Reading the Body’s Signals: How Recovery Speaks

Day 20 of 100 Days Muscle Resistance Workout Challenge

Focus Topic: Check for signs of muscle soreness and recovery speed.

Learning Material 

Recovery is where the magic happens — not during the workout itself. Every rep you lift causes tiny tears in your muscle fibers. Your body then repairs these fibers stronger than before, but only if it’s given the right conditions: rest, nutrition, and time. Learning to read your body’s signals can help you strike the balance between productive effort and overtraining.

Key Insights:

  1. Soreness Isn’t the Goal — Adaptation Is.
    Muscle soreness (DOMS: delayed onset muscle soreness) is common after new or intense workouts. However, soreness is not a direct sign of progress. Once your body adapts, soreness decreases — even though strength continues to grow. Constant soreness, on the other hand, means your muscles aren’t fully recovering.
  2. Sleep and Nutrition Drive Repair.
    During deep sleep, your body releases growth hormone, which triggers tissue repair and protein synthesis. Protein intake after workouts replenishes the amino acids your muscles need to rebuild. Without enough protein or sleep, this process slows, leaving you tired and stiff longer.
  3. Overtraining Feels Like Fatigue, Not Pain.
    When you’re under-recovered, you may notice low motivation, irritability, reduced performance, or poor sleep — all signs your nervous system needs a break. A smart athlete knows when to push and when to pause.

Real-World Example:

Think of training like baking bread. The workout is kneading the dough — it builds structure but also tension. The resting phase lets it rise; skip that, and the bread turns dense and flat. Your muscles need that same rising time.

My Reflection

Today, I learned about muscle soreness (DOMS: delayed onset muscle soreness). Although I feel fatigue during workouts, I haven’t experienced noticeable soreness for the past four or five days, which suggests it may be time to adjust my routine.

My sleep quality has remained excellent, with consistent sleep scores above 90, so I know I’m well-rested and recovering properly. My muscle growth is progressing steadily, but I haven’t lost any weight yet. Yesterday, I ate a cup of chicken poppers, not the best choice, and gained about 1.2 pounds, likely from water retention.

My main challenge right now is balancing fat loss with muscle gain. I want to reduce weight gradually while continuing to build strength.

Adjustment for this week:

  • Add 3–5 pounds to my leg workouts.
  • Include upper-body exercises on HIIT days.

Biometric data

Change in Weight from Day 1: -0.4 lb.
Skeletal Muscle: 38.9 %
Muscle Mass: 95.2 lb.

Adjustment Ideas (Strategic adjustment):

  1. Nutritional Support: Add a small protein-rich meal or shake within 30–60 minutes after workouts.
  2. Active Recovery: On sore days, replace heavy exercise with light stretching, walking, or yoga to increase circulation.
  3. Mindset Habit: Instead of chasing soreness, track performance gains — more reps, better form, steadier energy — as your true sign of progress.

Living with Kidney Disease and Anemia

Brian’s fitness journal after a brain stroke

Today, I want to talk about how I am living with kidney disease and Anemia. Recently, I was told that I have a red blood cell count problem.

It has been 11 years since I first learned that my kidneys were not functioning properly. Since then, I have spent a lot of time negotiating with my kidneys—and, unfortunately, they are not very cooperative negotiators.

When your kidneys stop working properly, a lot of other things become more complicated. Kidneys do much more than simply “filter the body.” They influence energy, muscle recovery, blood pressure, appetite, and what you can safely eat.

For me, food restrictions have become a regular part of life.

I have to watch protein and potassium carefully. I also need to limit foods high in phosphorus. There is something strangely ironic about being told that white bread is a better choice than whole wheat bread. Green vegetables, chocolate, nuts, dairy—many of the foods people describe as “healthy” suddenly become foods that require careful planning.

I can still eat some of them in moderation, but I have to pay attention.

The protein restriction creates another challenge: muscle recovery. Since I cannot eat large amounts of protein, I struggle more with building muscle and repairing it. If I push myself too hard during exercise, I end up with muscle soreness that lasts longer than it should. Fatigue becomes part of the package.

And now there is the red blood cell count issue.

Apparently, healthy kidneys produce a hormone that tells the body to make red blood cells. When the kidneys stop producing enough of that hormone, anemia often follows. So while my low red blood cell count sounds dramatic, the cause is actually fairly straightforward.

The good news is that this part has a relatively simple solution.

