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Wednesday, December 17, 2025 at 2:42 AM
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‘Keep moving’ is key to sticking with fitness programs

‘Keep moving’ is key to sticking with fitness programs

Most individuals that are planning a fitness program usually have a goal in mind as a reason for getting off the couch and start working out.  Setting goals can be a problem when the goal is too large and the person gets discouraged when progress seems slow.  Sometimes it is easier to break that goal into smaller segments and rewards with small gains become motivation instead of a discouragement.  One factor in setting a goal is where your starting point is.  If you are poor condition, or many pounds overweight, a fitness program is difficult to continue. The exercises are hard and instead of making a person feel good it seems every muscle and joint hurts and time working out is very limited before the person has to stop.  

I have made fitness goals for myself and others and there is no one plan that works for everybody.  Much of it depends on the goal that has been set and the motivation the person has to complete that goal.  One point I usually put in a fitness program is to allow some flexibility in the program to be able to make changes in a day to day workout.  It seems that making a program with very specific details on each day becomes hard to follow that plan for any length of time.  

I published programs in this column some years ago for runners that wanted to run a marathon, or especially for taking part in Moe’s Better Half Marathon.  I had a three month program to get ready for a marathon.  The starting point was usually being able to run a 10K distance.  I only had two items in the program to follow.  One was the total miles for each week and the other was the longest run for the week.  How you reached each of the goals depended on your weekly schedule of work, meetings, motivation, and general well-being each day.  From reading other programs most said that the long run was more important than the total miles for the week.  The program gradually added a few miles to each of the items and how you attained them depended on your weekly schedule.  For a marathon distance I stopped the longest run at between 20–22 miles.  I hoped the base of 15 to 18 mile long runs leading up to the 20 mile run would be enough to get the person through the last four miles of a marathon. From feedback of runners that followed the program it seemed to work

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