Waking up early to exercise!??! HOWWW!?
chrissayyscoops
Posts: 13 Member
Been struggling to wake up and go running before work ): any tips or tricks!?
Let's motivate each other! please feel free to add! xx
Let's motivate each other! please feel free to add! xx
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Replies
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If you REALLY want it, your mind will tell your tired body to STFU and get out of bed, and eventually it will become the norm I easily wake up at 6 and head to the gym or outside for a run even on days off, it is part of my lifestyle and its something I want badly.0
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My #1 technique for getting up early for a workout ( Run or Swim ) --- Go to Bed Early!0
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I hear you!! I am sooooo not a morning person....
Set your alarm on your phone on the other side of the room. You HAVE TO get out of bed to turn it off, there is no way to hit the snooze button and roll over for another lazy 10 minutes in bed.0 -
I gave up on the morning routine as I'm not a morning person, why fight it. I'm a night owl, so I workout once the kids are asleep. I go for a nice walk/jog at night while my wife is at home with the kids. Works much better and I can sleep in that much more in the morning haha!0
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Make sure you're going to bed early enough to support an early wake up call. I get up @ 445. Its normal to me now, even on weekends I wake up early! Set your alarm and treat it like a job. You wouldn't just skip work because you didn't want to get up?0
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Let your dog sleep in your bed. Feed your dog food they REALLY, REALLY LIKE, so they JUST CAN'T WAIT to eat every morning and are BOUNCY BOUNCY BOUNCY all over your bed and your stomach and your face HOURS before sunrise because FOOD and IT'S TIME FOR FOOD, RIGHT? and IF I LICK YOUR FACE YOU WILL FEED ME, RIGHT?
Also, I think about how good it feels to strut into work after having run X miles. Way better than slumping in still wiping sleep crumbies out of my eyes.0 -
My tip is ...
Sleep ... and then do your workout at lunch or after work.
I am not a morning person. I have never been a morning person. I have no desire to be a morning person.
But come about 7 pm, that's when the energy kicks in.0 -
Get a reasonable amount of rest and then get up in the morning and handle your business like an adult0
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cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »Let your dog sleep in your bed. Feed your dog food they REALLY, REALLY LIKE, so they JUST CAN'T WAIT to eat every morning and are BOUNCY BOUNCY BOUNCY all over your bed and your stomach and your face HOURS before sunrise because FOOD and IT'S TIME FOR FOOD, RIGHT? and IF I LICK YOUR FACE YOU WILL FEED ME, RIGHT?
Also, I think about how good it feels to strut into work after having run X miles. Way better than slumping in still wiping sleep crumbies out of my eyes.
THIS MADE ME LAUGH SO HARD lmao. May have to try!!
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I agree with a lot of you- I'm so NOT a morning person.. Id like to be, especially as it's getting to 100 degrees mid-afternoon in California!!! ):0
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#1 get sleep! It takes 21 days for something to become a habit. So Give it 21 days, a small goal to just wake up and get up, even if you just start with doing 10 min of yoga / stretching, The more waking up becomes the norm, the more intense your workouts will become... try not to go from zero to 100 overnight and just let your body ease into it. I'm on day 3.. hope this helps!0
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I would just never do this, because I don't like torturing myself. Do it right after work or school, save yourself some stress and give yourself the gift of sleep.0
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I find it easier to get up early if you drop the booze, even a single glass of wine the night before; if you do drink the night before getting up early will be a tired struggle. Then set a routine, I have about an hour before I need to start the commute from 6am, so dress - 5 min, gym 20min, breakfast 10 min, shower- 15 min, dress - 5min, relax - 5min, commute. If you follow the regime robotically you find from bed to commute really flies by and you wonder how you managed to do all that in such a short period of time. Mind you my running machine is in the garage, which makes things a bit simpler.0
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chrissayyscoops wrote: »Been struggling to wake up and go running before work ): any tips or tricks!?
Let's motivate each other! please feel free to add! xx
Alarm clock + discipline0 -
I don't. Early morning is not for me. I do it in the late afternoon.0
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Eh - you get used to it - I wake up at 4:55am - go to the gym by 530 - done by 6:30 and to work for 7. its second nature after you force yourself through it. The hard part is the weekends, its like I want to sleep in..... body says nope!
I find it easier to go before work - cause honestly if I did it after work I would not do it.0 -
cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »Let your dog sleep in your bed. Feed your dog food they REALLY, REALLY LIKE, so they JUST CAN'T WAIT to eat every morning and are BOUNCY BOUNCY BOUNCY all over your bed and your stomach and your face HOURS before sunrise because FOOD and IT'S TIME FOR FOOD, RIGHT? and IF I LICK YOUR FACE YOU WILL FEED ME, RIGHT?