For the next two months, I will visit the hematology clinic every two weeks. They will draw blood, check my levels, and give me an injection to stimulate red blood cell production.

It is not exactly how I would choose to spend my free time, but it is manageable.

The doctor told me that it will probably take at least a month before my blood counts start responding to the medication. Until then, the plan is simple: keep doing everything else I am already doing, show up for the appointments, and stay patient.

I am especially curious to see whether this treatment affects my running.

If my red blood cell count improves, my body should carry oxygen more efficiently, which could help my muscles perform better during exercise. Perhaps my runs will feel easier. Perhaps I will recover faster.

Or perhaps I will simply stop feeling like my muscles filed a formal complaint every time I overdo things.

Honestly, that alone would be a victory.

How Sleep Shapes Mood, Motivation, and Training Consistency

Day 19 of 100 Days Muscle Resistance Workout Challenge

Topics: Observe your mood and motivation after different sleep qualities.

Learning Material 

Mood may seem separate from muscle growth, but it’s actually one of the most powerful drivers of your performance. Sleep doesn’t just restore your body — it resets your emotional and motivational balance. How you feel when you wake up often predicts how you’ll approach the day’s workout, diet, and even your patience with yourself.

When you’re well-rested, you’re more optimistic and disciplined. When you’re sleep-deprived, the brain shifts toward survival mode, increasing irritability and lowering motivation. This isn’t weakness; it’s biology. The prefrontal cortex, which handles focus and decision-making, goes partially offline, while the amygdala, the brain’s emotional alarm center, becomes overactive. The result? Small setbacks feel heavier, and even simple routines seem harder.

Key Insights:

  1. Sleep Regulates Motivation Chemicals – Quality sleep restores dopamine and serotonin, neurotransmitters that affect willpower and optimism. When these levels drop, you’re more likely to skip workouts or crave comfort foods.
  2. Emotional Recovery Happens During REM Sleep – REM sleep helps your brain process emotions and stress1. Poor REM quality can make you short-tempered or unmotivated, even if you slept long hours.
  3. Good Sleep Builds Consistency – Athletes who sleep well report steadier motivation. They don’t rely on “pushing through” exhaustion; their baseline mood makes showing up easier.

Real-World Example:


Think of sleep as your emotional reset button. Imagine your mood as a phone battery: when charged overnight, you can handle notifications (stress, fatigue) calmly. But when you start the day at 30%, even small things drain you. The result isn’t just tiredness — it’s frustration and lower drive.

My Reflection

Since October, I’ve been recording my mood each day to understand how exercise and sleep influence my energy and emotions. I wake up earlier and exercise first thing in the morning. I go to bed before 8 pm, and start reading a physical book. Getting out from any digital device is a cue for me to go to bed. I do the same thing every evening, so it is like a ritual for sleep. After I put my book down, I fall asleep very quickly. I usually sleep well. Sleepless nights are rare for me. When they do happen, I can feel the difference in my performance the next day.

Recently, I learned that REM sleep plays a key role in regulating emotions. Studies show that REM sleep helps the brain consolidate emotional information and memories, which is something I hadn’t known before. I’ve researched the topics because I was curious. I’d read long ago that REM sleep helps organize memories, but I never realized it also supports emotional healing.

Looking back, this connection makes sense. During a difficult time in my life, I struggled with depression and often couldn’t fall asleep. It became a painful cycle: lack of sleep deepened the sadness, and the sadness made sleep even harder to find. Over time, I recovered, but that experience taught me how deeply rest and emotional balance are intertwined.

Over time, I re-regulated my sleep cycle. By the time I am done with my morning exercise, I am all refreshed and energized. It has something to do with sleeping well at night. After a good night’s sleep, you feel so refreshed in the morning. With better mental states with refreshed brain, it is so easy to get into a flow. I am recharged, and the more I get things done, the happier I will be. That is one of the reasons I like to wake up early: to do my morning exercise.

From now on, I’m determined to protect my sleep. It is not just for recovery, but because it’s essential to living happily.

Biometric data

Change in Weight from Day 1: -1.6 lb.
Skeletal Muscle: 39.10 %
Muscle Mass: 94.8 lb.

Adjustment Ideas (Strategic adjustment):

  1. Mindset Practice: On days with poor sleep, lower performance expectations — focus on movement, not perfection.
  2. Sleep Wind-Down: Try a 5–10 minute mindfulness routine (deep breathing or journaling) to reduce stress before bed.
  3. Mood Check Habit: Add a one-line note to your workout log about how your sleep quality affected your motivation. Over time, you’ll see your personal pattern.

