Andy Fortuna

Andy Fortuna Athlete - Coach - Instructor

06/03/2026

When things aren’t going well that’s when showing up is a super power.

Not when life is organized.

Not when work is calm.

Not when you got a full night of sleep.

Not when everything is going according to plan.

When you’ve had a long day.
When you’re stressed.
When you received bad news.
When life feels chaotic.

That’s when it matters most.

Now, that doesn’t mean forcing yourself through a brutal workout.

In fact, some days resilience looks like adjusting the plan.

Maybe your normal workout is 60 minutes.

Today it’s 30.

Maybe you planned to lift weights.

Today it’s a 10-minute walk.

Maybe you wanted to do everything perfectly.

Today you focus on one small action you can control.

Because the goal isn’t perfection.

The goal is continuing to move forward.

I’ve taught this to clients for years, and it’s something I remind myself of often.

The habits that build strength, energy, and resilience aren’t the ones we do when life is easy.

They’re the ones we continue when life gets hard.

Sometimes the biggest win isn’t crushing the workout.

It’s showing up anyway.

One step.
One choice.
One action at a time.

Because when we take care of ourselves during the hardest seasons, we’re better able to show up for the people, responsibilities, and priorities that matter most.

DM me “RESET” if you’re ready to build strength, energy, and resilience that lasts through real life.




06/01/2026

I see this all the time.

The day starts with good intentions.

Then:

👉🏽Work gets busy
👉🏽Meetings run long
👉🏽Kids need attention
👉🏽Stress builds
👉🏽Lunch gets skipped
👉🏽Water gets forgotten

Suddenly it’s evening and you’re starving.

So you grab whatever is easiest.

Then you wonder why:

🔹Your energy is low
🔹Your cravings are high
🔹Your weight isn’t changing
🔹Nutrition feels impossible

The truth?

Most nutrition struggles aren’t caused by a lack of knowledge.

They’re caused by a lack of structure

If this sounds familiar, Dm me “REFUEL” and I’ll share the simple nutrition framework I use with busy parents to stay consistent even during hectic weeks..

05/29/2026

As a hard working parent who is trying to prioritize your health and fitness , you don’t need another workout.

You don’t need another diet.

And you definitely don’t need more guilt.

What you need is a system.

Because the truth is:

Most people already know the basics.

Move your body.
Eat more protein.
Drink water.
Sleep more.

The challenge is doing those things consistently when work gets hectic, the kids need you, and life throws another curveball.

That’s why I spend less time helping clients find the “perfect” plan and more time helping them build one they can actually stick to.

A good plan isn’t the one that works on your best week.

It’s the one that still works on your busiest week.

(Please read that last one again, that’s where the magic happens)

If you’ve been struggling to stay consistent, what’s been the biggest challenge lately? Let me know in the comments below 👇

05/22/2026

TConsistency b sub one of our pillar

1️⃣ Stop waiting for the “perfect” workout

20–30 minutes still counts.

Consistency beats intensity when life is busy.

2️⃣ Train to support and enhance your life — not escape it

Your workouts should give you:
• more energy
• better movement
• more strength
• better stress tolerance

Not leave you exhausted all week.

3️⃣ Prioritize recovery more than you used to

Sleep, nutrition, walking, hydration, stress management, and mobility matter WAY more especially after kids.

Recovery is performance now.

4️⃣ Redefine what progress looks like

Progress might mean:
• fewer aches and pains
• more patience
• more energy after work
• carrying your kids easier
• feeling athletic again

Not just PRs and aesthetics.

5️⃣ Let your kids SEE health in action

One of the coolest parts of parenthood is that our kids are always watching.

When they see us:
• move consistently
• take care of ourselves
• manage stress
• train with balance

…they learn what healthy adulthood can look like.

You do not have to choose between being a parent and being athletic.

You just have to learn how to adapt the season you’re in.

If you’ve been struggling to rebuild consistency after kids…

DM me “REBUILD” and let’s simplify the process. # #




Sustainableukl

05/20/2026

I believe anyone with a body that is willing to put in the work can be strong and athletic.

I spoke with a mom recently and she said :
“I’m learning that movement overall is important. Whether it’s 45 minutes or 20 minutes… you still moved. But it’s hard to let go of the powerlifter mentality and accept I’m not who I was before becoming a mom.”

Honestly..

I think so many parents feel this way.

Especially people who used to be athletes, lifters, runners, or highly competitive.

