Fitness
I Finally Got Back Into A Workout Routine After Becoming A Dad. Here’s The Plan I Used.
IT WASN’T UNTIL my first child arrived in October 2024 that I realized time really is a commodity we fail to appreciate. Every day leading up to the big day, I navigated a schedule of writing, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, cooking, reading, vegetating, and walking with my very pregnant wife. I was able to commit to a rigorous 28-day workout program, by the end of which I got as lean as I’ve ever been (which you can read about here).
Then, overnight, I found myself couch-bound by a blobular being who sleep-drooled and farted on my chest as I binged the X-Men movies. Every. Single. Day. I ate whatever visitors stuffed into our fridge, slept in two-hour intervals, and lifted sporadically. Any attempt at me-time felt selfish and logistically impossible, but the lack of it took a toll on my physical and mental health.
It wasn’t until months later, after my son was sleeping for more than two-hour stretches at night, that my head was above water. The time felt right to recommit to a new workout program. I chose Men’s Health’s Dad Bod Arm Shred plan because it looked time-efficient, and let’s be real: bigger arms are always a fun and easy target to chase in the gym.
GET THE WORKOUT PLAN PDF
The workout showed me that I could get a lot of effective work done in a short amount of time. The programming was also fun, which made sticking to it easy. You can easily follow this plan for eight, 12, or even 16 weeks, and I’d advocate for anyone (not just dads), looking for a new challenge to give this one a go.
What Following Dad Bod Arm Shred Was Like
THIS FOUR-WEEK plan was written by Men’s Health contributor, certified strength coach, and fellow dad Andrew Heffernan, CSCS. Knowing a parent developed this plan eased my mind. I didn’t want to commit to a regimen that would force me to overreach, fall short, and retreat back into myself, and I felt confident that wouldn’t happen since Heffernan has been where I am. Here’s a quick breakdown of the four-week plan:
- Four workouts per week lasting between 30 and 45 minutes each.
- You’ll need an adjustable weight bench, a few pairs of dumbbells (or an adjustable pair of dumbbells), a resistance band, an air bike, a pull-up bar, and a kettlebell.
- Two arm days, consisting of exercises for your biceps, triceps, and shoulders. One arm day focuses on strength; the other is all about muscle growth.
- The two other workouts target your other major muscles.
- The PDF includes a chart for tracking reps and weights. Heffernan programmed progressive overload, a method of adding either more reps or load to your workout each week, into each workout.
- The PDF includes illustrations for every exercise. They’re a great reference point if you’ve never heard of a specific exercise or are unsure exactly how to dial in your form. For example, it wasn’t until I referenced the illustrations that I realized I could perform the bodyweight skullcrushers on a bench and not just with a barbell set in a power rack.
To access the full workout PDF, you just need to sign up for a Men’s Health MVP Premium membership, which includes tons of other dad-friendly workout programs, like Shred Your Dad Bod and Dad Bod Shred.
GET THE WORKOUT PLAN PDF
Each Workout Took About 30 Minutes
Twice a week, I’d strap my son into his bouncer, hand him his dumbbell-shaped rattles, and he’d watch me train. For the other workouts, I’d hand him off to my wife as I headed to my local big box gym.
My favorite aspects of this program were its accessibility and expeditiousness. If I hustled, I could get through each workout in about 30 minutes. Plus, I only needed a pair of adjustable dumbbells and an adjustable weight bench for three of the four workouts, so it was simple for me to do at home. (On day four, you’ll need an air bike, a kettlebell, and a pull-up bar.)
The gym has always been a social and emotional outlet, a place to interact with people and release some steam. Babies fill you with love, but the early newborn months were, for me, a constant spring of anxiety. I worried about every odd breath my son took (babies make many weird sounds). I worried about my wife, who woke every couple of hours in the night to feed the baby. I worried about neither of us having time to ourselves. And yet, leaving to do anything, even for an hour, felt like a betrayal of the people who needed me. The gym made me feel good, but now I was speeding through reps of curls and squats, worrying, worrying, worrying about how long I’d been away from home. Thankfully, this program accounted for my lack of time.
I Trained My Arms Harder Than Ever
This program challenged my perception of arm training and forced me to face an uncomfortable truth: I’ve never trained arms hard. Now, as a dad with only a few hours a week to spare for the gym, I was stimulating my arms more than I ever have while spending less time in the gym. Realizing that less sometimes is more (assuming you work hard) was worth the four-week commitment.
