What counts as exercise? Learn simple, realistic ways to move more every day, even if you hate workouts. Easy tips you can actually stick to.
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If you’re waiting for a perfect 45-minute workout in matching gym clothes, you’re making it too hard. Walking the dog counts. Taking the stairs counts. Carrying groceries counts. Chasing your kid around the house absolutely counts. So does a 10-minute stretch break between meetings.
I used to think exercise had to be sweaty, planned, and intense or it “didn’t count.” That mindset kept me stuck for months. But once I stopped treating movement like an all-or-nothing thing, I started getting way more active without really trying.
The big idea is simple: exercise is any movement that raises your heart rate, works your muscles, or gets your body out of a sitting rut. It doesn’t have to be fancy. It just has to happen.
And here’s the part people ignore: small movement adds up fast.
A 10-minute walk after lunch. 5 squats while your coffee brews. 3 flights of stairs instead of the elevator. That stuff stacks. It might not feel dramatic in the moment, but over a week, it can mean an extra 60 to 150 minutes of movement without much effort.
I’ve had weeks where I didn’t “work out” once, but I still felt better because I walked more, stood up more, and stopped sitting like a statue for 9 hours straight. My back hated me less. My energy was better. My mood wasn’t as flat.
So no, you don’t need to become a gym person overnight. You need to move more often than you currently do.
But let’s get specific, because vague advice is annoying.
These all count:
And yes, if your heart rate goes up and you’re breathing harder, that’s exercise. If your muscles are working, that’s exercise too. You don’t need a smartwatch to validate it.
So this is where people usually overcomplicate things. They think moving more means waking up at 5 a.m., buying new shoes, and signing up for some intense program they’ll quit by Tuesday.
Nope. Try this instead.
Attach movement to routines you already have. That’s the whole game.
This works because you’re not relying on motivation. You’re building movement into your day like it belongs there.
And this one is huge.
If you sit all day, set a rule: get up every 30 to 60 minutes. It doesn’t need to be a full workout. Just stand, walk, stretch, refill water, anything that breaks the spell of sitting.
I started doing this during long writing days, and it made a weirdly big difference. My lower back stopped screaming. My brain felt less foggy. I didn’t need coffee as often either, which was a nice bonus.
Walking is criminally underrated.
It’s the easiest exercise to keep consistent because it doesn’t require a setup. No equipment. No commute. No “I need to be in the right mood.” Just shoes and a direction.
Try this:
That’s 30 minutes a day without needing a formal workout. And if you want to level it up, walk a little faster for part of the time. You’ll feel it.
But if you hate long workouts, tiny bursts are your friend.
Pick 2 to 4 moves and do them for 2 to 5 minutes:
Repeat once or twice if you want. That’s it. No ceremony.
I’m a big fan of snack workouts because they lower the mental drama. You don’t have to “start exercising.” You just do a little bit now. That’s much easier to repeat tomorrow.
So instead of relying on willpower, make movement the easiest option.
Your environment should nudge you toward movement. If it makes sitting easier and moving harder, that’s a problem.
And now for the question everybody secretly asks.
How much movement do you actually need?
A solid target for general health is 150 minutes of moderate activity per week. That sounds big until you break it down. It’s just 30 minutes a day, 5 days a week. And it doesn’t need to happen all at once.
You can split it into:
If you’re starting from zero, don’t try to hit the full target immediately. Start with 10 extra minutes a day. That’s enough to build momentum.
And if you’re already active, the goal is still useful: add a little more movement, especially on your non-workout days. Consistency matters more than heroic effort.
But the real challenge isn’t knowing what counts. It’s keeping it going when life gets messy.
These help:
I’m strongly against the “all-or-nothing” mindset. It wrecks progress. A mediocre 12-minute walk you repeat 4 times a week beats a perfect plan you abandon in 6 days.
So if you want something stupidly practical, try this:
That’s not extreme. That’s just a normal person moving like a human being instead of a chair with a pulse.
And if you want to make it easier to stay consistent, track the little wins somewhere you’ll actually check. I’ve found that a simple habit tracker helps a lot, and Trider (myhabits.in) makes that kind of thing way less annoying than trying to remember everything in your head.
And the most important thing? Movement has to fit your real life.
Not your ideal life. Not your “new me” fantasy. Your actual life, with work, errands, fatigue, bad weather, and random chaos.
So start smaller than you think you should. Walk more. Sit less. Take the stairs when it makes sense. Do a few squats while the kettle boils. Count all of it.
And if you want a low-friction way to keep the habit going, try Trider and see if it helps you stay on track without making exercise feel like a project.