Olareno Letters began with a simple observation: the fitness writing most readily available is designed to sell a product, a programme, or a personality. The more considered view — steady, undramatic, attentive to what the body does when left to its own logic — tends to disappear.
This publication is an attempt to hold that quieter space. Its contributors are not influencers. They are writers who also practise — people who have spent time learning push-up progressions on wet grass, who have mapped squat variations against the limits of their own knee angles, who know what a hill sprint feels like at the third and fourth repetition.
The editorial standard is straightforward: write what you have observed, document what works across consistent practice, and resist the temptation to overstate.