The trio of relatively small muscles that make up your arms—the biceps, triceps, and deltoids—are onerous to grow. That’s been my experience, at least. But after the first workout, my biceps felt exceptionally sore, which rarely happens, and then sore after each subsequent workout. I’m not a personal trainer or strength coach, but I imagine this newfound soreness is due to two factors: volume and intensity.
It’s not a concrete rule, but more volume typically means more growth (assuming you’re not accumulating a ton of “junk” sets). Throughout the program, I accumulated 50 direct sets for my biceps and 52 for my triceps, not including the ancillary volume that comes from chin-ups, rows, pushups, and presses. I was able to squeeze in this much volume thanks to supersets—a common intensity technique where you perform two exercises back to back with no rest between sets. If you’re a dad who can’t afford to spend over an hour in the gym, supersets are a terrific way to pack more volume into a shorter workout, and you can apply them to any muscle.
I’ve trained long enough to know when I’m pushing my sets hard or not. Typically, I leave three or four reps in the tank for my arms, focusing on establishing a mind-muscle connection. This time, I adopted a new training style: heavy weights for every set. If a set of incline curls called for 15 reps, I’d use a pair of dumbbells that I can curl for 10 reps. Once I hit failure, I’d rest for about 10 seconds and finish the set. I was tackling my arm sets with the same ferocity that I’d apply to heavy rows or deadlifts, and I plan on bringing this intensity into all of my future arm workouts.
I Still Kept My Strength
If I was skeptical of anything, it’s that I’d keep my strength (or what was left of it) on only four, half-hour-long workouts, two of which target the arms. I was happy to be wrong.
For the Full-Body Big Lifts day, you perform two supersets—one consisting of the rear-foot-elevated split squat and dumbbell row and the other of the dumbbell bench press and dumbbell Romanian deadlift. The price to pay for such efficiency was grueling sets, lifting as much weight as my body could handle for every set of each movement. I rowed a 100-pound dumbbell, performed RDLs with 105-pounders, pressed 65 pounds on the incline bench, and held a 60-pound dumbbell in each hand for split squats. Because the program is arm-focused, you’re not expected to hit your chest, back, and legs with appreciable volume. You do, however, have to train these muscles hard. I rarely looked forward to this DOMs-inducing amalgamation, but it reminded me that effective workouts don’t have to be long and complicated.
If there was a workout I wanted to skip—and seriously considered skipping in week four—it was the Full-Body Muscle Circuit. After a full day of daddy daycare and a week of workouts, I begrudgingly plowed through an enervating circuit of compound exercises such as chinups, walking lunges, and hand-elevated pushups. Like during the other full-body day, I kept my reps and weight as high and heavy as possible, holding 50-pound dumbbells for walking lunges and cranking through 15 dead hang chinups on my first set.
What I Gained
YOU CAN LOSE a substantial amount of weight in four weeks. Gaining muscle mass, however, is a long-haul effort that takes at least eight to 12 weeks before you notice significant results. Still, I ended up with what looked like fuller shoulders while maintaining my weight and waistline (177 lbs and 31.5”). I also feel more energized now that I’m back into a consistent exercise routine. But I don’t measure the success of this routine in inches or pounds.
The newborn stage was tough. When people find out you’re expecting, they say you’ll feel an indescribable love for your child when he arrives. It’s hard to connect with when you hear it, but that feeling is real and, at times, all-consuming. When my son first smiled at me, my body pulsed with raw emotion that is, at least in my experience, rarer to come by as we age. As you get older, you become desensitized to your surroundings. You don’t experience many “firsts”. With my son, each day is full of them—his first roll; his first laugh, his first head bump (sorry, buddy). If there’s a magic quality about kids, it’s that, through them, you get to experience the mundane anew through fresh eyes.
However, what these parents don’t mention are the trade-offs of caring for a newborn. You are stripped of your autonomy, and your wants no longer come first. The baby sleeps on you for hours at a time. They eat every two hours. They vomit on every shirt you dare to wear around them. If you want to sit down with a pizza and watch your favorite show at the end of your week, expect to check in on them every 10 minutes while your food goes cold and your patience runs thin. Then prepare to feel like a terrible parent for getting frustrated that your food got cold and your patience ran thin. You and your partner will be around each other 24 hours a day, but will hardly interact as one sleeps and the other watches the baby. You are two ships passing in the night.