Also, I think about how good it feels to strut into work after having run X miles. Way better than slumping in still wiping sleep crumbies out of my eyes.
I am giggling so hard right now.
Will have to try.0 -
Can you find time to work out without getting up in the morning?
I'm a night owl. I don't have the energy or motivation to get up in the morning and do a workout. I started doing my workouts between 9-10 pm and that works for me.
If you aren't a morning person, getting up in the morning will make working out regularly even more difficult when you are just starting. You don't have to run in the morning if your sleep circle would have you sleep.0 -
juliet3455 wrote: »My #1 technique for getting up early for a workout ( Run or Swim ) --- Go to Bed Early!
If you want something, you plan for it. I go to bed between 9-10 and wake up without an alarm around 5. I've basically given up TV. Being healthy is more important.0 -
If that 100 degrees won't motivate you, what will (LOL)chrissayyscoops wrote: »I agree with a lot of you- I'm so NOT a morning person.. Id like to be, especially as it's getting to 100 degrees mid-afternoon in California!!! ):
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I was not a morning person either, but with the heat and my stress level at work, the morning is the best chance I have of actually working out. If I say I will go after work, there always seems to be something more pressing. I'll either end up working late, or I can't pull away from my kids.
I really like the idea that someone said about setting an alarm across the room so that you have to get up and turn it off. If that doesn't work for you, set two or three alarms. I used to do that; one beside the bed, one across the room, and one in the bathroom. I left my workout clothes in the bathroom and since I forced myself to walk there, I might as well get dressed and go. Now, it is second nature. I get up every morning at 5:15, I'm running by 6:00, done by 7:00, and then to work by 8:00.0 -
I was SO not a morning person either - the thought of getting up early actually made me angry! But when we got a dog and I all of a sudden had to think about him rather than myself, I smartened up and just started doing it. We now walk or run 45mins every morning and it really helps me stay energized and make good choices for the rest of the day.
someone else said it takes 21 days to develop a new habit and I 100% agree - give it 3 weeks and see how you make out.
And yes, definitely go to bed earlier
Good luck0 -
I switched to working out in the mornings a few years ago. It was a tough transition at first, but now I love getting up and running before going into the office (everything is so quiet in the morning! I love it!) Part of my issue was my nutrition the night before. If you wake up sluggish, or what not... it is harder to get up. I try to have a healthy snack with protein about 8pm, and that really helps me the next morning. ALSO... HYDRATE in the evening... seriously. That helps too!0
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It won't help the first few mornings, but while doing C25K I discovered to my great pleasure that as I got more fit, I started waking up earlier and earlier.
It helped that when I woke up early on non running days, I still went for a walk first thing. Doing cardio has really improved my sleep patterns.0 -
iGotThis27 wrote: »#1 get sleep! It takes 21 days for something to become a habit. So Give it 21 days, a small goal to just wake up and get up, even if you just start with doing 10 min of yoga / stretching, The more waking up becomes the norm, the more intense your workouts will become... try not to go from zero to 100 overnight and just let your body ease into it. I'm on day 3.. hope this helps!
21 days help, but it really takes much longer than that to firmly establish a new habit. Think more in the line of months, especially if you are replacing an old bad habit.0 -
You don't think about it... you just do it. Seriously, when you wake your mind is not engaged. Leave it that way and head to the gym. Once it's a habit - it's smooth sailing!0
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My #1 way to deal with it is to accept I'm not a morning person and go running after work instead.0
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I try to go for a quick run in the morning, so alarm at 4:45 up and out by 5. That's when I prefer to go, I am useless in the evening. My biggest problem is in the summer it is light out for so long I am much later getting to bed and then I am exhausted. I have slipped out of my routine the last few weeks and now its time to get back into it. I did it yesterday morning but this morning I didn't and I feel *kitten* when I miss it. Its a great start to the day.0
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@chrissayyscoops
A recent addition to Hello Healthy that repeats the comments of many above.
https://blog.myfitnesspal.com/how-to-stop-snoozing-through-your-morning-workout/
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/ihad/view/the-power-of-habit-part-1-why-habits-matter-688130
Hope all of the comments posted by the MFP Rat Pack help you.
Also as someone with only 11 posts it tells me that you are a newer user and my common posting to help the newbies on this journey is I suggest some good reads.
At the Top of each Message Board Group.( example)
community.myfitnesspal.com/en/categories/general-diet-and-weight-loss-help
You will find a heading called Most Helpful Posts.
community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10177910/most-helpful-posts-general-diet-and-weight-loss-help-must-reads#latest
I recommend that you take your time and read through these pinned posts as a starting point.
One of my favorite that helped me was
community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1234699/logging-accurately-step-by-step-guide/p10
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