It’s the new year, a time when everyone feels they have a renewed lease on life…or at least they think they do!

Just because it is a new year, a new month, a new day, doesn’t mean we can hit the reset button and start all over.  All of those missed workouts, the fast foods, the alcohol, late nights, and periods of high stress have taken their toll.  And NO, you do not get a free ‘GET OUT OF JAIL’ card to use. No, you can’t just erase what has been done. No, you can’t just engage in a 30-day nutrition challenge and think that will fix everything.  

You see, your current state of health and fitness is a culmination of everything you have done up until this point.  It wasn’t affected much by the dozen of cookies and multiple glasses of eggnog you consumed over the holidays, or the lack of working out for a week or two while on vacation.  It is also probably not being affected by eating a highly nutritious meal or two every now and then.

You may be wondering…well, what can I do?  What is the best approach? What are the best practices? What is the answer to achieving optimal fitness and holding onto it for the long game?  

I do not claim to have a magic pill, the best workouts, or the best dieting practices for you. What I do have is a fair amount of time in this trade, and have seen all the trends, what works and what doesn’t, who succeeds and who fails.  What I’ve come to realize is this…

You need to make the commitment as I did on day one to go all in.  No cherry picking which portions of health and fitness suit you or your schedule best, just to leave the inconvenient portions unattended to.  Achieving an optimal level of health and fitness is only achieved from playing the long game. No short-cuts, just sustained, consistent effort placed on making the right choices, on a regular basis.  That’s it!

The single most important rule I follow on a day to day basis is this…

I ask myself simply “Is (insert whatever I am about to do – exercise, eat, stay up late, load more on my work plate) going to have a positive or negative effect on me?”  At the very least, it gets me to think about what I am doing, and the possible effects of doing so. Have a short conversation with yourself, don’t be shy! Your health and fitness relies on it.

Coach Chris