So, yeah, forget my arms. Completing 16 workouts in a month was my success, and this program helped me achieve this consistency with manageable and fun workouts. What did I gain, if not pounds of new muscle tissue? The confidence to return to the gym and a new set of tools to help me balance fitness and fatherhood.
Andrew Gutman, NASM-CPT is a journalist with a decade of experience covering fitness and nutrition. His work has been published in Men’s Health, Men’s Journal, Muscle & Fitness, and Gear Patrol. Outside of writing, Andrew trains in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, helps coach his gym’s kickboxing team, and enjoys reading and cooking.
Fitness
How much exercise is enough? A local doctor says you only need 15 minutes a day – WTOP News
Exercise is part of a healthy lifestyle and its benefits are well known and have been for a long time. What is only recently proven by doctors is just how much exercise makes a difference for one’s longevity.
By now, most people understand that exercise is part of a healthy lifestyle; its benefits are well known and have been for a long time. What is only recently proven by doctors is just how much exercise makes a difference for one’s longevity.
For most people who sit at desks or behind the wheel all day, the problem is often finding time to work out. The good news, according to Dr. Julie Chen, an internal medicine and lifestyle medicine doctor at Kaiser Permanente in Gaithersburg, is that a daily exercise routine can be broken down into brief segments.
“The general recommendation is for 150 minutes of moderate activity per week,” Dr. Chen said. “So that is roughly about 30 minutes a day, five days a week. But the important point is it does not have to all be done at once. You can break it up into shorter segments of exercise and still get the same great benefits.”
And those benefits can be tremendous. Chen said that studies have shown going from no exercise a day to only 15 minutes of total exercise a day can “can actually decrease their risk of death, death from all causes, by about 14%.”
“Any movement is actually better than being sedentary,” she said.
Movement can be divided up into short segments throughout the day instead of in one long, strenuous workout and it can still offer the same reductions in the risk of certain diseases.
Now, you might understand there are benefits of exercising for short periods of time, several times per day; but you might be wondering how you can get in the gym several times a day.
Chen advocates for what she calls “exercise snacks” — “small bursts of physical activity that you can get in, two to three minutes at a time throughout the day.”
For example, taking the stairs or doing squats while putting groceries away, walking around the office on a phone call or planking while your dinner is in the microwave. Chen said try to do whatever it takes to get a few minutes of movement in a few times a day.
Chen is also a big fan of fitness apps, including the ones that come built into our smartphones and watches: “Studies have shown that that is really motivating that you can actually track your progress in your app. You can see your trends.”
“Consistency is a really big goal of this effort, and so if you look at your trends over time, that’s going to be a really rewarding aspect of trying to improve your health,” she added.
Beginning an exercise regimen doesn’t need to be complicated or time-consuming. You don’t need to splurge on workout clothes or a gym membership; you just need a few minutes, several times a day, to start reaping the benefits.
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Fitness
Adults hop on viral ‘rebounding’ trend to make exercise fun again — ‘I feel like a kid’
Forget boring home workouts, on-demand HITT classes and cold winter runs.
The latest wellness trend bouncing around TikTok involves a workout you might not even realize you’re doing, and that’s the point. It’s called rebounding. This low-impact exercise involves jumping on a mini fitness trampoline — called a rebounder — to get your heart pumping and support lymphatic drainage.
On Amazon, this best-selling model is currently on sale for just $129. It measures in at just 40 inches, making it ideal for small spaces while still offering room for an adult to jump, squat and jog in place. Users swear it gives them a seriously effective full-body workout, and many remark that it’s “so much fun” to use.
Clinical trials also back the benefits: a 12-week rebounding program for overweight women showed significant improvements in body composition as well as a decrease in diastolic blood pressure.
Ready to jump on the rebounding trend, too? You’d better hop on this Amazon deal fast.
This sleek rebounder by BCAN is sturdy and easy to set up, thanks to pre-assembled bungees and simpel video tutorial.
Reviewers say it’s completely changed their workouts, with one remarking they “feel like a little kid again.” Others have also noted it’s much easier on their joints than higher-impact exercises.