Note

  1. Daniela Tempesta et al., “Sleep and Emotional Processing,” Sleep Medicine Reviews 40 (August 2018): 183–95, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.smrv.2017.12.005; Serena Scarpelli et al., “The Functional Role of Dreaming in Emotional Processes,” Frontiers in Psychology 10 (March 2019): 459, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00459. ↩︎

Sleep as the Hidden Stamina Booster

Day 18 of 100 Days Muscle Resistance Workout Challenge

Topic: Cardio Connection: Notice how your sleep affects your stamina during cardio

Learning Material 

Sleep doesn’t just reset your mind; it’s also one of the strongest performance enhancers for cardio. When you run, cycle, or row, your body needs oxygen delivery, a stable heart rate, and muscular endurance — all of which depend on the quality of last night’s sleep.

Key Insights:

  1. Oxygen Efficiency: Deep sleep (especially slow-wave sleep) helps restore the cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Poor sleep reduces oxygen uptake, meaning you’ll feel winded sooner.
  2. Heart Rate and Recovery: Good sleep lowers resting heart rate and improves heart rate variability (HRV). These are markers of endurance. A poor night’s sleep can cause your heart rate to spike earlier, making even moderate cardio feel harder.
  3. Perceived Effort: Research shows sleep-deprived athletes rate workouts as more difficult, even when performance metrics are the same1. In other words, your brain tells you “this is exhausting” much earlier when you’re tired.

Real-World Example:


Think of cardio like filling a water balloon. With enough sleep, the balloon stretches easily and fills smoothly. With little sleep, the balloon feels stiff — you can still fill it, but it resists and feels harder. That resistance is how your body interprets cardio effort after poor rest.

My Reflection

I’ve been tracking my sleep for years, and I clearly see how it shapes my performance the following day. When I get fewer than seven hours, my mental focus drops sharply and my energy is noticeably lower.

Sleep quality is just as important as duration. External disturbances, like thunder or nighttime noise, can wake me and cut into my rest. On those nights, my cardio performance the next day is always worse. I’ve noticed that the depth and balance of my sleep cycles — especially how much deep sleep and REM sleep I get — make a real difference.

I’ve made a change to my diet. I have been eating much less protein than I need. My husband has kidney disease, and he is restricted in protein intake. To simplify meal preparation, I was eating the same amount of protein. No matter how much exercise I do, I feel like I’ve been losing my muscle mass.

I need to get enough protein, so I started taking an adequate amount. Since increasing my protein intake to support muscle repair, I’ve been sleeping more soundly. That was a new discovery for me. Typically, I fall into deep sleep quickly, followed by a shorter REM cycle, and then a longer, restorative REM period later in the night.

I also avoid being jolted awake during deep or REM sleep. To keep my rhythm natural, I rarely set an alarm unless absolutely necessary. Most mornings I wake up on my own, usually between 5:00 and 5:20 a.m., feeling refreshed.

Biometric data

Change in Weight from Day 1: -2.0 lb.

Skeletal Muscle: 39.10%

Muscle Mass: 94.8 lb.

Adjustment Ideas (Strategic adjustment):

  1. Bedtime Consistency: Set a fixed “lights-out” window (even within 20 minutes) to stabilize recovery.
  2. Pre-Cardio Fuel: If sleep was short, try a small carb boost before cardio (like half a banana) to reduce the sluggish feeling.
  3. Mindset Cue: On low-sleep days, accept a lighter cardio pace. Focus on moving consistently rather than pushing intensity.

Note

  1. Yan Kong et al., “(PDF) Effects of Sleep Deprivation on Sports Performance and Perceived Exertion in Athletes and Non-Athletes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,” ResearchGate, ahead of print, August 10, 2025, https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2025.1544286. ↩︎

Hematology Follow-Up and a Kitten’s Great Onesie Escape

Brian’s fitness journal after a brain stroke

Today included my hematology follow-up appointment, which meant the usual routine had to make room for doctors, blood tests, and medical logistics.

We first discovered my kidney problem after my brain stroke. At the time, the doctors wanted to try a treatment that would stop iron from leaking into my brain, but one of the requirements for that treatment was healthy kidneys.

That was when we found out mine were not healthy at all.

Back then, my kidney function had fallen close to stage 5.

