Hey, I'm Roxy!
Hey, I'm Roxy!
Your Goals.
My System.
Real Results.
Your Goals.
My System.
Real Results.
Personalized training and nutrition that fits your life, not the other way around.
Personalized training and nutrition that fits your life, not the other way around.
I cried after my first check-in, not because it was hard, because for the first time someone actually listened to what I needed.

Monika Terry
38, mother of two
The Vision
I've never started two clients the same way, because no two stories are the same.
The Plan
Busy doesn't mean broken. It means we get smarter about the time you do have.
The Process
Progress isn't always visible.
But it's always measurable.
We track everything.
The Proof
My results speak for themselves.
But the stories behind them
those are what drive me.
Lives changed
Lives changed
Lives changed
I don't take on clients. I take on stories. Every number behind that plus sign is a person who decided they were done settling.
✓ Ages 18 to 67
✓ Every level welcome
✓ 34 countries
✓ Online and in-person
✓ Ages 18 to 67
✓ Every level welcome
✓ 34 countries
✓ Online and in-person
I don't take on clients. I take on stories. Every number behind that plus sign is a person who decided they were done settling.
✓ Ages 18 to 67
✓ Every level welcome
✓ 34 countries
✓ Online and in-person
That number isn't luck. It's what happens when the plan is built around your life, adjusted every week, and never abandoned.
✓ Tracked since day one
✓ Weekly progress reviews
✓ Avg. goal reached week 11
✓ Zero abandoned clients
✓ Tracked since day one
✓ Weekly progress reviews
✓ Avg. goal reached week 11
✓ Zero abandoned clients
That number isn't luck. It's what happens when the plan is built around your life, adjusted every week, and never abandoned.
✓ Tracked since day one
✓ Weekly progress reviews
✓ Avg. goal reached week 11
✓ Zero abandoned clients
Ten years of going deeper into the science, the psychology, the nutrition. Because you deserve a coach who never stops growing.
✓ Certified Personal Trainer
✓ Precision Nutrition Level 2
✓ Performance Specialist
✓ Behavioral Change Coach
✓ Certified Personal Trainer
✓ Precision Nutrition Level 2
✓ Performance Specialist
✓ Behavioral Change Coach
Ten years of going deeper into the science, the psychology, the nutrition. Because you deserve a coach who never stops growing.
✓ Certified Personal Trainer
✓ Precision Nutrition Level 2
✓ Performance Specialist
✓ Behavioral Change Coach
Twelve weeks isn't a finish line. It's the moment you stop doing this for how you look, and start doing it for who you've become.
✓ Full assessment
✓ Custom plan, no templates
✓ Weekly check-ins
✓ Nutrition included, always
✓ Full assessment
✓ Custom plan, no templates
✓ Weekly check-ins
✓ Nutrition included, always
Twelve weeks isn't a finish line. It's the moment you stop doing this for how you look, and start doing it for who you've become.
✓ Full assessment
✓ Custom plan, no templates
✓ Weekly check-ins
✓ Nutrition included, always
About me
I know what It feels like to start over.
Help you finally become the strongest, healthiest, most confident version of yourself and make it last.
Daily start
Hours coached
Hours coached
Years training
Times quit


Play video
Social proof
The Quiet
Confidence
502 reasons to start.
We'll let them speak.
Social proof
The Quiet
Confidence
502 reasons to start.
We'll let them speak.

I'd been trying to lose the same 15kg for six years. Gone in four months.
Gina A.
34 · Marketing Director · Online

Roxy didn't give me a plan. She gave me a system I'll use for the rest of my life.
James R.
41 · Lost 22kg · New York

I booked a photoshoot at week eleven. I never thought I'd be that person.
Priya S.
29 · 9 months · London

I came for the weight loss. I stayed for what it did to my confidence.
Robert C.
52 · Hypertension reversed · Dubai

I came for the weight loss. I stayed for what it did to my confidence.
Lisa B.
38 · Mother of three · Sydney

She didn't give me a plan. She gave me a system I'll use for the rest of my life.
Emma V.
31 · Completed two programs · Berlin

I'd been trying to lose the same 15kg for six years. Gone in four months.
Gina A.
34 · Marketing Director · Online

Roxy didn't give me a plan. She gave me a system I'll use for the rest of my life.
James R.
41 · Lost 22kg · New York

I booked a photoshoot at week eleven. I never thought I'd be that person.
Priya S.
29 · 9 months · London

I came for the weight loss. I stayed for what it did to my confidence.
Robert C.
52 · Hypertension reversed · Dubai

