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FIVE HABITS SABOTAGING YOUR HEALTH GOALS
Don’t let these common mistakes derail your progress.

Feeling like you’re on the right track, but not quite getting the results you expected from your training and nutrition?

Tiny tweaks to common mistakes can get you back on track!

Habit #1: Being dehydrated
Too many of us reach for coffee, soft drink, energy drinks or juice instead of water during the day. While these drinks give you a nice boost, they’re also possibly contributing to weight gain and, in the case of sugary drinks, stimulating your appetite. Plus, when you’re dehydrated you can feel tired, dizzy, unable to concentrate and even have headaches. Do yourself a favour and aim for two litres of water a day.

Habit #2: Drinking lots of alcohol
While an evening glass of wine relaxes you, it’s a very easy habit to fall into… and a hard one to get out of! We are all familiar with the how a few bevvies suddenly make unhealthy food more appealing – plus, they add a lot of calories to your day with little to no nutrition for your body. Alcohol compromises your liver’s ability to process energy, meaning you don’t burn fuel as efficiently as you could sober (leading to weight gain!). Try to have at least 3 or 4 alcohol free days in your week, and stick to less than 3 drinks per sitting.

Habit #3: Skimping on sleep
So you’re binging the latest must-watch series on Netflix… next thing you know, it’s 2am and you’re supposed to be up at 6am. Oops! We’ve all been there, but this habit may be behind those irresistible cravings the next day. Be deliberate and set yourself a bedtime to make sure you get at least 7 hours of sleep. Unable to fall asleep? Try reducing your overall caffeine intake, avoiding sugary treats too close to bedtime, and turning off electronics an hour before sleep.

Habit #4: Not eating enough vegetables
We’ve all heard it before – aim for five serves of vegetables and two serves of fruit every day. But the reality is, less than 10% of Aussie adults meet this benchmark, and it’s sabotaging our health. Forget diets and eating as little as possible – focus on more fresh produce! Some easy ways to incorporate more veggies into your day include adding greens to smoothies, blending roasted carrots, pumpkin or beetroot into dips, and adding pickled veg to sandwiches or salads.

