Today, I want to share a simple framework we use inside Nerd Fitness Coaching to turn goals into plans you can actually follow.
By the end, youโll be like Neo in The Matrix โ able to see the pattern and build a resilient, flexible routine even when life gets chaotic.
Cool? Cool.
Step 1: Picture your 12-month win
The first step is to write down what your goals actually are!
Maybe itโsโฆ
Lose 20 pounds to improve your bloodwork
Run a 5k to support your local charity
Get your first โpull-upโ
Feel more confident in your body
Just feel better. Stronger, more energy, less aches and pains.
Anything goes.
If youโre feeling stuck, try this:
โ12-months from now, if youโve made awesome progress on your health and fitness goalsโฆwhat does life look and feel like? Describe your average day to me.โ
That can help get the ideas flowing and gives you a North Star to aim for.
Step 2: Identify the skills behind that goal
Hereโs where most people get tripped up.
They go straight from โI want to lose 20 lbsโ to โI need to follow this exact workout plan five days a week.โ That skips over a crucial step: skills.
Ask yourself:
โWhat are the types of skills someone who achieves this goal develops?โ
Here are some ideas to get you going:
Want to lose weight?
Controlling portion sizes
Planning and prepping meals
Getting enough sleep
Having non-food coping mechanisms for stress
Staying active throughout the week
Want to get stronger?
Carving out time to lift regularly
Recovering well (including sleep & rest days)
Eating enough protein
Learning how to work near failure in your workouts
You donโt have to list every skill. Just jot down a few that come to mind.
Step 3: Choose your practices
Now that youโve identified a few skills, the next step is to figure out how to practice them.
This is the cool part, because thereโs no one right answer, which is actually a good thing. Take my client Amanda, for example.
She wanted to lose weight to improve her overall health. So we identified โcontrolling portion sizesโ as a key skill. But she didnโt want to count calories every day.
So hereโs what we did:
Week 1: Built the habit of packing an afternoon snack at work. This helped prevent evening overeating.
Week 3: Used โhand-portion guidesโ to estimate meals. We started with breakfast, then moved to lunch and dinner over the course of a few weeks.
Week 10: Tried short-term calorie tracking. Which she actually enjoyed โ something she never thought when we first started!
All different practices. All in service of the same skill.
We had room to adapt based on what felt realistic and useful at the time.
And if she ran into a tough day? She could pivot to a different practice while still building the underlying skill.
If you skip the skill-building step, you risk creating an inflexible plan, or chasing the wrong actions entirely.
Thatโs one reason so many diets fail: they donโt help you build sustainable skills. They just give you temporary rules.
โ
Now Iโd love to hear from you!
Whatโs one 12-month win you can think of?
Whatโs one skill that could help you get there?
Whatโs an easy practice you can work towards this week for that skill?
Hit reply and let me know. Iโd love to cheer you on.
You got this ๐ช
-Matt

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