I came for the weight loss. I stayed for what it did to my confidence.
Lisa B.
38 · Mother of three · Sydney

She didn't give me a plan. She gave me a system I'll use for the rest of my life.
Emma V.
31 · Completed two programs · Berlin
Transformation gallery
Real results. Real people.
These aren't before and afters. They're beginnings and middles.
These aren't before and afters. They're beginnings and middles.
Sarah K.
—
34
I'd been trying to lose the same 15kg for six years. Gone in four months.
Program:
Transform
Result:
−18kg
Duration:
12 weeks

Sarah K.
—
34
Program:
Transform
Result:
−18kg
Duration:
12 weeks

Marcus B.
—
41
Six months. Thirty-one kilos. I stopped counting after that.
Program:
Elite
Result:
−31kg
Duration:
24 weeks

Marcus B.
—
41
Program:
Elite
Result:
−31kg
Duration:
24 weeks

Priya S.
—
29
I booked a photoshoot at week eleven. I never thought I'd be that person.
Program:
Transform
Result:
−12% body fat
Duration:
9 months

Priya S.
—
29
Program:
Transform
Result:
−12% body fat
Duration:
9 months

Daniel F.
—
52
Lost 18kg in 5 months. But the number I'm most proud of is the one I don't check anymore, my anxiety meds.
Program:
Elite
Result:
+8kg muscle
Duration:
24 weeks

Daniel F.
—
52
Program:
Elite
Result:
+8kg muscle
Duration:
24 weeks

Nadia O.
—
31
Two kids, one hour a week. Still showing up.
Program:
Starter
Result:
−9kg
Duration:
6 weeks

Nadia O.
—
31
Program:
Starter
Result:
−9kg
Duration:
6 weeks

Elena M.
—
45
Four years of stopping and starting. Month seven now. Something finally clicked.
Program:
Transform
Result:
First time consistent
Duration:
14 months

Elena M.
—
45
Program:
Transform
Result:
First time consistent
Duration:
14 months

How it works
Simple steps. Real change.
Four steps designed to remove every excuse that ever stopped you before.
Get your plan
A custom training and nutrition program built specifically for your life, schedule, and body. No templates. Ever.
Start training
Weekly sessions, check-ins, and real-time adjustments. You're never left guessing what to do next.
See results
Track progress, hit milestones, and build habits that outlast the program. This is where it becomes permanent.
Programs & pricing
Choose your path.
Own your result.
Three programs. One standard, you finish.

Starter
6 weeks
Built for those returning to fitness or starting from zero.
$
297
one time
Full fitness assessment
Custom training plan
Weekly check-ins
Nutrition basics guide

Starter
6 weeks
Built for those returning to fitness or starting from zero.
$
297
one time
Full fitness assessment
Custom training plan
Weekly check-ins
Nutrition basics guide

Transform
12 weeks
Most popular
A plan that bends around your life, not the other way around.
$
597
one time
Everything in Starter
Full nutrition program
Bi-weekly live sessions
Progress tracking dashboard
24/7 message support

Transform
12 weeks
Most popular
A plan that bends around your life, not the other way around.
$
597
one time
Everything in Starter
Full nutrition program
Bi-weekly live sessions
Progress tracking dashboard
24/7 message support

Elite
24 weeks
For those who want the absolute maximum from every week.
$
1,197
one time
Everything in Transform
Weekly 1-on-1 sessions
Blood work analysis
Supplement protocol
Priority direct access

Elite
24 weeks
For those who want the absolute maximum from every week.
$
1,197
one time
Everything in Transform
Weekly 1-on-1 sessions
Blood work analysis
Supplement protocol
Priority direct access

Sarah J.
43, team leader
Didn't believe in coaches. Now I don't know how I managed without one.

Sarah J.
43, team leader
Didn't believe in coaches. Now I don't know how I managed without one.
FAQ
Let's clear things up.
The questions everyone asks before they commit.