Habit #5: Sitting for too long
Even if you’ve already smashed a workout, it’s important to keep regularly moving throughout the day. When you sit for prolonged periods, you’re at increased risk for back pain, tight hips, weak glutes and hamstrings, not to mention weight gain and heart disease. Break up your day with movement “snacks” – try setting an alarm on your phone or watch to remind you to get up every hour for a little walk and stretch.
By Gabriel Leutz January 21, 2026
If you’re getting back into fitness after a long break, you’re not alone and you’re not “starting from zero.” You’re starting with life experience, a better understanding of your body, and (usually) a stronger reason for wanting to feel good again. At Altona North Training (ANT), we coach a lot of adults who haven’t trained in years. Some are coming back after kids, long work hours, injuries, stress, or simply losing momentum. The good news: you can rebuild fitness safely, without going extreme. This guide gives you a realistic 12‑week plan to help you return to training, rebuild strength and conditioning, and feel confident again. Quick takeaway: The goal isn’t to “make up for lost time.” The goal is to build a routine you can keep. Why it feels harder to restart (and why that’s normal) When you’ve had time off, a few things are usually true: your fitness tolerance is lower (so you feel workouts more) your joints and tissues aren’t used to training load your schedule is tighter than it used to be your confidence might be a bit shaky (“Will I keep this up?”) None of that means you can’t do it. It just means you need a plan that respects where you’re starting. The biggest mistakes people make when returning to exercise. If you want to avoid the classic “restart → soreness → injury → stop” loop, avoid these: 1) Going too hard in Week 1 Motivation is high, so people do 5–6 sessions in the first week. Then life hits, recovery tanks, and it becomes unsustainable. 2) Choosing random workouts instead of a progression plan Random workouts feel productive, but they’re hard to progress and easy to overdo. 3) Ignoring technique Especially after 35, technique matters. Not because you’re fragile — but because you want training to build you up, not beat you up. 4) Trying to lose weight fast instead of building habits Fast weight loss plans often sacrifice strength, energy, and consistency — the exact things you need to stay active long-term. What to focus on first (the “return to fitness” priorities) When you’re returning after a long break, your priorities should be: 👉 Consistency: 2–3 sessions/week you can actually maintain 👉 Strength training: the foundation for joints, confidence, and long-term results 👉 Low-impact conditioning: rebuild your engine without smashing your body 👉 Recovery: sleep, steps, protein, stress management 👉 Progression: small wins every week At ANT, we use structured 12‑week training cycles because they make progress clear and safe — and they remove the guesswork. The 12‑week plan: how to start exercising again (without burning out) This plan is designed for adults 35+ returning after months or years off. If you have a medical condition or significant pain, get clearance from your healthcare professional first — and start with coached sessions. How hard should it feel? Use a simple effort scale (RPE): RPE 6–7/10 most sessions (you worked, but you could do a bit more) You should finish feeling better, not destroyed. Weeks 1–4: Rebuild the habit + movement quality Goal: show up consistently, learn technique, reduce soreness, feel confident. Weekly target: 2–3 sessions/week Steps: aim for a daily walk (even 15–30 minutes helps) Strength focus (full body): squat pattern (box squat / goblet squat) hinge pattern (kettlebell deadlift / hip hinge) push (incline push-up / dumbbell press) pull (cable row / band row) carry (farmer carry) core (dead bug / plank variations) Conditioning: 1–2 easy sessions/week (bike, rower, incline walk) keep it conversational pace What success looks like by Week 4: you’re training regularly without dread soreness is manageable, technique feels smoother, energy is improving. Weeks 5–8: Build strength + fitness capacity Goal: start progressing weights/reps, build a stronger base, improve work capacity. Weekly target: 3 sessions/week (ideal) Optional: 1 extra light conditioning session if recovery is good Strength focus: increase load gradually (small jumps) add a little more volume (extra set or reps) introduce slightly more challenging variations (as appropriate) Conditioning: 1–2 sessions/week one can be moderate intervals (short bursts, not all-out) What success looks like by Week 8: you feel noticeably stronger, daily tasks feel easier (stairs, lifting, carrying), you recover faster between sessions, confidence is up Weeks 9–12: Consolidate + level up (without overdoing it) Goal: make training feel like part of your identity and routine. Weekly target: 3–4 sessions/week depending on schedule and recovery 3 sessions/week is plenty for most adults 4 sessions/week works if sleep/stress is solid Strength focus: keep progressing (slowly) maintain great technique don’t chase fatigue — chase quality reps Conditioning: 1–2 sessions/week keep one easy, one moderate (optional) What success looks like by Week 12: training feels normal (not a “phase”), you’re stronger, fitter, and more resilient, you have a clear next cycle to follow 12‑week plan table (simple weekly structure) Use this as a practical guide. Adjust days to suit your schedule. Restart 1–4 2–3x/week full body 1–2x easy Walk most days Build 5–8 3x/week 1x easy + 0–1x moderate Walk most days Level Up 9–12 3–4x/week 1x easy + 0–1x moderate Walk most days Important: If life gets busy, don’t quit — drop to 2 sessions/week and keep the habit alive. That’s how people actually succeed long-term. What if you’re nervous about the gym? This is more common than people admit. If you’ve had time off, it’s normal to feel: self-conscious unsure what to do worried about injury worried you won’t keep it up A coached environment removes most of those barriers. At Altona North Training, our sessions are led by PT-qualified coaches, and we’re big on creating a welcoming “ANT family” culture where people are known by name and supported. If you’re local to Altona North, Newport, Williamstown, Brooklyn, or South Kingsville, you don’t have to restart alone. Next steps: the easiest way to restart (with support) If you want to get back into fitness after a long break, the fastest path is a plan you can follow — with coaching that keeps you safe and consistent. Check the timetable and book your first session at Altona North Training. We’ll meet you where you’re at and build from there.
