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By OK Tease Co.
How I Started Moving Again When 20 Minutes Felt Impossible This is for the woman who knows movement would help but can't imagine finding the time, the e...
This is for the woman who knows movement would help but can't imagine finding the time, the energy, or the version of herself that used to do this easily. I'm not going to tell you to crush a workout. I'm going to tell you how I got moving again when even a short walk felt like too much, and how small it's okay to start.
For a long stretch I kept telling myself I'd get back into working out when I had a solid twenty minutes to myself. No kids pulling on me. No dishes. No text I owed somebody. And you already know how that story goes, because that twenty minutes never showed up. Not once. There is always something.
So I stopped waiting for the block of time and started with the amount of time I actually had. Which some days was ninety seconds. I'm not exaggerating. I would stand in my kitchen while the coffee brewed and do calf raises like a lunatic, holding onto the counter. That was it. That was the whole workout some mornings.
And here's the thing nobody tells you: it counted. Not because ninety seconds transforms your body, but because it kept the door open. I didn't have to restart from zero the next day. I was already someone who moves, even if barely. That identity mattered more than the number of minutes.
I mean it. The mistake I made for years was starting at the size I used to be able to do. I'd remember the version of me who ran or lifted or took a full class, and I'd try to jump back in at that level, and I'd quit by day three because it felt terrible and I felt worse.
When I finally came back, I started smaller than my ego wanted to. One song. I'd put on one song and move however I felt like moving until it ended. Walk to the mailbox and back. Stretch on the living room floor while the kids watched their show. The goal was never to feel accomplished. The goal was to not skip it.
Because momentum isn't built on big days. It's built on the days you did the tiny thing when you didn't feel like it. Those are the days that actually change you. The Mayo Clinic points out that even short bouts of activity throughout the day add up, which was oddly freeing for me to hear, because it meant I wasn't failing by breaking it into scraps. I was just doing it a different way than the magazine version.
I quit trying to schedule workouts like appointments because I never kept them. Instead I attached movement to things I was already doing. Coffee brewing? Calf raises. Waiting for the microwave? Squats, and yes I felt ridiculous, and no it didn't matter. Kids in the bath? I'm sitting on the bathroom floor stretching my hips out instead of scrolling.
Summer makes this easier if you let it. It stays light so late that I stopped believing my own "there's no time" story, because there was a whole warm evening sitting there. Some nights the workout was just walking the block with the kids after dinner. Slow. Talking. Nobody counting steps. But we were outside and we were moving, and that was the win.
The point is you don't need a new hour in your day. You have to hide movement inside the hours you already have. That's not a lesser version of getting fit. That's how a busy woman actually does it.
I want to be honest about the order this happened in, because I think we get it backwards. I didn't start moving and then feel good weeks later when something visibly changed. I felt better almost immediately, way before anything looked different. Steadier. Less foggy. Like I had my hands back on my own life a little.
I've leaned on a few habits in this season to feel more like myself, and I'll say plainly that peptides have been part of what's personally helped me feel stronger and more like me. I'm not going to explain the science, because that's not my lane and I'm not the person to teach it. I'm only telling you it's been part of my own story. What I'd actually encourage you toward is movement, because that's the free thing sitting right in front of you, and it's the thing that gave me the most back for the least.
If your body or your head feels like something bigger is going on, please talk to a doctor or a professional who's actually trained for that. I'm your girlfriend in your corner, not your medical anything, and I'd rather send you to the right person than pretend I'm her.
Here's what I believe all the way down. You are not starting from nothing. You didn't lose your strength during the hard season, you just set it down for a minute so you could carry everything else. It's still yours. Reaching for it again looks a lot less dramatic than we imagine. It looks like calf raises at the coffee pot. A walk around the block. One song in the kitchen.
Women are built to come back. I've watched it in myself and I've watched it in the women around me. We bend under the weight and then we stand back up, and honestly I think God knew exactly what He was doing when He built that resilience into us. You've got it in there. Some mornings you have to move first and trust the feeling to catch up.
So today, don't find twenty minutes. Find two. Stand up, put on a song, and let that be enough. Tomorrow you get to be someone who already started.