01/06/2026
The health and fitness industry loves a trend. Monthly, we’re sold the next “magic bullet” that will transform our body, health, and life. The reality? The things that get the most attention are often the least important - Here are 5 overrated areas of fitness...
1. DAILY STEPS: Moving more is fantastic. But somehow “be active” became “hit 10k steps.” Which actually came from a Japanese pedometer campaign in the ‘60s, not groundbreaking science. Walking on a treadmill for an hour then sitting for the next 12 doesn’t make you healthy ✅ The benefits come from moving throughout the day: Walking instead of driving. Taking the stairs. Gardening. Playing with the kids. Housework. A relaxing stroll. Movement isn’t a number. It’s a lifestyle.
2. THE PERFECT PROGRAMME: It doesn’t exist. I’ve written thousands of programmes with every detail mapped out. Some delivered incredible results. Some didn’t. Why? Because a mediocre programme executed consistently beats the “perfect” programme executed poorly every time ✅ Success comes from: Effort. Consistency. Discipline. Adherence. Patience. Master the basics and repeat them longer than everyone else.
3. MOTIVATION: Motivation is overrated. One day you’re fired up. The next day you’re not. If your success depends on motivation, you’re in trouble ✅ Build your actions around: Purpose. Values. Habits. Identity. Know why you’re doing it. When the excitement fades, purpose and results keep you moving forward.
4. COUNTING CALORIES: Yes, calorie tracking works. But for most people, it’s not where they should start. Before tracking every gram, focus on: More protein. Better quality. Portion control. Meal routines. Less processed crap. Less mindless snacking ✅ Most people can achieve incredible results simply by improving habits and consistency.
5. “SMART” DEVICES: Fitness trackers, sleep scores, recovery scores, stress scores... Useful? Sometimes. Annoying? Often. Too many check a device before checking in with themselves ✅ Information without action is useless. The truth? You don’t need more data. You need common sense. I don’t need a watch to tell me I’m tired, stressed, or haven’t moved enough.