The holidays don’t wreck your fitness—the pressure to train like nothing changed does.
Sleep gets shorter. Stress goes up. Schedules get weird. Food and alcohol change. Recovery takes a hit. When that happens, your body adapts exactly as it should. Feeling flatter, heavier, or less motivated isn’t failure—it’s physiology.
Here’s the mistake most people make: They try to maximize when the season calls for maintenance.
Holiday training should be about:
• Maintaining strength
• Keeping joints and tissues happy
• Supporting mental health
• Preserving the identity of “I’m someone who moves”
Not chasing PRs.
Train smarter right now
:• Shorter sessions, fewer sets
• Keep intensity, reduce volume
• Warm up more than usual
• Walk more—movement counts
• 2–4 sessions per week is plenty
Fitness isn’t fragile. You don’t lose progress in a few imperfect weeks. What does derail people is guilt, all-or-nothing thinking, and trying to “burn off” the holidays. Train to support your life—not escape it—and January becomes a ramp, not a restart.
*Question for the group:
What’s the hardest part of staying active during the holidays—time, energy, motivation, or expectations?