I have also dealt with anemia since childhood because of a Mediterranean blood condition similar to sickle cell disease. After my stroke, I needed injections to increase my red blood cell count. I went through that treatment for a few months nearly ten years ago.

Earlier this year, my doctor noticed that my red blood cell count had dropped again, so now I am back in treatment mode.

My wife asked me how I did not notice the anemia returning.

Honestly, I did not.

Since I have lived with anemia for most of my life, feeling dizzy from time to time does not feel unusual to me. I know I cannot take regular iron pills because of my blood condition, so I mostly accepted it as normal.

My wife found that strange. She used to struggle with anemia herself, and for her, the symptoms were very noticeable—especially feeling lightheaded after standing too long. In her case, the problem came from not getting enough protein and iron for her activity level.

So now, I am committed to this treatment plan until May. I have to see the hematologist twice a month, which feels slightly ironic because every visit includes them taking three more vials of blood to monitor the blood problem.

Apparently, treating anemia involves donating a surprising amount of blood first.

When I returned home, my wife and I planned to inspect our kitten’s incision. Today was supposed to be the day we decided whether she could finally retire from her onesie.

As it turns out, our kitten made that decision herself.

Sometime between my wife waking up and me getting out of bed, she successfully escaped from the onesie. Apparently, she had officially reached the end of her patience with recovery fashion.

At that point, we looked at the incision, saw that everything appeared healed, and decided not to put the onesie back on.

She has been absolutely full of energy ever since.

Today she has run around the house, reclaimed her territory, and played more than thirty rounds of fetch. Clearly, she feels completely recovered and ready to return to her normal life of speed, chaos, and relentless enthusiasm.

Honestly, seeing her back to normal made the whole day feel much lighter.

Fueling the Fire: Tracking Your Energy

Day 17 of 100 Days Muscle Resistance Workout Challenge

Topics: Pay attention to your energy during your workout.

Learning Material 

Energy is the invisible “currency” of your training. You may have the discipline to show up, but how much you get out of your workout depends on how much energy you bring into it. Tracking your energy doesn’t mean obsessing over every dip or spike — it means noticing patterns and learning what fuels your best sessions.

Key Insights:

  1. Energy is Multi-Dimensional – Physical energy (glycogen, ATP, hydration), mental energy (focus, motivation), and emotional energy (mood) all interact. A poor night’s sleep can leave you physically fine but mentally sluggish; a stressful day can drain motivation even if your body is rested.
  2. Energy Fluctuates Naturally – Science shows our bodies follow ultradian rhythms (90–120 minute cycles of alertness). You might feel powerful at the start of a workout and sluggish halfway through. Recognizing this rhythm helps you time your most demanding exercises when energy is highest.
  3. Fuel Sources Matter – Your body uses glycogen (from carbs) for quick energy, fat for longer endurance, and protein for repair (not fuel). Skipping carbs entirely may leave you dizzy during cardio, but too many slow-digesting carbs before training can make you heavy. Balance is key.

Real-World Example

Think of your body like a hybrid car. Carbs are the gas for quick acceleration (sprints, heavy lifts). Fats are the steady electric battery (endurance, recovery pace). Protein is the mechanic that repairs the car after the trip. If you only fill one “tank,” you’ll either stall out early or run sluggishly.

My Reflection

Most nights, I achieve a good to excellent sleep score. Because of my naturally low blood pressure, some mornings are harder to wake up, though I usually feel more refreshed once I’ve done my morning exercise.

Occasionally, outside noises like thunder keep me from sleeping, and I notice the sluggishness the next day. I aim to go to bed at the same time every night, which helps me fall asleep more quickly.

Lately, I’ve realized that getting enough protein during the day improves my sleep quality. I also avoid eating after 6 p.m. because it leaves me feeling heavy and less rested the following morning. Going to bed on a full stomach never works well for me.

Today I felt more tired than usual because I didn’t get enough sleep. Since starting resistance training, I’ve noticed that my body craves more rest than before. Importantly, I feel so good about myself.

Biometric data

Change in Weight from Day 1: – 2.2 lb.

Skeletal Muscle: 39.2 %

Muscle Mass: 94.8 lb.

Adjustment Ideas (Strategic adjustment):

  1. Nutritional tweak: Add a small, fast-digesting carb (like half a banana or a slice of toast) 30–60 minutes before workouts to see if it steadies your energy.
  2. Sleep awareness: Set a simple pre-bed wind-down (no screens for 20 minutes, light stretching, or reading) to improve sleep quality — energy will often follow.
  3. Micro-habit: Do your hardest exercise (squats, push-ups, or cardio burst) in the first 15 minutes of training when your natural energy is highest.