By Gabriel Leutz January 21, 2026
If you’re over 35 and thinking about getting stronger, you’re in the right place. A lot of people assume strength training is only for “gym people” — but in reality, it’s one of the best things you can do for your energy, joints, confidence, and long-term health. At Altona North Training (ANT), we coach everyday adults (many returning after years away from training) through structured strength and conditioning in a supportive environment. This guide will show you exactly how to start strength training safely after 35 — without feeling intimidated or wrecked for days. Quick takeaway: You don’t need to go hard. You need a plan, good coaching, and consistent progress. Why strength training matters more after 35 From your mid-30s onward, your body responds really well to strength training — but it also responds poorly to random, high-intensity workouts done with poor technique. Strength training helps you: 👉 Build and maintain muscle (important for metabolism and daily function) 👉 Support joint health by strengthening the muscles around hips, knees, shoulders, and back 👉 Improve bone density (especially important as we age) 👉 Feel more capable in everyday life (lifting, carrying, stairs, sport, parenting) 👉 Train for longevity — not just short-term weight loss If your goal is to feel strong for life, strength training is the foundation. The biggest mistake beginners over 35 make (and how to avoid it) The most common mistake I see is doing too much too soon. Motivation is high, so people jump into: daily workouts high-impact cardio random circuits heavy weights before technique is solid Then they get sore, flare up an old injury, or feel like they “can’t keep up”… and they stop. A better approach: start with a simple plan that builds consistency, technique, and gradual progress. What “strength training” actually means (for beginners) Strength training doesn’t mean you need to lift massive weights or spend hours in the gym. For beginners, strength training is practicing key movement patterns with good technique and gradually increasing the challenge over time. The main patterns we build at ANT are: Squat (sit/stand strength) Hinge (safe lifting mechanics for your back and hips) Push (upper body strength) Pull (posture, back strength, shoulder health) Carry (real-world core + grip strength) These patterns are the building blocks for a strong, resilient body. H ow to start strength training safely after 35 (step-by-step) Step 1: Start with 2–3 sessions per week If you’re new or returning after a long break, 2–3 strength sessions per week is the sweet spot. It’s enough to make progress, but not so much that recovery becomes the bottleneck. Rule of thumb: you should leave sessions feeling like you worked — not like you got hit by a truck. Step 2: Prioritise technique before load Good technique protects your joints and makes training more effective. This is where coached training makes a huge difference — especially if you’ve had: lower back flare-ups knee pain shoulder issues long periods of sitting (tight hips/upper back) At ANT, we modify exercises so you can train safely while still progressing. Step 3: Use “progressive overload” (without ego lifting) Progressive overload is just a fancy way of saying: make it slightly harder over time. That can look like: adding 1–2 reps adding a small amount of weight improving range of motion moving with more control reducing rest slightly You don’t need to max out. You need to build momentum. Step 4: Respect recovery (it’s part of the program) After 35, recovery matters — not because you’re “old,” but because life stress is real (work, kids, sleep, responsibilities). Focus on: sleep (your best recovery tool) protein (supports muscle repair) daily movement (walking helps soreness and energy) smart programming (hard days + easier days) If you’re consistently exhausted, the answer usually isn’t “push harder.” It’s “train smarter.” A simple beginner strength plan (example week) Here’s a beginner-friendly structure that works well for adults over 35: Option A: 2 days/week (great starting point) Day 1: Squat + Push + Pull + Core Day 2: Hinge + Single-leg work + Pull + Carry Option B: 3 days/week (best for steady progress) Day 1: Lower body strength + upper push/pull Day 2: Full body strength + conditioning (moderate) Day 3: Lower body + upper body accessories + carries At ANT, we run 12-week training cycles so progression is planned, measurable, and safe — which is exactly what beginners need. “Do I need cardio too?” Cardio is great for heart health — but most beginners do better when cardio supports strength training, not replaces it. If you’re starting out, aim for: 2–3 strength sessions/week 1–2 light-to-moderate cardio sessions (walking, bike, rower) daily steps where possible This combination builds fitness without beating up your joints. Why coached group training is a shortcut (especially for beginners) A lot of people in Altona North try to start alone, get overwhelmed, and stop. Coached group training gives you: a plan (no guessing) technique coaching (so you don’t get hurt) modifications (so injuries don’t derail you) accountability and community (so you stay consistent) At ANT, every session is led by PT-qualified coaches, and we cap classes so you actually get attention — not just a “follow along” workout. If you’re in Altona North: here’s your next step If you’re searching for strength training in Altona North and you want a beginner-friendly plan, I’d recommend starting with a structured approach you can stick to. DM us or email : info@antraining.com.au Ready to feel stronger, move better, and train with a plan? Conclusion Strength training for beginners over 35 doesn’t need to be complicated — it needs to be structured, coached, and consistent. Focus on 2–3 sessions per week, learn the key movement patterns, progress gradually, and prioritise recovery. If you’re in Altona North and want a plan that builds strength safely (without intimidation), coached training is the fastest path to real results.
strength training for beginners in Altona North
coached strength and conditioning session Altona
December 17, 2025
Why strength training matters in your 30s, 40s & 50s. Evidence-based benefits for strength, function, bone health, and longevity.