Keep going!
The hardest part of any fitness plan isn’t the workout.
The hardest part is staying consistent. Trusting the process, being patient and sticking with it until the end.
We all start excited and super pumped up! We go grocery shopping to find healthy foods, we buy shoes, maybe even buy new fitness outfits…. but three-four weeks in we’re stuck and unmotivated.
This is where the excitement falls off, the pounds aren’t falling off as fast as they were, you’re sore often, and you’d rather go back to your old habits.
This is when you need to call in for the help…
This process will help you analyze what you’re doing and get extra help where you need it.
First, do you like it?
I have always been a strong believer that workouts should be fun and bring joy. They should never be a chore. For me, I like the challenge and changing it up. That is when I see results.
Look at your current plan. Is there something about it that you hate doing? Something that you find boring? Something that you dread doing? Then STOP doing it.
Now, this doesn’t mean you get to just stop working out. For everything you take off, you have to find a replacement. If you don’t run, then do you like swimming? Or walking? For me, hiking is my escape outside of the gym, Group fitness classes is also my thing, there’s something about working out in groups of people that are like minded and share same goals as you.
What is YOUR goal?
Just working just because is not something most people can do. Yes, once you’ve gotten in the habit, it’s so much easier to keep it going, but building the habit requires more than that to keep you going.
You need to spend the time to find your greater WHY.
I’m not saying you need to find your life’s purpose (although it’s never a bad idea to spend time reflecting on that), but you need to find a reason to stay active and the “why” you are working out in the first place.
Maybe you have a few pounds to lose.
Maybe you’re trying to get off some medication.
Maybe you are working out to help your mental health.
There are a lot of reasons, but just going to the gym to “feel good” is rarely a good enough reason for most people. I train a lot of people, and although it sounds nice to have that as a reason, it’s rarely enough.
You need a stronger purpose to pull you through those hard times when you want to throw in the towel. We all need a purpose.
Celebrate your little victories
First mistake, don’t use the scale to measure progress.
There are a million reasons that your body could have a different scale number than what you think it should.
Instead, keep track in a variety of ways. Like staying committed to workouts that you accomplished during the week, drinking enough water, not going thru the drive-thru, having less sugar.
Take pictures of your body. Pictures are SO helpful. Even if the scale doesn’t seem to be moving, you can visually see how your body is changing.
Measure parts of your body. This way you know what’s growing and what’s shrinking. Even if you can’t see the gains, measurements don’t lie.
Try all these things before you throw in the towel on your new fitness plan. Never forget that mental strength is the most important strength of all.
Stay strong and just keep going.