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The Never Miss a Workout Mentality is Dumb

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Last week I saw an image that said: “the no-excuses culture is toxic.”  I 100% agree.

Rarely does a single image or phrase inspire me to write an entire blog post, but this is something I have always felt strongly about.

The no-excuses phrase falls into a category that I see often and maybe daily. The “fitness motivation” category with phrases like no excuses, never miss a workout, the only bad workout is the one you didn’t do.

It’s ok to miss a workout…or ten.

Life goes on. 

These “motivational quotes” exist to help people stay motivated to do their workout. I know the feeling of falling out of one workout and then ten, and suddenly it’s a month later and you wonder what happened. The problem is, the motivation to do anything must come within. No one cares more about your working out then you do.

Typically, the more consistent and more you practice something, the better you get. The more you run, the better you get (to a point). The more you sew, the better you get. The more you do your job, the better you get.

The thing about working out and sports is, it also relies heavily on recovery. Stress on your body is stress on your body, whether that is a new job, working out, or a new lifestyle. Your body doesn’t distinguish that stress.

One of the best things you can do for working out is to take a rest day (whether it’s unplanned or not).

Many phrases are just dumb in the fitness (and life) world:

All of this to say, while motivational quotes have their time and place, they can’t and shouldn’t be the standard.

It’s ok to take breaks, have unplanned rest days, and not go hard every day. No one goes hard every day because your body breaks that way.

No questions today, but would love to hear your thoughts. 

 

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