DiscoverA Better Way with Kersten KimuraForget Motivation—Here’s Your Real Guide to Staying Consistent After 40
Forget Motivation—Here’s Your Real Guide to Staying Consistent After 40

Forget Motivation—Here’s Your Real Guide to Staying Consistent After 40

Update: 2025-10-15
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If you’re over 40 and find yourself constantly cycling through phases of starting and stopping your workouts, struggling to maintain consistency, this post is for you.







You might believe that the missing ingredient is motivation — that magical force that will one day make you leap out of bed, ready to crush your workout. But here’s the truth: chasing motivation is exactly what’s keeping you stuck.



























If you wait for motivation to show up, you could end up waiting forever.







Building lasting consistency doesn’t require a military-style routine or punishing discipline. It requires creating real habits that fit your life as it is right now.







Below are five key principles — plus three simple, practical tools — that will show you what actually works for staying consistent after 40.















1. Start Small to Win Big: Embrace the “No Zero Days” Mantra







One of the biggest mistakes people make when starting or restarting fitness is trying to do too much, too soon.







We’re told to work out six days a week, do cardio three times, cut all sugar, and eat “perfectly.” The result? Overwhelm, burnout, and another cycle of quitting. Check out this post to understand how much a beginner actually needs to work out, to get results (it's not 6 days a week, and you are allowed to eat carbs, too).







Instead, start smaller than you think you need to.







The best way to do that is by adopting the “No Zero Days” philosophy. It means committing to some movement every single day — even if it’s just a 10-minute walk or gentle stretching. Every time you move, you’re reinforcing new neural pathways that strengthen your identity as someone who is consistent.







So, less is more. Don't overwhelm yourself with an hour-long workouts every day, because it's likely that you will stop after a week only to take a “break” for another month.







Consistency doesn’t come from intensity. It comes from repetition.And repetition starts with doing something, not everything.















Stop Sabotaging Yourself with Perfectionism







The “all-or-nothing” mindset often shows up as perfectionism — that little voice that says,









“If I can’t do the full 45-minute workout, I might as well skip it.”









That voice is lying to you.







Something is always better than nothing.







You wouldn’t throw away your phone just because the battery is at 10%; you’d plug it in. The same logic applies to movement — do what you can with the energy you have, and call that a win.







Every small action counts more than a skipped “perfect” workout.















2. Take Ownership and Know Your “Why”







This part can be uncomfortable, but it’s where the real transformation happens.







You have to take ownership of your health — not your trainer, not your spouse, not your schedule. You.







And ownership goes deeper than wanting to look a certain way. It’s about building strength, energy, and independence so you can live fully.







Your why might be wanting to carry groceries without pain, maintain strong bones, avoid diabetes, or stay active with your kids or grandkids. These reasons matter more than any short-term goal.






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Forget Motivation—Here’s Your Real Guide to Staying Consistent After 40

Forget Motivation—Here’s Your Real Guide to Staying Consistent After 40

Kersten Kimura