Let’s go full zen for a second.
If your body feels like it’s giving up… it’s not.
It’s speaking to you. You’ve just forgotten how to listen.
When I was 21, I trained five days a week, played rugby on weekends, and recovered from hangovers like it was a sport in itself.
I even wrote a blog called “Surviving on Painkillers” because I’d pop paracetamol before sessions just to get through the pain.
At the time, I thought I was being tough.
Looking back, I realise I was ignoring every signal my body was giving me. Pushing through wasn’t strength… it was disconnection.
Soreness, fatigue, and plateaus are not signs of failure.
They’re signals.
They’re your body’s way of saying, “Something needs attention.”
When you ignore those messages, you burn out.
When you listen? You adapt. You grow. You actually make long-term progress.
So if you’re feeling tired or sore right now… good. That means you’ve started. That means your body is changing.
Don’t confuse discomfort with defeat.
I’d much rather feel that ache of “I did something hard today” than sit still and feel myself slipping further from who I want to be.
Because I’ve seen what rock bottom looks like. And climbing out of that is ten times harder than just staying in the game.
So take the feedback.
Let your body speak.
Then keep showing up… smarter, not harder.
Pain isn’t the enemy. It’s the knock on the door that says, “You’re doing something new.”