If you “have no time,” you’re probably waiting for perfect time
I’ve said “I’m too busy” so many times it’s almost embarrassing. And honestly? Most of the time, I wasn’t actually out of time—I was out of willpower, energy, or a plan that didn’t feel annoying.
But here’s the annoying truth: you don’t need more time to exercise. You need a smaller target.
That’s it. That’s the whole game.
People picture exercise as a 60-minute workout, gym bag, playlist, shower, and a heroic personality. But real life is messy. Work bleeds into dinner. Kids need stuff. The couch is right there. So if exercise only “counts” when it looks perfect, you’ll keep skipping it.
I used to wait for the magical free hour. Spoiler: it never showed up.
Stop aiming for workouts. Start aiming for movement snacks
This is my strongest opinion: 30-minute workouts are nice, but 3-minute movement snacks are what save your week.
Movement snacks are tiny bursts of exercise you can actually squeeze in.
Think:
- 10 squats while coffee brews
- 1 brisk walk around the block
- 15 pushups against a counter
- 2 minutes of stretching before a shower
- stairs instead of the elevator, twice a day
That doesn’t sound sexy. But neither does quitting because you’re waiting for the “right time.”
If you do 5 minutes a day, that’s 35 minutes a week.
If you do 10 minutes a day, that’s 70 minutes a week.
And if you do it consistently, you start becoming the person who moves, not the person who only thinks about moving.
Make exercise stupidly easy to start
The biggest lie we tell ourselves is that motivation comes first. It usually doesn’t. Action comes first, motivation follows.
So make the start tiny enough that your brain can’t argue.
Here’s the rule I love: make it so easy you feel slightly silly.
Examples:
- Put on workout clothes first thing, even if you only walk for 5 minutes
- Open the yoga mat and do 1 stretch
- Do 5 squats before brushing your teeth
- Walk for exactly 7 minutes after lunch
And yes, 7 minutes counts. I’m very serious about this. If “exercise” feels like a courtroom case, you’ve already lost.
The goal isn’t to impress anyone. The goal is to make starting feel almost automatic.
Attach exercise to something you already do
If you’re busy, the best habit hacks are the boring ones.
Habit stacking is basically sneaking exercise into an existing routine.
Try:
- After you make coffee, do 10 calf raises
- After you send your first work email, stand up and stretch for 60 seconds
- After lunch, walk for 8 minutes
- After dinner, do 1 short bodyweight circuit
- Before bed, do 5 minutes of mobility
I’ve had way more success linking movement to habits I already do than trying to “find time” like it’s a lost sock.
And the beauty is, you don’t need to think. The cue is already there.
Use the “minimum viable workout” rule
Some days, you’ll have a full 20 or 30 minutes. Great.
But on chaotic days, you need a backup plan so small it feels almost too easy.
Here’s mine:
Minimum viable workout = 5 minutes, no excuses.
Pick one:
- 20 squats
- 10 pushups
- 30-second plank x 3
- 5-minute brisk walk
- 1 song of dancing in your room like a maniac
If you do more, awesome. If you don’t, you still kept the chain alive.
That matters more than people think. Because skipping once is fine. But skipping enough times turns exercise into something you “used to do.”
Put exercise into your calendar like a real appointment
If it’s not scheduled, it’s basically imaginary.
I know that sounds strict, but it works. Treat exercise like a meeting you can’t casually move around for “someday.”
Try this:
- Block 10 minutes three times a week
- Put it on your calendar
- Set a reminder 10 minutes before
- Make it a recurring event
And don’t schedule it in fantasy land. If mornings are chaos, stop lying to yourself and choose lunch or evening. If evenings collapse under fatigue, do it earlier. Be honest about your actual life, not your ideal life.