Because becoming a parent changes everything:
• your time
• your recovery
• your priorities
• your schedule
• your energy

And sometimes it can feel like you lost part of yourself.

But I truly don’t think you have to choose between being a parent and being athletic.

Athletic just looks different now.

Maybe training sessions are shorter.
Maybe recovery matters more.
Maybe performance means having enough energy for your kids, your workouts, and your life.

But the goal is still the same:
• move well
• feel strong
• stay capable
• maintain energy
• stay healthy long term

And honestly, one of the coolest parts of becoming a parent is that now we get to model what health looks like for our kids.

Not perfection.

Consistency
Movement.
Strength.
Resilience.
Balance.

Your athletic identity doesn’t disappear when you become a parent.

It evolves.

If you’ve been struggling to reconnect with your health, strength, or consistency after kids…

DM me “RESET” and I wan to help you simplify the process.

And if you ready to make a change then apply to train online with me. Feel strong, athletics , and more confident in 12 weeks. Link In Bio


 
 


05/18/2026

I see this all the time with busy parents and professionals.

The day gets hectic…
work runs long,
kids need attention,
stress builds,
and poor food choices slowly start adding up throughout the day.

Not because you “don’t care.”

Usually because:
👉🏽meals were skipped
👉🏽energy crashed
👉🏽there was no plan
👉🏽life got busy

Also, extreme dieting is not sustainable or enjoyable.

That’s why I help clients get better at the basics:
⚡️make better choices consistently
⚡️ increasing protein
⚡️building simple meals
⚡️planning ahead when life gets busy
⚡️creating structure that fits real life

Because sustainable nutrition isn’t built through perfection.

It’s built through consistency and better daily habits.

DM me “REFUEL” if this feels familiar
And if you’re ready to make a change apply for coaching with me. Link in bio

05/15/2026

It’s finding TIME.

For some parents the only time they consistently train is while their kids are at practice.

And honestly..

That’s real life for a lot of parents.
Not everyone wants to wake up at 4am.
Not everyone has perfect schedules.
Not every workout is going to look ideal.

The people who stay consistent long term usually aren’t the ones with perfect routines.

They’re the ones who learn how to work WITH their life instead of against it.

Sometimes that means:
👉🏽shorter workouts
👉🏽evening sessions
👉🏽training between practices (or at practice )
👉🏽adjusting expectations season to season

Consistency doesn’t come from having more time.

It comes from finding a window that realistically fits your life and protecting it.

Especially as parents, sustainability matters more than perfection.

DM me “REBUILD” if you’re trying to figure out how to make training fit your real life schedule.
And if you’re ready to make a change you can apply for coaching call with me. Link in bio 🙏🏾

05/14/2026

You need LESS chaos
I was talking with someone recently who said:
“I’ve been slowly phasing habits in since January.
First water.
Then sleep.
Then training.
Trying not to get overwhelmed.”
And honestly…
That’s one of the smartest ways to create lasting change.
Because most busy adults aren’t struggling from laziness.
They’re trying to:
• eat better
• train harder
• sleep more
• manage stress
• show up for family
• keep up with work
…all at once.
That’s where burnout, injury, and illness happens.
Real progress is usually built slower than people think.
One habit.
One routine.
One layer at a time.
Not extremes.
Not starting over every Monday.
Just consistent progress that fits real life.
Especially for busy parents, sustainability matters more than intensity.
DM me “RESET” and let’s talk about why youre overwhelmed trying to balance health, fitness, work, and life.
And if you’re ready to make a change you can apply for coaching with me. Link in bio 🙏🏾

05/13/2026

But it does mean training might need to look different.
A lot of busy parents make the mistake of thinking:
“Bad sleep = no workout”
or
“I need to push harder to wake myself up.
Usually neither is the answer.
After a rough night of sleep, your body is already carrying more stress.
That day might be better for:
•Walking
•Mobility work
•Lighter strength training
•Shorter sessions
•Breathing and recovery work
•Technique-focused workouts
The goal isn’t to punish yourself.
The goal is to keep momentum without digging a deeper recovery hole.
Consistency doesn’t mean training hard every day.
It means learning how to adjust without stopping completely.
That’s how long-term progress actually happens.
If you’ve been struggling to balance training, recovery, and real life, DM me “RESET” and I’ll help you figure out what your body actually needs right now.

Address

1
Pinecrest, FL
33193

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Andy Fortuna posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category