Oct 14, 2025
Why do some people stay consistent with their health and fitness
habits while others fall off after a few weeks?
In this episode, Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher share five tips
to help you stay consistent with your workout routine. Learn
the benefits of scheduling your workouts, why setting challenges
makes goals easier to achieve, and how the right social support can
fuel long-term consistency.
Tune in to discover simple, practical strategies that keep you
on track even when motivation runs dry.
- Amy starts by revealing the real reason most people struggle
with motivation.
- She explains that most fail because they don’t have a system to
lean on when they don’t feel like doing anything. Once you build a
solid structure, you don’t have to keep negotiating with yourself
every day, you just show up and do it.
- Tip #1: Schedule it.
- Your workout should be on your calendar. The moment you block
off time, you instantly raise the odds of following through.
- Amy explains the power of scheduling. When you train at the
same time, on the same day, week after week, you don’t have to
think about it anymore. You’ve taken away the decision fatigue, and
all that’s left is repetition — and repetition is what builds
results.
- Even when you don’t feel like it, Amy says following through
matters most. That single act of showing up when you’d rather skip
tells your brain, “I keep my word.” And once you see yourself as
someone who follows through, your confidence grows, and so does
your consistency.
- Tip #2: Create a challenge.
- Goals are good, but challenges are better because they’re
specific and measurable. Whether it’s 30 days without junk food or
40 straight workouts, a challenge forces you to track your wins,
and those little wins pile up into lasting change.
- Dr. Fisher explains why goals without action fall
flat.
- Writing down “lose 10 pounds” feels nice, but it doesn’t move
the needle on its own. It’s the daily steps you take toward that
goal that create momentum.
- According to Amy, when you see progress in black and white —
whether it’s workouts logged, weight lifted, or meals recorded — it
lights a fire to keep going. The act of tracking doesn’t just
measure growth, it actually fuels it.
- Dr. Fisher highlights how habits become automatic over time. In
the beginning, discipline feels heavy, but the longer you practice
good routines, the lighter they get.
- Amy shares the benefits of structured challenges. She talks
about Exercise Coach’s 30-day metabolic comeback challenge, built
on whole foods and consistent workouts. That combination of
simplicity and accountability gives people results they can see and
feel quickly.
- Dr. Fisher highlights the accountability that comes with
working with a personal trainer. When someone is tracking your
progress and guiding your choices, excuses lose their power.
- Tip #3: Gather friends.
- Pursuing health doesn’t have to be a lonely road. The more you
include friends or family in the process, the more motivated and
committed you’ll both become.
- Amy explains why family habits matter. When you shift things
like sleep, nutrition, or daily activity as a household, you build
a culture of wellness instead of trying to go it alone.
- Amy shares how social support saved her progress. She recalls
doing a 30-day challenge with her husband and admits she probably
would’ve quit without him. Having even one supportive partner can
make the difference between stopping and succeeding.
- Learn the importance of boundaries. Not everyone in your life
will cheer on your healthy habits, and some will even try to pull
you back.
- Protect your progress by drawing a line and surrounding
yourself with people who genuinely want to see you win.
- Amy explains why a coach can be the difference-maker. Having a
personal trainer by your side means you’re never facing the journey
alone.
- A coach isn’t just there for accountability, they bring
encouragement, structure, and belief when you need it most.
- Tip #4: Listen to a podcast.
- Feeding your mind is just as important as training your body.
The more you hear about health and strength, the more you begin to
see yourself as the kind of person who lives that lifestyle.
- How to stack habits for maximum momentum. Listen to a podcast
while walking, cycling, or lifting, and suddenly you’re training
your body and your mindset at the same time. That layering effect
makes progress faster and more fun.
- Tip #5: Write down a positive message.
- Surrounding yourself with affirmations or quotes isn’t just
feel-good fluff — it rewires your focus. When positivity is visible
in your environment, it becomes easier to keep your mindset
sharp.
- Amy explains how to fight your brain’s negativity bias. By
default, our minds scan for danger and problems. Writing down
uplifting reminders trains your brain to see possibilities instead
of pitfalls.
- Dr. Fisher shares one of his favorite quotes: “Anticipation is
worse than participation.” Most of the time, the fear of starting
feels heavier than the act of doing. Once you step in, the
resistance fades and you wonder why you waited so long.
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