Mental strategies that help make exercise a habit

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If your fitness routine has been less than consistent over the past few months, you’re likely not alone. Summer is a unique season: longer days often consist of making after-work plans with friends, taking family vacations and and spending weekends at outdoor barbecues or the beach — not hours logged inside a gym.

And while the warm weather does provide ample opportunity to be active outdoors, a more erratic schedule can make it difficult to schedule it in consistently. Now that fall is here and work and family obligations tend to fall back in line, we can make fitness a more consistent part of our routine again.

But after a few lax months, this is easier said than done. Anyone who has tried to lose weight, tone up or even just simply recommit to exercise knows that the battle is often more mental than physical. So we tapped Stephanie Mansour, personal trainer and CEO of Step It Up with Steph, for some advice on how she helps her clients overcome that mental hurdle. Here are some of her best mental hacks to get your mind in the game — and your body back in the gym.

Start with mini workouts

Your normal plan of attack is likely to hit the ground running, scheduling hour-long gym sessions a few days a week. But Mansour says to start small. We’re talking 5-minute workout small.

“I tell my weight-loss clients who are not used to working out that they need to start with a mini workout,” says Mansour. It is an immediate way to combat any excuse you may have on why you can’t exercise — after all, who doesn’t have five minutes to spare? “Some people say, ‘I don’t have 30 minutes to work out; I can’t even get to the gym; where do I start?’ Start with a mini workout — literally 5 minutes,” she says.

It could be crunches while you’re watching TV, squats while you fold the laundry or a walk around the block. “It sounds gimmicky but these are the types of movements that you want to start doing so you get that muscle memory,” says Mansour. “In your mind you’re seeing the workout as just five minutes and who knows? You may be inspired to go for five more minutes and that will build and build.”

This mental hack is twofold. First, it’s easier to convince yourself to do something for five minutes rather than 30, especially if you’ve been off your workout grind for a while. Beyond that, you are slowly starting to condition your mind to put health front and center and getting your body used to moving, which will help build motivation over time.