Any specific questions?
I answer every email personally. If something's on your mind, send it over, I'll get back to you within a day.
01
How do I know which program is right for me?
That's exactly what the free intro call is for. We talk for 15 minutes, I ask you the right questions, and together we figure out where you are and what makes sense. No pressure, no upsell — just an honest recommendation.
01
How do I know which program is right for me?
That's exactly what the free intro call is for. We talk for 15 minutes, I ask you the right questions, and together we figure out where you are and what makes sense. No pressure, no upsell — just an honest recommendation.
01
How do I know which program is right for me?
That's exactly what the free intro call is for. We talk for 15 minutes, I ask you the right questions, and together we figure out where you are and what makes sense. No pressure, no upsell — just an honest recommendation.
02
I've tried programs before and quit. How is this different?
02
I've tried programs before and quit. How is this different?
02
I've tried programs before and quit. How is this different?
03
Do I need to be at a certain fitness level to start?
03
Do I need to be at a certain fitness level to start?
03
Do I need to be at a certain fitness level to start?
04
How much time do I need per week?
04
How much time do I need per week?
04
How much time do I need per week?
05
Is nutrition included?
05
Is nutrition included?
05
Is nutrition included?
06
What happens after the program ends?
06
What happens after the program ends?
06
What happens after the program ends?
07
Can I do this if I travel frequently or have an unpredictable schedule?
07
Can I do this if I travel frequently or have an unpredictable schedule?
07
Can I do this if I travel frequently or have an unpredictable schedule?
08
What makes you different from other online coaches?
08
What makes you different from other online coaches?
08
What makes you different from other online coaches?

Any specific questions?
I answer every email personally. If something's on your mind, send it over, I'll get back to you within a day.
Featured in
The proof is everywhere.
They wrote about it. Their words, not ours.
Pulse Magazine
The coach who builds plans around real life, not the other way Around

Pulse Magazine
The coach who builds plans around real life, not the other way Around

Pulse Magazine
The coach who builds plans around real life, not the other way Around

Body Brief
34 countries, one method, zero excuses, one standard, always.

Body Brief
34 countries, one method, zero excuses, one standard, always.

Body Brief
34 countries, one method, zero excuses, one standard, always.

Forge & Form
Why the best coaches ask more questions than they answer copy

Forge & Form
Why the best coaches ask more questions than they answer copy

Forge & Form
Why the best coaches ask more questions than they answer copy










Stop waiting for the right moment.
Spots are limited and they fill fast.
Blog
The knowledge base.
Everything I write, I live first.

Jan 14, 2026
Mindset
Why Most Fitness Plans Fail Before Week Three
You started strong. You always do.
The first week felt good. Maybe even great. You were motivated, disciplined, showing up. Then week two happened. Work got busy. You missed a session. Then another. By week three, the plan was sitting in your downloads folder, unopened.
This isn't a you problem. This is a design problem.
Why plans fail — the real reason
Most fitness programs are engineered for a fictional version of you. The version that wakes up at 6am energized, has an hour to train, eats a prepped meal at exactly noon, and goes to bed at 10pm with zero stress.
That person doesn't exist. And building a plan for them guarantees failure for everyone else.
Research consistently shows that the number one predictor of long-term adherence isn't the quality of the program — it's how well the program fits the individual's actual lifestyle. A mediocre plan followed consistently will always outperform a perfect plan followed sporadically.
The three design flaws that kill most programs
1. No minimum viable version
Every plan needs a floor — the absolute minimum you can do on your worst day and still feel like you showed up. Most programs don't have one. They're all-or-nothing. And when life makes the full version impossible, nothing wins.
A minimum viable session might be 20 minutes. Three exercises. Done. It keeps the habit alive on the days that matter most.
2. No feedback loop
Most plans are static. They don't adjust based on how your body is responding, how much sleep you're getting, or how much stress you're carrying. They just tell you what to do on day 14 regardless of what happened on days 1-13.
A real program evolves. It checks in. It asks: how are you actually doing? And it changes based on the answer.
3. Punishment for missing sessions
If your plan makes you feel guilty for missing a session, it's working against you. Guilt leads to avoidance. Avoidance leads to quitting.
The best programs are built around the assumption that life will sometimes get in the way — and they have a clear, judgment-free protocol for picking back up.
What a sustainable plan actually looks like
It has three non-negotiable sessions per week and two optional ones. The non-negotiables are short enough to survive a bad day — 30 to 45 minutes. The optionals are there for the weeks when everything goes right.
It has nutrition guidelines, not rules. Guidelines bend. Rules break.
It has weekly check-ins built in — not to track perfection, but to catch problems early before they become reasons to quit.
And it has a clear answer to the question every client eventually asks: what do I do when I fall off?
The answer is always the same: you do the next session. Not extra sessions to make up for lost time. Not a restart from day one. Just the next one.
The shift that changes everything
Stop thinking about your fitness plan as something you follow. Start thinking about it as something you negotiate with.
A plan that fits your life isn't a lesser plan. It's the only kind that works.
The goal isn't a perfect twelve weeks. The goal is still going in year three.

