5 Tips To Stay Fit While Traveling

5 Tips To Stay Fit While Traveling

As a physiotherapist and personal trainer for executives, business owners and busy professionals, I’m frequently asked the same question by clients: “How can I stay fit when I’m traveling or on vacation?” Here are my best tips in hopes that you can implement these to stay fit no matter where life finds you.

Fail To Plan = Plan To Fail

Fail To Plan = Plan To Fail

A little planning goes a long way. A huge percentage of staying fit while traveling revolves around your ability to plan the particulars of your exercise—what, where and when—well in advance, to implement that plan while you’re away from home and your usual routine. 

When you’re at home, you’ve got your daily routine: wake up, breakfast, work, etc. You operate the rest of your life like clockwork, so take this same approach to your health and wellness. Routinize and set aside a specific time in your schedule for exercise and hold yourself to it no matter what, just as you do for the other appointments and people in your life you care about. 

A bit of brainstorming about your training space is always a worthwhile thought experiment. If you know where you’re going to be (cottage, hotel, etc.), think about what you have access to that would make exercising easier. Is there a gym at the cottage or hotel? Best case scenario! If not, a set of stairs, some resistance bands and a commitment to blocking out some time in your schedule on travel days goes a long way.

This little bit of planning and routine keeps you in the same groove you’ve got at home, and ensures you can be there for those you care about for the next five, 10 and 20 years, too. 

Remove Barriers

Remove Barriers

Our unconscious brain loves excuses. This means that anything we could see as a barrier to exercise, we will see as a barrier to exercise. Saying to yourself, “I can’t exercise—I left my resistance bands at home,” is an easy rationalization in the moment, pack your luggage with duplicates of any easy-to-carry fitness equipment you use. This way there will be no barrier keeping you from your healthy habits. Resistance bands, jump ropes and backup protein bars pay off in terms of the space-to-convenience ratio for the luggage or handbag you take everywhere.

Packing healthy snacks and protein bars is especially helpful. This little bit of effort means that when you’re on the go driving, flying or working, you’ve got an autopilot option to stay on track instead of stopping roadside or at the airport for that convenient but probably suboptimal snack. It’s never one big thing, but rather 100 little things you have to get right to be consistent with your health and fitness while living a high-mobility lifestyle.

Get an Accountability Buddy

Get an Accountability Buddy

You don’t have to go it alone. If you have the choice between a 6am workout on a Saturday morning or sleeping in, you know what you’ll instinctively choose. However, if you’ve made a commitment to someone else, you’re much more likely to make the harder choice. Accountability buddies can give you an excuse to exercise, instead of the 100 excuses you can invent in the moment not to.

Accountability can take many different forms. Committing to a spouse or friend by putting agreed-upon workout times in your calendar can pay big dividends. A personal trainer, especially one who comes to you, can help by doing the “what” portion of exercise planning and legwork for you. This is a big value-add if you just want to wake up, get your workout done and get on with your day—without having to drive to a gym and sort through which exercises to do and which equipment to use. Leaning into others who are stakeholders in your health and wellness can inspire you to commit to the time you set aside to train and exercise.

Get an Accountability Buddy

Bite-Sized Exercise

Anything is better than zero! Even if you can’t make the time for a daily workout, you absolutely can do an extra lap on the stairs each time you use them. You absolutely can do 10 bodyweight squats every time you sit down. Or you absolutely can make a point of going for a 10-minute walk after each meal with your spouse or partner. These little wins can add up quickly if you fully commit to them, and it’s an absolute game-changing mindset for many of the executives I work with, even when their schedule while traveling is wall-to-wall slammed.

Bundle Exercise with other Activities

Bundle Exercise with other Activities

To keep workouts from feeling like a chore, hack your brain’s reward system. Bundling exercise with an activity you enjoy can inspire you to pony up. 

For example, I enjoy listening to music. One idea could be to set a rule that you can only listen to music when you are walking the stairs, treadmill or in the gym while you’re away. This habit will allow you to “soften” any lack of motivation to exercise by giving your brain a bit of positivity: listening to your favorite playlist while you exercise. 

Another way to do this is to bundle exercise with an activity you know you must do, but that can be done anywhere. Example: You have to take a call today, but it doesn’t matter where you are when you do. Try putting headphones in and walking the stairs or treadmill while you take that call. This will ensure you’re making optimal productive use of the time you’ve already set aside. 

Of course, these habits take a bit of discipline to implement. But a little forethought and implementation can unlock a huge amount of benefit for maintaining healthy habits, even if traveling and/or vacationing are a regular part of your life. 

About the Writer

Mike Slomczewski, MSc.PT, CSCS is a physiotherapist, strength and conditioning specialist and the owner of Summit Performance. He serves executives, business owners, busy professionals and unique solo athletes with full-service and travel health and fitness services. You can book a Discovery Call with Mike here: https://www.summit.fit/discovery-call 

Learn more about Summit Performance: https://www.summit.fit/

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