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Perhaps a more accurate title for this post would be “what happened when I stopped putting pressure on myself to exercise”. Because for the past month that’s exactly what I did.

I know, I know for someone who preaches exercise and just generally promotes an active lifestyle it seems pretty out of character to choose to be sedentary for a month. I suppose I have some explaining to do.

I’ve been very honest with you regarding my struggles surrounding food, but I’ve stayed away from vocalizing my issues around exercise. Partially because I’m still pretty in the thick of it, but also because I feared being called out as a hypocrite.

I find I’m much better able to sort through my thoughts and share them with you guys when it’s in hindsight, but this time I’m hoping that sharing my struggles as they happen can both inspire you but also recruit you to help me. I want you to know that my life certainly isn’t perfect and I definitely don’t have this whole health thing figured out.

I’m telling you this because lately I’ve been realizing that my relationship with exercise is far from healthy.

Exercise has been and I suspect will always be my vice. Learning to eat intuitively was a challenge but learning to move intuitively has proved to be one of my biggest obstacles.

I often find myself wishing I could just un-know information. Wishing away the number of calories burned while running, the benefits of strength training, how to build muscle and stick to a training plan. Yearning to get back to a time when exercising was something you just did, rather than part of some larger goal you’re trying to achieve.

But these days, I find it hard to let this information go. Suddenly, “only” working out 4 days a week riddles me with guilt and anxiety and irrational fears that even I can’t explain. Rather than celebrating the fact that I moved and challenged myself for 4 days, I focus on the 3 days that I didn’t.

Did I balance enough cardio to strength? 

Am I stronger than I was last week?

Can I run a little further?

These kinds of thoughts wax and wane in my brain. When I think them through objectively I realize that the entire purpose of exercise (to keep me healthy and strong) are being entirely negated by my stress surrounding it.

It reached a point where exercise was just another thing on my to-do list adding pressure and anxiety to my life. It stopped being about moving my body, but whether I was meeting the expectation I set for myself as an active person.

Interestingly, these thoughts have nothing to do with how I look – thoughts that plagued me for many years in the past – but with whether I was living up to my brand. A brand that encourages movement and exercise as part of a healthy lifestyle.

But what I’m beginning to learn is that no amount of physical activity can help us tackle our mental health. Being healthy and in my case, inspiring others to be healthy requires that we support our mental health as much, if not more than our physical health. I’ve come to realize that my disordered relationship with exercise has been threatening my mental health. That I was putting my body first, and my brain second, forgetting entirely that they depend on each other to function at their best.

So what did I do? I stopped exercising. Entirely. With the exception of a few workouts here and there (you try going on vacation with Fit Foodie Finds…), I took exercise off my to-do list. I ditched the goals, and the expectations and gave myself permission to move if I wanted to, but with no plan dictating how to do that.

Having a dog prevented me from becoming entirely sedentary, but besides our daily walks I learned to embrace other ways of supporting my body. Instead of dragging myself to the gym, I read a book. Instead of forcing myself to go to a class, I sipped a new tea and took a nap. I did everything my body was telling me to do. I relaxed.

So what happened?

Everything. I put no specific timeline on myself for when I’d dip my toes back into working out but here I am a month later feeling invigorated and slightly more aware of how damn smart our bodies really are.

And for those of you wondering…

Here’s What DIDN’T Happen When I Stopped Working Out

I did not balloon or turn into a sloth whale (yes, this is what I imagined in my head). I don’t own a scale, but none of my clothes fit any differently and I still felt pretty bad-ass going bathing suit shopping.

I didn’t suddenly notice a new roll on my tummy or less definition in my arms. I didn’t have to go out and buy new jeans or spend the entire month wearing moo-moos.

In fact I feel a lot more comfortable in my body than I did before this experiment.

More importantly…

Here’s What DID Happen When I Stopped Working Out

I became a lot more aware of how great it feels to prioritize self-care. In some crazy way, taking that time that I normally allotted to working out and instead dedicated to doing what felt right to me made me a better person towards others. I was more attentive and patient because I felt less pressured or burdened.

I felt an overall contentment with my life. This one is kind of hard to explain, but I just felt like I was a lot more present and took a lot more enjoyment out of the small moments in life. Taking Rhett for a walk, cuddling and watching episodes of New Girl with C, meal prepping a couple meals for the week. I cherished these moments a lot more.

Taking the pressure off myself to do something I felt like I was supposed to be doing, made me realize how many other things I burden myself with because I feel some inexplicable sense of commitment. I’m someone who puts a lot of value in my word and also wants to do everything, all while doing it perfectly. Realizing that life doesn’t fall apart when you can’t get that workout in, also helped me come to terms with the fact that I can’t do it all, and I certainly can’t do it all perfectly.

