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How to stop making excuses to not exercise

How to stop making excuses to not exercise

I have to be honest with you about something. You already know you need to exercise. You know it's good for you. You know it'll make you feel better, live longer, look better, and have more energy. Knowledge isn't the problem. The problem is that your brain is wired to avoid discomfort, conserve energy, and seek immediate gratification over long-term benefit. Every time you skip a workout, your brain gives you a perfectly rational-sounding excuse. 'I'm too tired.' 'I'll do it tomorrow.' 'I don't have time.' 'My knee hurts.' 'I'll start Monday.' The thing is: those excuses are all true. You're genuinely tired. You genuinely don't have time. Your knee genuinely hurts. But none of those are reasons to skip exercise — they're just descriptions of how you feel in this moment. Real change happens when you stop accepting those descriptions as justifications. This isn't a pep talk. It's a structural approach to making excuses harder to make. Here's what actually works.

1

Name the real reason, not the excuse

Step 1: Name the real reason, not the excuse

When you catch yourself making an excuse to skip a workout, ask one question: 'What's the real reason?' Not the polite reason. The real one.

Common real reasons:

- 'I'm scared I won't be good at this'

- 'I'm afraid of failing in public'

- 'I don't actually want to be fit — I just want to want it'

- 'I'm using exercise as something to want rather than something to do'

- 'I'm exhausted because I'm not sleeping enough and exercise makes it worse'

- 'I have an unresolved injury I'm not addressing'

These are different from 'I don't have time.' The polite excuses are surface-level. The real reasons are usually deeper — fear, exhaustion, deeper avoidance, competing priorities that you're not acknowledging.

Naming the real reason doesn't solve it, but it stops you from being fooled by the surface-level excuse. Once you see it clearly, you can address it. Fear of being seen as a beginner? Hire a coach for a few sessions to get past it. Exhaustion? Fix the sleep. Injury? See a professional.

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Pro tip: Try journaling for 2 minutes before a planned workout: 'Why am I about to skip?' See what comes up. Most people are surprised by their own answers.
2

Schedule it like a meeting — non-negotiable

Step 2: Schedule it like a meeting — non-negotiable

You don't skip meetings with your boss because you're tired. You don't cancel a doctor's appointment because you don't feel like it. The same principle should apply to exercise — but it doesn't, because you treat exercise as optional.

The fix: schedule your workouts in your calendar, like meetings. Treat them as non-negotiable appointments with yourself. When the time comes, you show up. Not because you feel like it. Because it's what's on the schedule.

Make this work by:

- Blocking specific times (e.g., 6:30am Mon/Wed/Fri, 5:30pm Tue/Thu)

- Putting them in a calendar app with reminders

- Telling someone (partner, friend, coach) so you're accountable

- Tracking missed sessions and reviewing weekly

This sounds corporate. It works. The goal is to remove the in-the-moment decision of 'should I work out today?' That decision is where 90% of excuses happen. Pre-decide instead.

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Pro tip: Put workout appointments in red on your calendar. Visual prominence matters. White-text-on-white-background meetings get skipped; red blocks get treated differently.
3

Lower the bar until you can't say no

Step 3: Lower the bar until you can't say no

The 'I don't have time' excuse is almost always 'I don't have 90 minutes for the workout I planned.' Solve this by planning a 20-minute workout that you actually have time for.

The 20-minute minimum effective workout is real:

- 5 minutes warm-up

- 10 minutes of one or two exercises done hard (e.g., 5 sets of 5 squats or 4 rounds of 5 pull-ups + 10 push-ups)

- 5 minutes cool-down

Done 3-4 times a week, this maintains most of your fitness and supports ongoing progress. It's not optimal, but it's vastly better than skipping.

The principle: the best workout is the one that happens. A 20-minute workout that you actually do beats a 60-minute workout you skip three times this week.

Most people dramatically overestimate how much time they need. Try this: track your actual workouts for two weeks. Most will be 30-45 minutes, not the hour-plus you imagined. The 'I don't have time' excuse is usually 'I don't have hour-plus blocks of free time,' which isn't a real constraint.

