Fitness

Bespoke – And Bite-Sized – Workouts Can Revolutionise Your Exercise Routine

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Most of us are familiar with habit stacking – the practice of adding a new habit with an old one, the theory being that in combining the two it will help you stick to your goals. It seems that there is a similar trend emerging in our approach to working out, in which we’re fitness stacking to build our ideal exercise routines. If, like me, the thought of a 40-minute long HIIT or cardio session convinces you to disregard it before you have even started, then the idea of snacking on shorter exercises one after the other might be for you too.

My newly curated formula of 20 minutes of at-home rowing, bolted on with a 10-minute stretch and 10 minutes of mindfulness, has helped me to get back on track with a workout that motivates in the same time frame. Part of my newfound motivation is the luxury of being able to tap into digital fitness wherever I am, facilitating this new way of stacking my workouts together, depending on what I want to do or what my time allows.

Apple, whose Fitness+ platform has seen huge growth in this style of exercise, with mix-and-match workouts, has developed its short, time-sensitive class offering off the back of the demand for this type of training. The platform’s tech allows users to create a custom plan. “This is about fitness for everyone and making it fun. It’s always been our mission statement,” explains Jay Blahnik, Apple’s vice president of fitness technologies. Guest Fitness+ trainer Joe Wicks, AKA The Body Coach – our very own modern-day Mr Motivator, who kept the nation moving during the pandemic thanks to his at-home YouTube workouts – now advocates for the curated workout that suits our needs today. “Action leads to motivation and a 10 to 15-minute boost of exercise is the sweet spot. Digital fitness is enabling this – you can put 10 minutes of exercise together without effort.”

The personal trainer who regularly puts me through my paces, Luke Worthington, agrees that stacking is conducive to a great workout routine. “A well-balanced health and fitness regime should look to address all five measurable pillars of wellness: strength, cardiovascular fitness, mobility, body composition and emotional wellbeing. At first glance, trying to do all of this potentially from a standing start might make you feel overwhelmed. Creating routines in the first place is the hard part – the trick is to start to add small things bit by bit. Fitness stacking takes advantage of the routine we already have and simply adds to it, without creating extra demand to your motivation.” Fitness stacking has been born out of our appetite for streaming workout classes and signing up to fitness apps. When you have a variety of different exercises in one place, you no longer need to go out of your way to find a new studio or discipline, it’s all in the palm of your hand.

Bryony Deery, founder of Pilates by Bryony, a digital platform that offers a streaming library of more than 400 classes, has also seen a shift in how people are consuming their workouts. “We have noticed more people have created at-home workout stations so they can dip in and out of movement throughout the day, and our classes are designed to be stackable and to work for and with you. One of our most popular classes is a five-minute core workout, which people add onto their Pilates practice, or the 20-minute core and bum-focused class. People use the app to fit around their needs.” The evidence all stacks up.

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