Jan 14, 2026
Mindset
Why Most Fitness Plans Fail Before Week Three
You started strong. You always do.
The first week felt good. Maybe even great. You were motivated, disciplined, showing up. Then week two happened. Work got busy. You missed a session. Then another. By week three, the plan was sitting in your downloads folder, unopened.
This isn't a you problem. This is a design problem.
Why plans fail — the real reason
Most fitness programs are engineered for a fictional version of you. The version that wakes up at 6am energized, has an hour to train, eats a prepped meal at exactly noon, and goes to bed at 10pm with zero stress.
That person doesn't exist. And building a plan for them guarantees failure for everyone else.
Research consistently shows that the number one predictor of long-term adherence isn't the quality of the program — it's how well the program fits the individual's actual lifestyle. A mediocre plan followed consistently will always outperform a perfect plan followed sporadically.
The three design flaws that kill most programs
1. No minimum viable version
Every plan needs a floor — the absolute minimum you can do on your worst day and still feel like you showed up. Most programs don't have one. They're all-or-nothing. And when life makes the full version impossible, nothing wins.
A minimum viable session might be 20 minutes. Three exercises. Done. It keeps the habit alive on the days that matter most.
2. No feedback loop
Most plans are static. They don't adjust based on how your body is responding, how much sleep you're getting, or how much stress you're carrying. They just tell you what to do on day 14 regardless of what happened on days 1-13.
A real program evolves. It checks in. It asks: how are you actually doing? And it changes based on the answer.
3. Punishment for missing sessions
If your plan makes you feel guilty for missing a session, it's working against you. Guilt leads to avoidance. Avoidance leads to quitting.
The best programs are built around the assumption that life will sometimes get in the way — and they have a clear, judgment-free protocol for picking back up.
What a sustainable plan actually looks like
It has three non-negotiable sessions per week and two optional ones. The non-negotiables are short enough to survive a bad day — 30 to 45 minutes. The optionals are there for the weeks when everything goes right.
It has nutrition guidelines, not rules. Guidelines bend. Rules break.
It has weekly check-ins built in — not to track perfection, but to catch problems early before they become reasons to quit.
And it has a clear answer to the question every client eventually asks: what do I do when I fall off?
The answer is always the same: you do the next session. Not extra sessions to make up for lost time. Not a restart from day one. Just the next one.
The shift that changes everything
Stop thinking about your fitness plan as something you follow. Start thinking about it as something you negotiate with.
A plan that fits your life isn't a lesser plan. It's the only kind that works.
The goal isn't a perfect twelve weeks. The goal is still going in year three.

Feb 3, 2026
Nutrition
The Truth About Eating Less and Moving More
Let's start with what's actually true.
A calorie deficit drives fat loss. That part is correct. If you consistently consume fewer calories than you burn, your body will use stored fat for energy. The physics are real.
But here's what the "eat less, move more" crowd consistently gets wrong: they treat the human body like a calculator. Input less, output more, done. Except your body isn't a calculator. It's a biological system with hormones, hunger signals, stress responses, sleep cycles, and a deeply complicated relationship with food that started long before you decided to get in shape.
Why cutting calories usually backfires
When you drastically reduce your food intake, several things happen that most people don't anticipate.
First, your hunger hormones spike. Ghrelin — the hormone that signals hunger — increases significantly when you're in a caloric deficit. At the same time, leptin — the hormone that signals fullness — drops. Your body is actively working against your plan.
Second, your metabolism adapts. This is sometimes called metabolic adaptation or adaptive thermogenesis. Your body becomes more efficient at using the energy you give it, which means the deficit that worked in week one is smaller in week six. This is why progress always slows, and why dramatically cutting calories often leads to a plateau much faster than expected.
Third, muscle mass is at risk. In an aggressive caloric deficit without adequate protein and resistance training, your body will break down muscle tissue for energy alongside fat. Less muscle means a slower metabolism, which makes everything harder long term.
What actually drives sustainable fat loss
Protein — the non-negotiable
If there's one variable that separates people who successfully change their body composition from those who don't, it's protein intake.
Protein is highly satiating — it keeps you fuller for longer than carbohydrates or fat. It has the highest thermic effect of any macronutrient, meaning your body burns more calories just digesting it. And it's essential for preserving and building muscle tissue, which keeps your metabolism high during a deficit.
A practical target: 1.6 to 2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight per day. For a 70kg person, that's 112 to 154 grams daily. Most people eat a fraction of this.
A moderate, sustainable deficit
A deficit of 300 to 500 calories per day is the sweet spot for most people. It's enough to drive consistent fat loss — roughly 0.3 to 0.5kg per week — without triggering aggressive hunger responses or significant metabolic adaptation.
This is slower than most people want. But it's also the speed at which the results actually stick.
Resistance training — not just cardio
Cardio burns calories during the session. Resistance training builds muscle, which burns calories around the clock. The combination of both is optimal, but if you can only do one, resistance training wins for body composition.
More muscle means a higher basal metabolic rate. A higher basal metabolic rate means you can eat more while staying in a deficit. And eating more while losing fat is, for most people, the key to actually sticking with the process.
Sleep and stress — the overlooked variables
Poor sleep elevates cortisol, drives cravings for high-calorie foods, impairs glucose metabolism, and reduces the anabolic hormones responsible for muscle repair and growth. One night of poor sleep measurably affects your hunger hormones the following day.
Chronic stress does similar damage through similar mechanisms. Managing stress isn't a soft recommendation — it's a physiological requirement for effective fat loss.
The mindset shift that makes all of this work
Stop trying to eat as little as possible. Start trying to eat as much as possible while still making progress.
That reframe changes everything. Instead of white-knuckling through hunger, you're building a diet rich enough in protein, vegetables, and whole foods that you're genuinely satisfied — and still in a deficit.
It's slower. It's less dramatic. And it's the only approach I've seen work consistently across hundreds of clients over nearly a decade of coaching.