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Pro tip: Keep a 'minimum viable workout' in your back pocket. On your worst days, do 10 minutes of something. That counts. The streak matters more than any single session.
Watch: “Don’t have time to exercise?” : How to stop making excuses | Fitness Coaching — Shawn Albers: Fitness Coach Open on YouTube ↗
4

Find a workout partner or community

Step 4: Find a workout partner or community

Accountability to other people is the single most effective excuse-killer that exists. It's harder to skip a workout when someone else is waiting for you. It's harder to talk yourself out of going when you've told three friends you're going.

Options that work:

- Workout buddy: someone at your level who meets you at the gym 2-3 times per week

- Group class: scheduled, social, led by an instructor

- Online accountability: fitness communities, group chats, app-based challenges

- Coach: paid accountability, plus actual guidance

The mechanism is simple: social obligation is a stronger force than willpower. Your brain will let you down easily. It won't let down a friend who showed up for you.

Many people who have tried and failed to exercise alone for years find that group classes or partner training instantly solve the consistency problem. The personality trait of 'lazy' is much rarer than people think — what most people lack is structure and accountability.

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Pro tip: If you can't find a workout partner, schedule check-ins with a friend where you report your workouts. Even weekly 5-minute text exchanges dramatically improve consistency.
5

Track your streak — make skipping the exception

Step 5: Track your streak — make skipping the exception

There's a psychological phenomenon called 'loss aversion' — losing something feels worse than not gaining the equivalent. Applied to workouts: maintaining a 30-day streak feels more important than adding one more workout.

The mechanics:

- Mark an X on a calendar for each day you complete your minimum workout

- After 7 X's, you'll be reluctant to break the chain

- After 30 X's, the streak becomes part of your identity — 'I'm someone who works out'

- After 90 X's, you don't even consider skipping

This works because it gamifies consistency and creates visible progress. Your brain likes checking boxes and not breaking chains.

Don't break the chain by missing a day. If you have to miss, do a 5-minute minimum workout to maintain the streak. The minimum exists for exactly this reason.

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Pro tip: The calendar should be visible. Tape it to your bathroom mirror, your fridge, your desk. Visibility is what creates the social pressure even if no one else sees it.
6

Address the underlying problem when excuses repeat

Step 6: Address the underlying problem when excuses repeat

If you keep making the same type of excuse, the issue isn't discipline — it's a real barrier you haven't addressed.

Common repeating excuses and what they really mean:

- 'I'm too tired' → You're not sleeping enough or you're overtraining. Fix the sleep; reduce workout intensity.

- 'I don't have time' → Your priorities aren't actually what you say they are, or you need shorter workouts. Reorganize.

- 'My [body part] hurts' → Real injury or chronic issue. See a professional. Don't train through sharp pain.

- 'I'm not in the mood' → You might be depressed or burned out. Address the underlying mood issue first.

- 'I'll start next week' → You don't actually want this goal. Find a different motivation or drop it.

Notice that none of these are solved by 'trying harder.' They require specific changes to your situation.

Be honest with yourself. If you genuinely don't want to exercise and no amount of reframing helps, that's information. Maybe your goal should be different — recreational sports, hiking, dancing, swimming — anything that gets you moving in a way that doesn't feel like a chore. Exercise you enjoy doing is exercise you'll actually do.

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Pro tip: If you've tried to build a consistent exercise habit for 6+ months and failed multiple times, consider whether you're trying to force a goal that isn't really yours. Some people genuinely don't want to lift weights — and that's fine. Find the movement you actually like.

Citations & External Resources

This guide was researched using authoritative sources. For further reading, explore the references below:

Frequently Asked Questions

How to stop making excuses to not exercise?

Excuses feel like reasons. They aren't. Here's how to actually stop making them and start training consistently. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to get into shape for summer fast.

What is the best way to stop making excuses to not exercise?

The best way to stop making excuses to not exercise is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. I have to be honest with you about something. You already know you need to exercise. You know it's good for you. You know it'll make you feel better, live longer, look better, and have more energy.... You might also find our guide on How to get into shape for summer fast helpful.

How long does it take to stop making excuses to not exercise?

Most people can stop making excuses to not exercise within 7 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to get into shape for summer fast.

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