And finally, I realized how much I really do love to move. After a couple of weeks off I went on a run and it felt amaaaazing. Today I went on a hike in Arizona and tomorrow may bring more of the same. But I also am getting comfortable with the idea that I don’t know what tomorrow will bring and if all it includes is a walk around the block, I’ll be happy with myself.

I’ll never be able to un-know everything I’ve absorbed regarding working out and the fitness world, but I certainly can become better at listening to my body’s cues. At understanding when it needs a HIIT workout, or when it needs a run. Or sometimes, a bath and a sleep-in is exactly what it needs.

I’m not changing my tune when it comes to exercise. It’s like brushing your teeth, you just have to do it. But you don’t have to torture yourself in the process. I think goals and fitness challenges are great. But just because your friend is training for a marathon and your boyfriend just completed Tough Mudder doesn’t mean that going on a 30 minute walk isn’t enough. You’re allowed to go to the gym one day and lift weights and not be on a training schedule. You can go on a run that is shorter and slower than your last and not feel like a failure.

Likewise, you can slow down, eat a piece of chocolate and go to bed early and still be doing as much good for your body as that muay thai-yoga-crossfit class.

Sometimes we all need a little kick in the pants to get moving, but it’s important to remember what you’re moving for. I realized that I what I truly prioritize is feeling great. Do I want to be strong? Of course. But I want to be strong enough to move a box without breaking my back or carry my future children. I don’t need to lift a 250lb barbell above my head and I don’t need to run a sub 4 hour marathon.

If lifting that barbell makes you feel great, then more power to ya! But in the same vein, if you want to do a strength class one day and a spin class the next and then never do either again, that’s totally cool too. You’re allowed to be inconsistent. You’re allowed to move for the sake of moving and not because you have to achieve a goal. It’s easy to get wrapped up in this idea that we need to exercise to meet or exceed a challenge. That if we’re not dry-heaving on the ground, the workout was worthless. But our workouts don’t need to be the most effective for them to be worthwhile.

This isn’t an excuse to stop moving or permission to become a couch potato. It’s just a reminder that we don’t all need to perform like professional athletes on a strict training schedule to get the benefits of exercise.

I guess what I really learned from this whole experiment was that our bodies are ridiculously-crazy-smart. In some weird-twisted way, I had to eliminate exercise entirely to realize it’s benefits. And I also had to take a break from it to remind myself how important it is to care for other aspects of our being.

In moving forward, exercise doesn’t feel like another thing on my to-do list. I have no idea how many times I’ve worked out this week and I don’t care how many times I workout next week. I’m not perfect and I know this won’t be an easy road, but I’m taking it day by day. I’m asking myself if I’m moving because it feels good and I want to or because I feel like I have to. If it’s the latter, it’s important that I assess how I could make a better use of my time.

What I’m trying not to do is feel guilty around exercise. To constantly remind myself that it doesn’t matter how much or how hard I worked but how it made me feel. This isn’t easy when you’re surrounded by people posting their latest #workoutgoals and fitspo images. But I’m going to give it my best shot.

I hope you’ll join me in trying to become more intuitive with our bodies and how we move them. Honestly, I could use as much support as I can get. But if the least I can do is get you to ask yourself whether this statement applies before your next workout then I’ll have done my job well. I certainly hope it resonates with you as much as it resonated with me:

“I’m working out because I love my body, not because I hate it.” 

Let’s all give our bodies a little more love, because we’ve got one life to live and it’s the only one we’ve got!

What Happened When I Stopped Workout Out

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Meet the Maven

Hi! I'm Davida and welcome to my corner of the internet. I'm a wellness blogger, yoga teacher, certified herbalist, and green beauty lover.

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161 Comments

  1. I will totally NOT be surprised if this post goes viral – and it totally deserves too. I’ve loved reading your past posts on your relationship with food, and this one hits me no different. I always find myself feeling guilty when I miss ONE day, or when I work out and don’t sweat, or when I decide sleeping for 7 hours for the 1st time in 2 weeks is more important that working out. Sometimes we need a break to remember why we do the things we do, whether it be working out, blogging, eating “clean,” or anything else. Thanks for sharing this, Davida!

    1. It’s such a fine balance between all of the components that go into healthy living and sometimes we think that we need to measure them all perfectly. The reality is that our bodies change everyday and sometimes we need more sleep and sometimes we need more activity. We can’t just place the same schedule onto everyday and expect the same results! Ahhhhh it’s so complicated sometimes haha. Thanks so much for your awesome support, lady!