Feb 3, 2026
Nutrition
The Truth About Eating Less and Moving More
Let's start with what's actually true.
A calorie deficit drives fat loss. That part is correct. If you consistently consume fewer calories than you burn, your body will use stored fat for energy. The physics are real.
But here's what the "eat less, move more" crowd consistently gets wrong: they treat the human body like a calculator. Input less, output more, done. Except your body isn't a calculator. It's a biological system with hormones, hunger signals, stress responses, sleep cycles, and a deeply complicated relationship with food that started long before you decided to get in shape.
Why cutting calories usually backfires
When you drastically reduce your food intake, several things happen that most people don't anticipate.
First, your hunger hormones spike. Ghrelin — the hormone that signals hunger — increases significantly when you're in a caloric deficit. At the same time, leptin — the hormone that signals fullness — drops. Your body is actively working against your plan.
Second, your metabolism adapts. This is sometimes called metabolic adaptation or adaptive thermogenesis. Your body becomes more efficient at using the energy you give it, which means the deficit that worked in week one is smaller in week six. This is why progress always slows, and why dramatically cutting calories often leads to a plateau much faster than expected.
Third, muscle mass is at risk. In an aggressive caloric deficit without adequate protein and resistance training, your body will break down muscle tissue for energy alongside fat. Less muscle means a slower metabolism, which makes everything harder long term.
What actually drives sustainable fat loss
Protein — the non-negotiable
If there's one variable that separates people who successfully change their body composition from those who don't, it's protein intake.
Protein is highly satiating — it keeps you fuller for longer than carbohydrates or fat. It has the highest thermic effect of any macronutrient, meaning your body burns more calories just digesting it. And it's essential for preserving and building muscle tissue, which keeps your metabolism high during a deficit.
A practical target: 1.6 to 2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight per day. For a 70kg person, that's 112 to 154 grams daily. Most people eat a fraction of this.
A moderate, sustainable deficit
A deficit of 300 to 500 calories per day is the sweet spot for most people. It's enough to drive consistent fat loss — roughly 0.3 to 0.5kg per week — without triggering aggressive hunger responses or significant metabolic adaptation.
This is slower than most people want. But it's also the speed at which the results actually stick.
Resistance training — not just cardio
Cardio burns calories during the session. Resistance training builds muscle, which burns calories around the clock. The combination of both is optimal, but if you can only do one, resistance training wins for body composition.
More muscle means a higher basal metabolic rate. A higher basal metabolic rate means you can eat more while staying in a deficit. And eating more while losing fat is, for most people, the key to actually sticking with the process.
Sleep and stress — the overlooked variables
Poor sleep elevates cortisol, drives cravings for high-calorie foods, impairs glucose metabolism, and reduces the anabolic hormones responsible for muscle repair and growth. One night of poor sleep measurably affects your hunger hormones the following day.
Chronic stress does similar damage through similar mechanisms. Managing stress isn't a soft recommendation — it's a physiological requirement for effective fat loss.
The mindset shift that makes all of this work
Stop trying to eat as little as possible. Start trying to eat as much as possible while still making progress.
That reframe changes everything. Instead of white-knuckling through hunger, you're building a diet rich enough in protein, vegetables, and whole foods that you're genuinely satisfied — and still in a deficit.
It's slower. It's less dramatic. And it's the only approach I've seen work consistently across hundreds of clients over nearly a decade of coaching.

