If you coach functional fitness, write about movement quality, or create content about how active adults can train smarter and recover better — the Trucomfort blog wants to hear from you. Recovery is where training adaptations are made, and the home recovery environment — the bed, the massage chair, the sleep quality — is where most athletes and active adults have the most room to improve their results without adding a single training session.
This page is for personal trainers, functional fitness coaches, movement specialists, and active lifestyle writers whose work touches on recovery, mobility, home training, and the physical foundations of long-term fitness. For sports medicine, physiotherapy, or clinical rehabilitation topics, visit our Write for Us page for the sports recovery guidelines.
Why Functional Fitness Writers Belong on the Trucomfort Blog
Trucomfort is a premium U.S. supplier of massage chairs, bed frames, and Murphy beds. A significant portion of our audience is active adults — people who train consistently, take their recovery seriously, and are willing to invest in the home environment and equipment that supports their physical performance. That is precisely the audience a functional fitness coach wants to reach with evidence-based recovery content.
A personal trainer who writes for our blog is writing for readers who already value physical investment and are actively looking for ways to optimize their recovery between sessions. The alignment between your expertise and their need is direct and immediate.
Functional Fitness & Active Recovery Topics We’re Looking For
Recovery Science for Active Adults
- How recovery works — the physiology of supercompensation and why rest is where adaptation happens
- Active vs. passive recovery — when each is appropriate and how to combine them effectively
- Sleep as the most important recovery variable most athletes underestimate
- How recovery quality affects training capacity, injury risk, and long-term athletic longevity
- Recovery monitoring for recreational athletes — practical tools and metrics worth tracking
- The cumulative effect of poor recovery over a training block — what coaches need to recognize
Home Recovery Setup & Equipment
- Building an effective home recovery space around the tools that actually work
- Massage chairs for athletes — which features matter most for post-training use
- How to use a massage chair as part of a structured post-workout recovery protocol
- The case for investing in your home recovery environment vs. paying for recovery services
- Home gym and recovery space design for athletes training in small spaces
- Murphy beds in a home gym space — how dual-purpose room design supports training and recovery in limited square footage
Mobility, Flexibility & Soft Tissue Work
- Mobility work for desk athletes — addressing the postural and movement restrictions that accumulate in sedentary work environments
- Hip flexor, thoracic spine, and shoulder mobility protocols for people who train and sit
- How foam rolling, massage, and heat therapy work differently — and when to use each
- Fascia, connective tissue, and why soft tissue quality matters for long-term movement health
- Stretching protocols that work — what the research says about static, dynamic, and PNF approaches
- Building a pre-sleep mobility routine that improves both recovery quality and next-day movement
Functional Fitness Programming & Lifestyle
- How to program recovery into a training week — not as an afterthought but as a training variable
- Training for longevity — how active adults over 40 should think about the training-recovery balance
- The minimum effective dose for maintaining fitness during high-stress or low-recovery periods
- How lifestyle factors — sleep, nutrition, stress, home environment — affect training response
- Coaching clients on recovery — why it’s often the highest-leverage intervention available
- Home training efficiency — how to get maximum training stimulus with minimum equipment and space
What You Get as a Contributor
- A do-follow backlink to your website, coaching platform, or professional profile — one contextual link in the article and one in your author bio
- Your credentials and coaching background featured in your author bio on every article you publish
- Exposure to an engaged audience of active adults actively investing in their recovery and home environment
- Long-term organic visibility on a niche wellness platform with consistent search traffic
- A publishing credit that positions you as an authority in the recovery and home wellness intersection
Submission Requirements
- Length: 1,000 words minimum — 1,200 to 1,800 preferred for practical training and recovery guides
- Originality: 100% original, not published or submitted elsewhere
- Quality standard: Grounded in coaching experience, sports science, or documented professional practice — not generic fitness advice
- Format: Google Doc with editor access, or Word document. Clear H2/H3 structure required
- Author bio: 50–80 words with your name, certifications, coaching background, and one link
- Images: Suggest at least one royalty-free image relevant to your topic
- No advertorials: Editorial content only — we don’t publish pieces promoting specific coaching programs or affiliated products
Ready to Pitch Your Functional Fitness or Recovery Article?
Send a 3–5 sentence pitch with your topic, your angle, and a brief note on your coaching background and certifications. We review every pitch personally and respond within 5–7 business days.
📩 Submit Your Pitch →The Submission Process
- Pitch first — Email sales@trucomfortmassagechairs.com with your topic, your angle, and a brief note about your coaching background and certifications.
- We confirm fit — Our editorial team responds within 5–7 business days. If it’s a match, we confirm and share specific editorial direction.
- Write and submit — Send your completed draft as a Google Doc with editor access, your bio, image suggestions, and preferred backlink.
- Editorial review — Light edits for clarity, formatting, or SEO may be made. You’ll be notified before anything goes live.
- Publication — Your article is published and we send you the live URL to share with your audience and clients.
Who We’re Looking For
- Certified personal trainers (CSCS, NSCA-CPT, ACSM, ACE, NASM) with a recovery or functional movement focus
- Functional fitness coaches and CrossFit coaches writing about performance recovery
- Movement specialists, mobility coaches, and corrective exercise practitioners
- Strength and conditioning coaches working with recreational or masters athletes
- Active lifestyle writers with genuine coaching credentials and an evidence-informed approach
- Fitness content creators with a serious audience and a specialization in recovery, mobility, or home training
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I write about specific training methodologies I use with clients?
Yes — first-hand coaching experience and real protocols are among the most valuable content for our readers. Describe what you actually do and why it works.
Can I write about recovery for masters athletes or active adults over 50?
Yes — this is an underserved content area that aligns well with our audience demographic. Articles addressing how recovery needs and strategies change with age are particularly welcome.
Can I include links to my coaching programs or courses?
Your author bio includes one link to your website or professional profile. One additional contextual link within the article body is permitted, pointing to a relevant, non-commercial resource. We don’t allow links that function as direct promotion for paid programs within the article body.
How long after approval until my article goes live?
Typically 7–14 business days after your draft is approved and any editorial revisions are finalized.
Contact the Editorial Team
Questions before you pitch? Reach us at sales@trucomfortmassagechairs.com or call +1 (418) 717-0912.
For the full guest post guidelines covering sleep science, sports recovery, massage therapy, and general home wellness, visit the Trucomfort Write for Us page.
Share Your Functional Fitness & Recovery Expertise With Our Readers
Personal trainers, functional fitness coaches, movement specialists, and active recovery writers — if you have genuine coaching knowledge about training smarter and recovering better, we want to publish it.
View the Full Submission Guidelines →