Evidence-based ways to build and stick to an exercise habit as a busy professional.
It’s difficult to overstate the significance of exercising for health and longevity. Besides its positive effects on body composition, regular exercise lowers the risk of cardiovascular risk, reduces stress, improves mood, staves off dementia, and helps with chronic pain, according to Harvard Health--all of which are central to the promotion of a long and healthy life. M. D. Peter Attia goes so far as to claim that “nothing comes close to having a greater impact on the length and quality of your life than your training.”
None of this is news. But while the positive effects of exercise are widely appreciated, less than a third of US adults are hitting basic exercise benchmarks, with nearly half saying that they are too busy to fit exercise into their daily routine.
If you fall in that half and would like to develop an exercise habit, this article is for you.
Here are two evidence-based ways to build an exercise habit as a busy professional.
In a 1981 study, researchers extended the closing time of elevator doors from 10 seconds to over 30 seconds. This simple change prompted individuals to opt for the stairs instead of waiting.
Dr. Wendy Wood, a research psychologist at the University of Southern California, identifies this as a prime example of "friction." It illustrates how minor inconveniences can influence behavior and impede habit formation. By removing such obstacles, we can facilitate the development of habits that stick.
We can apply this example to other aspects of our life where small inconveniences impact our behaviors and get in the way of habit development. When we clear the obstacles that stand in our way, it’s a lot easier to make habits that actually stick.
Here are some examples of how to reduce friction in the case of exercise:
https://x.com/alexiskold/status/1761765057845678374?s=20
Research emphasizes the importance of repetition in habit formation. The idea is simple: the more you repeat something, the more likely you’ll develop a habit of doing it.
The idea can be applied in the context of exercise. You can make it your goal to get some exercise in--to repeat exercising--daily. This way you never have to restart the habit, something which is psychologically difficult to do.
Daily exercise doesn’t have to mean going to the gym every day of the week if that’s not realistic for you. It only means getting some form of exercise daily. This could be:
Whatever you do, you are repeating the same kind of activity--exercising--every day. And the more you repeat it, the more likely it is that you’ll get in the habit of doing it as part of your routine.
Evidence-based ways to build and stick to an exercise habit as a busy professional.