If you’ve ever worked out before, you might have heard the idea that a workout isn’t “good” unless it leaves you sore for days afterwards. That feeling of being shattered, wiped out, or barely able to move. Somehow that’s been sold to us as proof that the session worked.
But here’s the thing: soreness does not equal success.
In fact, chasing soreness can actually hold you back from the progress you want.
Take Emma, for example. When she started training with us, she didn’t push herself until she was sore and exhausted. Instead, she showed up regularly, kept consistent, and gradually got stronger all without wrecking her week.
That’s the kind of progress that sticks.
Let me tell you about Emma. She used to do one brutal workout a week… the kind that left her too sore to move for days. She thought that meant it was working. But really, it was holding her back.
If your training knocks you out for three or four days at a time, it’s not helping you be consistent. And consistency is what really matters.
When Emma started with us, everything changed. We gave her three sessions a week with just the right intensity. Yes, she felt some muscle ache, but it never ruined her week or kept her from moving.
For the first time in years, she was able to keep going, week after week.
If you’re just getting back into training, feeling a bit achy after your first few sessions is normal. Your body is waking up and adapting to new demands.
But soreness shouldn’t stop you from living your life or make you want to skip the next workout. If it does, the training plan needs to change.
Here’s what most trainers won’t tell you: a smart workout program focuses on building you up, not breaking you down. Intensity has its place, but so does pacing and recovery.
At Function Fitness, we want you to leave sessions feeling energised not defeated.
We don’t measure success by how sore you feel the next day. Instead, we look at how you improve over time, how your strength builds, and how you stay consistent.
Remember, soreness is not the goal. Strength is.
Show up regularly. Build gradually. Stay in the game.
That’s how real results happen and stick around for the long term.