“It absorbs impact well and allows for a nice, smooth rebound that is gentle on the joints, making it perfect for a low-impact cardio workout,” one person explained. “Whether I’m doing high-intensity intervals or simply bouncing for fun, the movement feels fluid and responsive.
The BCAN model features an upgraded handlebar for added stability. It’s 8mm premium bungee — with a durable woven outer layer and a 350-strand natural latex core — delivers smooth, quiet bounces, so you can enjoy your workout without disturbing others.
This article was written by Miska Salemann, New York Post Commerce Writer/Reporter. As a health-forward member of Gen Z, Miska seeks out experts to weigh in on the benefits, safety and designs of both trending and tried-and-true fitness equipment, workout clothing, dietary supplements and more. Taking matters into her own hands, Miska intrepidly tests wellness products, ranging from Bryan Johnson’s Blueprint Longevity Mix to the viral Oura Ring to Jennifer Aniston’s favorite workout platform – often with her adorable toddler by her side. Before joining The Post, Miska covered lifestyle and consumer topics for the U.S. Sun and The Cannon Beach Gazette.
Fitness
Fitness trainer with 18 years of experience shares why exercise is crucial for kids: ‘Not just about health and fitness’
Exercise is often spoken about in the context of physical fitness – stronger muscles, better stamina and improved overall health. But its value, especially for children, extends far beyond the body. Regular physical activity can quietly shape character, teaching lessons about effort, patience, discipline and resilience that mirror how the real world works. From learning to cope with discomfort to understanding that progress takes time, exercise can become a powerful training ground for life itself.
Also Read | Chennai fitness trainer with 18 years of experience shares 5 simple things to focus on for long-term fitness
Chennai-based fitness trainer with 18 years of experience, Raj Ganpath – founder of the Slow Burn Method, co-founder and head coach at Quad Fitness, and author of Simple, Not Easy – is shedding light on why exercise is important for kids, with the benefits going beyond health and fitness. In an Instagram video shared on February 27, he explains how the impact of exercise extends far beyond physical wellness, shaping resilience, discipline and long-term character development.
Embracing discomfort
According to Raj, exercise is one of the healthiest ways to help children learn how to sit with discomfort in a safe, structured and sustainable way. Life inevitably brings challenges and unease – something adults understand well – but many children today are shielded from situations that test their resilience.
He explains, “Exercise is a great way to experience this discomfort in a safe and sustainable manner. Lifting weights, holding a plank, doing cardio, repping till it burns, all of these things are opportunities to embrace discomfort, opportunities to put themselves in a place where they’re not comfortable and learn from it, opportunities to practice physical and mental resilience.”
Learning hardship
The fitness trainer emphasises that hardship is an inevitable part of life, and meaningful success often requires pushing through moments of difficulty. While most adults recognise this truth through lived experience, children may not always have the same exposure to challenge. Raj believes exercise can bridge that gap.
He elaborates, “It will teach them that they need to do hard things if they want to accomplish something. Getting through a very hard workout, setting a goal and achieving it, completing a task. All of these things are not just random chores. These are incredible opportunities – opportunities to experience hardship and build fortitude.”
Delayed gratification
In today’s fast-paced world, the desire for instant gratification is stronger than ever – and children are growing up at the centre of it. With technology, streaming platforms and 10-minute delivery services, almost everything is available at the tap of a screen. As a result, the ability to wait, persist and work steadily towards a long-term goal can easily take a back seat. Exercise, notes Raj, offers a powerful counterbalance.
He explains, “Everyone wants everything right away today. This is true for us adults too, but it is even more true for our kids because this is the only world they know. A world where everything happens right then and right there, whenever they want it, wherever they want it. Exercise will teach them to wait, to be patient, to trust the process, to fail and still keep going, to work towards something larger that they will get much later. This is a very important character building quality and will serve them well for many, many years to come.”
The fitness trainer concludes, “Exercise is not just about health and fitness. It is a simulation of life itself. A ready-made character building tool available to you to help prepare your kids for life, the raw and real life that they’re going to have to deal with no matter what. So make sure they build the habit and make sure they embrace it.”
Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. It is based on user-generated content from social media. HT.com has not independently verified the claims and does not endorse them.
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