  2. I needed to read this today! I spent the past several hours regretting that I slept in and through my “normal workout time”. I forced myself into doing a workout the past two days this week I have slept in, and today I am just not feeling it, but yet I am dwelling on the fact that I should just do it. I realize now I am not alone in the brain battle! Its cold, windy and really I think a bath wins out today! Great read!

  3. This was such a great reminder for when we get just a little too carried away. Hello, I’m the queen of that! I find myself constantly “too passionate” (obsessive or fixated) and I let myself and my balance get very out of hand. I’m not sure if I’m there with exercise, but last year I went a little too overboard always trying to PR in every distance in my running. Unfortunately now I really had to scale back, but if I would have stayed balanced I could have sustained it!

  4. HI!!! Long time no chat.

    I loved everything about this, Davida. I hate doing anything because I’m “supposed” to. I find that life is so much more fun (and less complicated) when we focus on doing whatever makes us feel “good” and keeping it as simple as that.
    I’d much rather move my body in a way that feels intuitive and not really focus on schedules, plans, etc. It just doesn’t work for me. It’s a recipe for unhappiness. Swimming against the current.

  5. This speaks to me so much, especially after having a baby and trying to do the whole business of “getting my body back” (hah, what a crock). I have been an avid exerciser for years, but sometimes it does turn into an obsession. I also easily focus on what I didn’t do instead of what I did. Now that I’m a mom, fitting workouts in is a lot easier said than done so it’s easy to be super unhappy with what I didn’t do because I literally couldn’t get to it (like this week, have a sick kid = no gym for me). My new motto is that if I don’t LOVE what I am doing and it’s not inspiring me every time I do it, I don’t do it. This goes for exercise plans that I formerly would suffer through and now would just rather quit if it’s not working. Why force something?

  6. Davida, this resonates with me so much! I can get so hard on myself if I don’t move my body daily. The struggle is so real. I think I may just have to take a month of too!
    I’ve really been working on changing my mindset around exercise and really just move my body in a way that I love. Running use to be my thing….or so I thought. But to be honest, it’s not something I love to do..so why do it, right?! What I do love..is walking my dog (wilma the doodle), walking/running with a friend, hitting up a yoga class with a friend (followed by a coffee date). I like to move my body but I also like to incorporate social time with friends or peaceful time with my pup in nature. Your amazing words in this post is just another reminder to continue to move my body in a way that I love and in a way that truly nourishes my mind, body and soul!

    xoxo,
    Stacie

  7. Love this, Davida. I think we all have good intentions when we initially start a lifestyle of regular exercise, but it’s so easy to get caught up with it. I have totally been there, and taking a step back helps me put things into perspective. Thanks for being so candid and sharing this experiment. You’re amazing! <3

    1. You’re amazing! Those damn endorphins really are addicting haha. But it’s important to keep a healthy mind too. Thanks for continuing to inspire so many people with your own journey xoxo

  8. Love love love this post!!! I think it’s easy to get caught up in the rules of “healthy living” and then we miss the point entirely!

  9. Davita, I have to say, YES. I am thrilled you wrote this. I am thrilled you explained what DID and DID NOT happen. So many believe they’re going to gain 240923843892 pounds if they don’t work out, but that’s not the case as long as you eat a healthy diet and practice self love. Your experiment is admirable and I really hope girls/guys who suffer from over-exercise read this post and take notes. Print it out. Re-read it a billion times. Very well written 🙂

    1. Aw thanks gorgeous! It is so true. Working out is part of a package and you can’t just expect to feel and look amazing if you’re neglecting everything else. Thanks for your support as always GiGi!

  10. Hi!

    Really love the recipes on your blog and was initially here to look through them. However, when I saw the link to this post – I knew I had to read it especially since routine and exercise for me is something I still struggle with : feeling like I have to drag myself daily to the eliptical machine and get / hit a certain quota. Like you said, the food aspect is so much simpler to deal with but the exercise is much more deeply rooted and is rather unhealthy in terms of feeling we need to exercise to justify the amount we eat when in actuality food is meant to fuel our workouts and the mindset shouldn’t be workout to eat but eat to workout. It’s definitely hard given all the messages we hear, though.

    Kudos to you for going through what seems to be so impossible nowadays. I hope I can get to that point at some point. Baby steps, though, I suppose. I get overwhelmed thinking of stopping for a set period of time but perhaps stopping for a day won’t do any harm. Thanks for the post

    1. I hear ya! It’s incredibly challenging, especially because we’re constantly being fed messages that we need to push and test our bodies. Try slowing down a bit or replacing a workout with another activity you enjoy. Sometimes a small change can make a big impact in your perspective. And always remember that it’s a privilege to exercise and not something to be taken advantage of 😉 Thanks for your support!