Feb 24, 2026
Training
How to Train When You Have No Time
I've heard it thousands of times.
"I just don't have time."
And I believe people when they say it. Life is genuinely busy. Careers, families, travel, social obligations — the modern schedule is relentless. I'm not here to tell you that you're wrong about being busy.
But I am here to tell you that time is almost never the real reason people don't train consistently. Structure is.
The real problem with busy schedules
When we say we don't have time to train, what we usually mean is: I don't have a clear, non-negotiable slot for training that I've protected from everything else.
The difference is significant. Time exists. Everyone has 168 hours in a week. The question is whether training has a reserved place in those hours — or whether it exists in the leftover space after everything else is done.
Leftover space is never reliable. Which is why people who train "when they can" rarely do.
The math that changes the conversation
Three hours of training per week represents 1.78% of your total weekly hours.
For most people, that 1.78% is the difference between significant body composition changes, better energy, improved sleep, lower disease risk, and a fundamentally different relationship with their body — versus none of those things.
When you frame it that way, "I don't have time" becomes a harder argument to make.
Building a three-hour training week
Here's what a practical, results-producing three-hour training week actually looks like.
Session 1 — Full body strength (60 minutes)
This is your anchor session. It should happen at the same time every week — non-negotiable, in the calendar like a meeting you can't reschedule.
Focus: compound movements. Squats, deadlifts, pressing, pulling. These recruit the most muscle mass and produce the most adaptation per minute spent.
Sample structure:
Warm up: 8 minutes
Squat or deadlift variation: 4 sets
Upper body push: 3 sets
Upper body pull: 3 sets
Core: 2 sets
Cool down: 5 minutes
Session 2 — Upper body focus (45 minutes)
More volume on the muscles trained in Session 1, with emphasis on the upper body. This is where you build the shoulder, back, and arm development that compounds over months.
Sample structure:
Warm up: 5 minutes
Bench press or overhead press variation: 4 sets
Row variation: 4 sets
Lateral raises or accessory shoulder work: 3 sets
Bicep and tricep work: 2 sets each
Session 3 — Lower body and conditioning (45 minutes)
Lower body focus with a short conditioning finisher to support cardiovascular health and calorie burn.
Sample structure:
Warm up: 5 minutes
Squat or hip hinge variation: 4 sets
Single leg work (lunges, step-ups, Bulgarian split squats): 3 sets
Hamstring isolation: 3 sets
Conditioning finisher: 8–10 minutes (intervals, circuits, or moderate cardio)
Optional Session 4 — Active recovery (30 minutes)
This session isn't a workout. It's a walk. A swim. A yoga class. Anything that moves your body without adding significant training stress. It improves recovery, maintains the habit of movement on rest days, and accumulates the low-intensity activity that most people are chronically deficient in.
How to actually protect the time
Schedule sessions the same way you schedule important meetings — in advance, with a specific start time and location. The research on habit formation is clear: implementation intentions ("I will train at 7am on Monday at the gym") dramatically outperform vague intentions ("I'll try to train a few times this week").
Have a backup session time for each scheduled session. If Monday 7am falls through, Monday 6pm is already planned. This removes the decision-making that derails most people.
Reduce friction to zero. Gym bag packed the night before. Route planned. No decisions required on the day.
The honest truth about "no time"
The clients I've coached who were truly the busiest — the surgeons, the founders, the parents of three young children — were often the most consistent trainers. Not because they had more time, but because they'd made the decision that this was non-negotiable.
That decision is available to everyone. It doesn't require more hours. It just requires a clear commitment to using 1.78% of the ones you already have.

