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The Science Of Never Missing A Workout

The only limit is your own creativity.

Struggling to get to the gym? Lacking in motivation? Here's how the research says you can get yourself to the gym without fail.

You’ve probably been using the word ‘habit’ wrong. Many people think of a habit as something you do repeatedly. That’s not true.

Habits are “actions that are triggered automatically in response to contextual cues that have been associated with their performance: for example, automatically washing hands (action) after using the toilet (contextual cue), or putting on a seatbelt (action) after getting into the car (contextual cue).” From: Making health habitual: the psychology of ‘habit-formation’ and general practice

A lot of research shows that doing a specific task repeatedly in a certain context will eventually cause the task to be activated within said context.

For example:

  • Participants in one study chose a healthy behavior (eating fruit, going for a walk). The researchers then tied that behavior to a contextual cue (after breakfast, after lunch). The researchers found that habit strength increased rapidly for 66 days, and then reached a plateau. Also, the researchers found that habit strength was not severely impaired when missing one day.

  • Another study compared dieting among people who were given a leaflet on improving consistency and people who weren’t. The researchers found that the people who were given the leaflet lost way more weight.

  • Another study found that “ strong habits – although perceived to be purposive and goal-dependent – are actually influenced by recurring triggers in the performance context.”

Put another way, you can create positive habits by creating intentional triggers for positive behaviors.

Now, we know the action we want to create, which is going to the gym every day (yes you can go to the gym every day).

But what about the contextual cue? What context could we tie the action of going to the gym to?

You’ve got dozens if not hundreds of actions. From the available research, it doesn’t seem to matter what the context is, so long as you use it consistently.

The only limit is your own creativity.

Here are some of the contextual cues:

  • Go immediately after waking up.

  • Go immediately after breakfast.

  • Go immediately after lunch.

  • Go immediately after dinner.

  • Go immediately after work.

  • Go immediately after your last class

  • Go before class.

  • Go after writing your workout down (this is what I do).

  • Go after watching a motivational video.

It doesn’t matter what it is, so long as you do the task of going to the gym every day within the context you set. Eventually, it’ll be weird when you don’t go to the gym.