Anyone else struggle to stay motivated in winter

10 posts · started by Marc NL · Aug 10, 2024

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Marc NL
Posts: 233
Joined: Jul 2019
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Marc NL
233 posts · joined Jul 2019
#1
Every year without fail come November and December my motivation drops off. Darker mornings, darker evenings, cold drive to the gym. Currently running 400mg test and 300mg primo and even that is not keeping my head fully in the game. I started training at lunch instead of evenings which has helped a bit. Anyone else get seasonal dips? How do you manage it?
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Beantown Rick
Posts: 552
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Beantown Rick
552 posts · joined Jun 2016
#2
Boston winters are brutal so I feel this. What helped me was signing up for a powerlifting meet in February. Having a competition gives you a hard deadline and suddenly the cold dark mornings do not matter as much. Even if you do not compete seriously just having a goal event changes the mental game completely.
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Jock
Posts: 1,016
Joined: Mar 2015
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Jock
1,016 posts · joined Mar 2015
#3
Aye every winter without fail. Scotland does not exactly help with the weather. What sorted it for me was paying for a gym closer to work instead of near home. Cuts out the drive in the dark and I just go after work before heading back. Also started doing morning sessions on weekends when the gym is quieter. Routine beats motivation every time.
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Mick AU
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Mick AU
463 posts · joined Aug 2017
#4
Our winters are mild but I get the slump. For me it comes after big events or holidays when training gets disrupted. Getting back into rhythm is hard. The only thing that works is just showing up even for a shorter session. A 45 minute workout beats skipping entirely. Momentum builds again after a week or two.
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Davo
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Davo
466 posts · joined Mar 2016
#5
Winter is tough. I started tracking lifts more obsessively in winter specifically to stay engaged. Nothing kills motivation faster than just going through the motions. Set a specific strength target for the season, something like hitting a new deadlift PR by March, and that gave me a reason to show up consistently even when I did not feel like it.
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BERLINER
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BERLINER
516 posts · joined Sep 2016
#6
Winter in Berlin is also dark and cold. I solve this problem by training always at same time every day. No decision to make - it is just what happens at 7am. When motivation depends on how you feel it will fail. When it is just a habit like brushing teeth you do not think about it.
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NYCgains
Posts: 237
Joined: Nov 2019
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NYCgains
237 posts · joined Nov 2019
#7
No winter here really in terms of affecting the gym. But I get the seasonal slump. For me it is summer actually - too many distractions, outdoor stuff, events. Winter is when I lock in and make the best gains. Sounds like you need to flip the script and think of winter as your building season rather than a problem to get through.
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MunichMarc
Posts: 278
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MunichMarc
278 posts · joined Dec 2018
#8
I have the same problem in Munich in winter. I started training with a friend twice a week and it helps a lot because you cannot cancel on someone else as easily as you cancel on yourself. The other sessions I do alone but the two partner sessions keep the habit going. Maybe try finding a training partner?
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FLbodybuilder
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FLbodybuilder
1,336 posts · joined Feb 2015
#9
Living in FL so I will never understand a cold dark winter but I respect it lol. Honestly though I get seasonal motivation dips too, just in summer when it is too hot to eat properly. Have you tried timing your blast to peak in winter? Being on gear tends to carry your motivation when your head is not fully in it.
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Dutchman
Posts: 568
Joined: Apr 2016
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Dutchman
568 posts · joined Apr 2016
#10
Seasonal affective disorder has a measurable effect on motivation and energy. Vitamin D supplementation is worth prioritising in winter, especially in northern latitudes. Low D3 correlates with lower testosterone and general fatigue. If you are not already supplementing, 3000-5000 IU daily through the winter months is well supported in the literature and cheap to implement.
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