Feb 24, 2026
Training
How to Train When You Have No Time
I've heard it thousands of times.
"I just don't have time."
And I believe people when they say it. Life is genuinely busy. Careers, families, travel, social obligations — the modern schedule is relentless. I'm not here to tell you that you're wrong about being busy.
But I am here to tell you that time is almost never the real reason people don't train consistently. Structure is.
The real problem with busy schedules
When we say we don't have time to train, what we usually mean is: I don't have a clear, non-negotiable slot for training that I've protected from everything else.
The difference is significant. Time exists. Everyone has 168 hours in a week. The question is whether training has a reserved place in those hours — or whether it exists in the leftover space after everything else is done.
Leftover space is never reliable. Which is why people who train "when they can" rarely do.
The math that changes the conversation
Three hours of training per week represents 1.78% of your total weekly hours.
For most people, that 1.78% is the difference between significant body composition changes, better energy, improved sleep, lower disease risk, and a fundamentally different relationship with their body — versus none of those things.
When you frame it that way, "I don't have time" becomes a harder argument to make.
Building a three-hour training week
Here's what a practical, results-producing three-hour training week actually looks like.
Session 1 — Full body strength (60 minutes)
This is your anchor session. It should happen at the same time every week — non-negotiable, in the calendar like a meeting you can't reschedule.
Focus: compound movements. Squats, deadlifts, pressing, pulling. These recruit the most muscle mass and produce the most adaptation per minute spent.
Sample structure:
Warm up: 8 minutes
Squat or deadlift variation: 4 sets
Upper body push: 3 sets
Upper body pull: 3 sets
Core: 2 sets
Cool down: 5 minutes
Session 2 — Upper body focus (45 minutes)
More volume on the muscles trained in Session 1, with emphasis on the upper body. This is where you build the shoulder, back, and arm development that compounds over months.
Sample structure:
Warm up: 5 minutes
Bench press or overhead press variation: 4 sets
Row variation: 4 sets
Lateral raises or accessory shoulder work: 3 sets
Bicep and tricep work: 2 sets each
Session 3 — Lower body and conditioning (45 minutes)
Lower body focus with a short conditioning finisher to support cardiovascular health and calorie burn.
Sample structure:
Warm up: 5 minutes
Squat or hip hinge variation: 4 sets
Single leg work (lunges, step-ups, Bulgarian split squats): 3 sets
Hamstring isolation: 3 sets
Conditioning finisher: 8–10 minutes (intervals, circuits, or moderate cardio)
Optional Session 4 — Active recovery (30 minutes)
This session isn't a workout. It's a walk. A swim. A yoga class. Anything that moves your body without adding significant training stress. It improves recovery, maintains the habit of movement on rest days, and accumulates the low-intensity activity that most people are chronically deficient in.
How to actually protect the time
Schedule sessions the same way you schedule important meetings — in advance, with a specific start time and location. The research on habit formation is clear: implementation intentions ("I will train at 7am on Monday at the gym") dramatically outperform vague intentions ("I'll try to train a few times this week").
Have a backup session time for each scheduled session. If Monday 7am falls through, Monday 6pm is already planned. This removes the decision-making that derails most people.
Reduce friction to zero. Gym bag packed the night before. Route planned. No decisions required on the day.
The honest truth about "no time"
The clients I've coached who were truly the busiest — the surgeons, the founders, the parents of three young children — were often the most consistent trainers. Not because they had more time, but because they'd made the decision that this was non-negotiable.
That decision is available to everyone. It doesn't require more hours. It just requires a clear commitment to using 1.78% of the ones you already have.

Jan 14, 2026
Mindset
Why Most Fitness Plans Fail Before Week Three
You started strong. You always do.
The first week felt good. Maybe even great. You were motivated, disciplined, showing up. Then week two happened. Work got busy. You missed a session. Then another. By week three, the plan was sitting in your downloads folder, unopened.
This isn't a you problem. This is a design problem.
Why plans fail — the real reason
Most fitness programs are engineered for a fictional version of you. The version that wakes up at 6am energized, has an hour to train, eats a prepped meal at exactly noon, and goes to bed at 10pm with zero stress.
That person doesn't exist. And building a plan for them guarantees failure for everyone else.
Research consistently shows that the number one predictor of long-term adherence isn't the quality of the program — it's how well the program fits the individual's actual lifestyle. A mediocre plan followed consistently will always outperform a perfect plan followed sporadically.
The three design flaws that kill most programs
1. No minimum viable version
Every plan needs a floor — the absolute minimum you can do on your worst day and still feel like you showed up. Most programs don't have one. They're all-or-nothing. And when life makes the full version impossible, nothing wins.
A minimum viable session might be 20 minutes. Three exercises. Done. It keeps the habit alive on the days that matter most.
2. No feedback loop
Most plans are static. They don't adjust based on how your body is responding, how much sleep you're getting, or how much stress you're carrying. They just tell you what to do on day 14 regardless of what happened on days 1-13.
A real program evolves. It checks in. It asks: how are you actually doing? And it changes based on the answer.
3. Punishment for missing sessions
If your plan makes you feel guilty for missing a session, it's working against you. Guilt leads to avoidance. Avoidance leads to quitting.
The best programs are built around the assumption that life will sometimes get in the way — and they have a clear, judgment-free protocol for picking back up.
What a sustainable plan actually looks like
It has three non-negotiable sessions per week and two optional ones. The non-negotiables are short enough to survive a bad day — 30 to 45 minutes. The optionals are there for the weeks when everything goes right.
It has nutrition guidelines, not rules. Guidelines bend. Rules break.
It has weekly check-ins built in — not to track perfection, but to catch problems early before they become reasons to quit.
And it has a clear answer to the question every client eventually asks: what do I do when I fall off?
The answer is always the same: you do the next session. Not extra sessions to make up for lost time. Not a restart from day one. Just the next one.
The shift that changes everything
Stop thinking about your fitness plan as something you follow. Start thinking about it as something you negotiate with.
A plan that fits your life isn't a lesser plan. It's the only kind that works.
The goal isn't a perfect twelve weeks. The goal is still going in year three.

