before the barefoot running book Born to Run popularized running ‘sans shoes.’ To this day, I help clients navigate their way through foot, ankle and knee pain with the principles I refined through barefooting.

But wait, there’s more!

To stay healthy and injury-free, I also saw the importance of learning and practicing what I call ‘skilled movements.’ In my 50s I boxed, practiced the martial art of Wu Shu, parkour, ninja training and now as I tiptoe into my 60s, I’m adding Kung Fu and bouldering to my resume of personal movement.

During a wonderfully fulfilling 30-year career, I’ve been able to help everyone from professional athletes to physicians and surgeons to thousands of regular people get out of pain. You name it — arthritis, joint disease, and chronic pain — and the McCall Method brings relief where other approaches fall short.

History of the McCall Method

The beginnings of the McCall Method, in a way, date back to those first days humans stood upright and began to walk. More than 20 years ago, when I was trying to unify my yoga teaching and our daily movements, I read about how people in different global cultures enjoyed moving and working through their days without pain in their joints or muscles. The author, Angie Thusius, had been introduced to this ability to move and work without pain in different international communities by Noel Perez. For years, Perez researched how men and women from different ethnic backgrounds walked, carried heavy loads and moved through their lives without pain. Thusius developed the Kentro Body Balance guidelines from Perez’s research.

With my knowledge and experience as a physical therapist with more than 20 years experience, along with the work of Thusius and Perez, I developed the McCall Method.

We all agree on one fundamental: how Western civilization defines “correct posture” and ways to move is often much different than in other global cultures. These ethnic and indigenous groups lead lives that demand an excessive amount of manual labor, yet they do it with comfort, strength and ease. Looking for examples of this movement closer to home? Just watch the way children play and move through their days, especially before they start attending school. We can learn so much from their natural movement in their early years before adults begin teaching them “correct postures.”

More About LisaAnn

I hold a B.S. in Physical Therapy, a B.S. in Education, and a Master’s studies in Exercise Physiology. I had a private practice in physical therapy in Dallas, Texas for 18 years and 7 years in Bend, Oregon. I now consult and teach the McCall Method both online and in Flagstaff, Arizona where I live with my husband and two dogs.

  • I do not have a degree from Harvard

  • I do not have a PhD

  • I quit working on my Masters in Exercise Physiology to go to Physical Therapy school

  • I have a B.S. in Education

  • I have a B.S. in Physical Therapy

  • I have over 100,000 hours of experience as a physical therapist/movement coach.

As a licensed physical therapist, I have years of experience in orthopedic care. There is not much I haven’t seen or treated. I am now taking my physical therapy hat off and focusing on teaching/coaching the McCall Method Movement program. Again, while I’m not practicing physical therapy, I’m keeping my physical therapy license current because I like to stay educated and up-to-date with learning the latest research in my field.

Things I love ☺︎

Dogs
Movement of any kind
Gardening
Donkeys

Things I don’t love ☹︎

Paperwork
Spelling
Brussel sprouts

Still want to know more?

Explore more than 200 free videos on the McCall Method YouTube channel!