My Fitness Log

Tick the F'cking Boxes

Finding Momentum: How I Made Room for Fitness Without Losing My Digital Edge

Illustration of Team on video call in a Home office setting, with a focused mood.

As a product designer in the fast-paced digital world, my days are packed with sprints, meetings, and deadlines. For years, I told myself there just wasn’t time to train consistently. But one small step changed everything—and I’m sharing my progress to show you that even in high-demand careers, fitness and marathon goals are still possible.

Starting Small in a Big World

I began with 10-minute morning jogs—just enough to feel my heartbeat but not enough to feel overwhelmed. Any run logged in made me feel like I was respecting my time and body equally. This new habit created a rhythm that even tight schedules couldn’t disrupt.

Building Fitness Accountability

I started tracking not just miles, but moods. A post-run note on how it made me feel helped rewire my day. I also leveraged digital accountability tools, like fitgit.me, to log progress and celebrate small victories. Sharing that journey gave me purpose outside metrics and meetings.

Integrating Training Into Work-Life Balance

I learned that training doesn’t require free time—it creates it. Lunch-hour interval runs replaced doomscrolling. Weekend long runs became idea incubators for my projects. The marathon is no longer a finish line; it’s a reminder that I can pace myself across all goals.

Progress isn’t loud—it’s consistent. For digital professionals chasing personal and professional greatness, starting small is the secret. One step at a time, with the right mindset and some fitness accountability, you’ll go farther than you think.

Always remember to TTFBs!!!

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