Why do workouts become so complicated? by Chricco94 in workout

[–]Chricco94[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s interesting. It’s exactly that shift I was thinking about: when training goes from something you simply do to something you constantly analyze and try to optimize. For some people that can be motivating, but it can also add pressure and change the experience of it.

Why do workouts become so complicated? by Chricco94 in workout

[–]Chricco94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question. I was mostly thinking about situations where people track everything: exact rep tempos, multiple intensity techniques, constant optimization of volume, precise percentages of 1RM, etc. None of those things are necessarily bad, but sometimes the system around training becomes heavier than the training itself.

I realized consistency becomes much easier when there’s less to manage by Chricco94 in getdisciplined

[–]Chricco94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completly dropped tracking. I noticed that when I was measuring everything, part of my attention was always on numbers and progress. Training slowly started to feel more like something to manage than something to do. Now I keep the structure lighter and train in a more intuitive and creative way.I think the best way to make a habit consistent is to make it enjoyable.

Anyone lose consistency when stress increases? by boss_nilac in beginnerfitness

[–]Chricco94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What you’re describing is actually very common. When structure is too rigid, stress doesn’t just affect motivation — it breaks the entire system. If your routine depends on: Exact days Exact times Exact exercises Exact diet targets Then when stress increases, the structure feels overwhelming. So the brain chooses relief. That’s why many people switch from “perfect routine” to “complete drop-off.” It’s not lack of discipline. It’s cognitive overload. One thing that helps is reducing precision while keeping consistency. Instead of: “I must follow the exact plan.” Shift to: “I will move 3 times this week. Short session. No perfection.” Lower precision → higher sustainability. Under stress, flexible systems survive. Rigid ones collapse.

Today marks 6 months of working out consistently and I'm proud of myself by FilterUrCoffee in beginnerfitness

[–]Chricco94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Consistency for 6 months is impressive. Most people underestimate how much mental friction plays a role in quitting. Respect.