Feb 3, 2026
Nutrition
The Truth About Eating Less and Moving More
Let's start with what's actually true.
A calorie deficit drives fat loss. That part is correct. If you consistently consume fewer calories than you burn, your body will use stored fat for energy. The physics are real.
But here's what the "eat less, move more" crowd consistently gets wrong: they treat the human body like a calculator. Input less, output more, done. Except your body isn't a calculator. It's a biological system with hormones, hunger signals, stress responses, sleep cycles, and a deeply complicated relationship with food that started long before you decided to get in shape.
Why cutting calories usually backfires
When you drastically reduce your food intake, several things happen that most people don't anticipate.
First, your hunger hormones spike. Ghrelin — the hormone that signals hunger — increases significantly when you're in a caloric deficit. At the same time, leptin — the hormone that signals fullness — drops. Your body is actively working against your plan.
Second, your metabolism adapts. This is sometimes called metabolic adaptation or adaptive thermogenesis. Your body becomes more efficient at using the energy you give it, which means the deficit that worked in week one is smaller in week six. This is why progress always slows, and why dramatically cutting calories often leads to a plateau much faster than expected.
Third, muscle mass is at risk. In an aggressive caloric deficit without adequate protein and resistance training, your body will break down muscle tissue for energy alongside fat. Less muscle means a slower metabolism, which makes everything harder long term.
What actually drives sustainable fat loss
Protein — the non-negotiable
If there's one variable that separates people who successfully change their body composition from those who don't, it's protein intake.
Protein is highly satiating — it keeps you fuller for longer than carbohydrates or fat. It has the highest thermic effect of any macronutrient, meaning your body burns more calories just digesting it. And it's essential for preserving and building muscle tissue, which keeps your metabolism high during a deficit.
A practical target: 1.6 to 2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight per day. For a 70kg person, that's 112 to 154 grams daily. Most people eat a fraction of this.
A moderate, sustainable deficit
A deficit of 300 to 500 calories per day is the sweet spot for most people. It's enough to drive consistent fat loss — roughly 0.3 to 0.5kg per week — without triggering aggressive hunger responses or significant metabolic adaptation.
This is slower than most people want. But it's also the speed at which the results actually stick.
Resistance training — not just cardio
Cardio burns calories during the session. Resistance training builds muscle, which burns calories around the clock. The combination of both is optimal, but if you can only do one, resistance training wins for body composition.
More muscle means a higher basal metabolic rate. A higher basal metabolic rate means you can eat more while staying in a deficit. And eating more while losing fat is, for most people, the key to actually sticking with the process.
Sleep and stress — the overlooked variables
Poor sleep elevates cortisol, drives cravings for high-calorie foods, impairs glucose metabolism, and reduces the anabolic hormones responsible for muscle repair and growth. One night of poor sleep measurably affects your hunger hormones the following day.
Chronic stress does similar damage through similar mechanisms. Managing stress isn't a soft recommendation — it's a physiological requirement for effective fat loss.
The mindset shift that makes all of this work
Stop trying to eat as little as possible. Start trying to eat as much as possible while still making progress.
That reframe changes everything. Instead of white-knuckling through hunger, you're building a diet rich enough in protein, vegetables, and whole foods that you're genuinely satisfied — and still in a deficit.
It's slower. It's less dramatic. And it's the only approach I've seen work consistently across hundreds of clients over nearly a decade of coaching.
The work continues off the gym floor too.

Tom D.
37, school teacher
Three months in, my doctor asked what changed. Everything did, permanently.

Tom D.
37, school teacher
Three months in, my doctor asked what changed. Everything did, permanently.
Train smarter · Live better · No shortcuts · Built for real life · Zero abandoned clients · Results that last · Show up. Every week.
Train smarter · Live better · No shortcuts · Built for real life · Zero abandoned clients · Results that last · Show up. Every week.
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