Why a Consistent Sleep Schedule Boosts Recovery

Day 16 of 100 Days Muscle Resistance Workout Challenge

Topic: Consistent sleep schedule for recovery

Learning Material 

It’s tempting to think of sleep as a numbers game—just hit 7–8 hours and you’re fine. But science shows that when you sleep matters almost as much as how long you sleep. Your body runs on circadian rhythms, a natural 24-hour clock that thrives on consistency. Going to bed and waking up at the same time every day strengthens that rhythm and amplifies recovery.

Key Insights

1. Regularity Strengthens Recovery

Research on sleep regularity shows that maintaining consistent bed and wake times improves sleep onset, sleep efficiency, and subjective restfulness. In contrast, irregular schedules—such as alternating late nights and early mornings—disrupt circadian alignment and reduce sleep quality even when total sleep duration remains unchanged1. Inconsistent schedules—late nights followed by early mornings—confuse your body’s internal clock, leading to lower-quality rest even if the total hours look the same.

2. Hormones Love Predictability

Growth hormone and melatonin are both key for muscle repair and recovery. Melatonin is released on a schedule, which helps set the body’s sleep cycle, allowing recovery hormones like growth hormone to be released at nighttime. If bedtime shifts wildly, these hormones don’t peak at the correct times, which can blunt muscle growth and recovery. Think of it like watering a plant—doing it at the same time each day helps it thrive.

3. Consistency Beats Perfection
You don’t need to hit the exact minute every night. Even keeping within a 30–60 minute window trains your body to expect sleep, making it easier to drift off and wake up energized. The brain loves rhythm—it learns best, recovers best, and performs best with predictable cycles.

Metaphor Example

Imagine your body as a train system. If trains (your sleep cycles) run on time every day, passengers (your hormones and recovery processes) know exactly when to board. If trains are late or unpredictable, everyone waits around, and the whole system slows.

My Reflection

From experience, I’ve learned that regulating my bedtime helps me fall asleep much faster than when I used to have irregular sleep patterns years ago. The one challenge I still face is adjusting to seasonal time changes—I often need to prepare about 10 days in advance.

When I get a good night’s sleep, my mind feels clearer and sharper. I also notice that I eat better the following day because I feel more energized and motivated. My waking time varies slightly, usually within a 20-minute window, but I don’t even set an alarm. I prefer to wake up naturally, and since I’ve regulated my sleep, my body allows me to do that. Occasionally, things like thunderstorms interrupt my sleep, but this is rare. When it happens, I simply stay still in bed and rest. The next night, I often sleep a little longer—about 30 minutes—but the sleep is deeper and restorative.

It took me years to train my body clock, as I was naturally more of a night person. Now, though, I find that exercising in the morning is far better for my productivity and energy throughout the day. This routine has worked well for me for years, and I have no desire to return to my old habits.

Biometric data

Change in Weight from Day 1: -1.6lb.

Skeletal Muscle: 39.10%

Muscle Mass: 94.8 lb.

Adjustment Ideas (Strategic adjustment)

  1. Sleep: Set a target “bedtime window” (e.g., between 9:30–10:00 p.m.) and stick to it for three nights.
  2. Micro-habit: Dim lights and reduce screen use 30 minutes before bed to cue your body’s rhythm.
  3. Mindset: Think of bedtime as part of your training routine—not an afterthought.

Note

  1. Marc Wittmann et al., “Social Jetlag: Misalignment of Biological and Social Time,” Chronobiology International 23, nos. 1–2 (2006): 497–509, https://doi.org/10.1080/07420520500545979. ↩︎

Kitten Recovery Update: Escape Attempts, Endless Appetite, and Onesie Battles

Brian’s fitness journal after a brain stroke

Another Kitten Recovery Update. Our Kitten has been recovering very well. In fact, she is recovering so well that she is sure she does not have to be in her onesie.

This morning began with breakfast, coffee… and a jailbreak attempt.

The moment I opened my office door, our cat made a bold dash for freedom. After more than a week of confinement, she clearly believes she has served her sentence. Now every door opening feels like a high-stakes negotiation. I have to move carefully, or she will slip past me like a tiny, determined fugitive.

As if that were not enough, she had also escaped her surgical onesie—again.

Impressive, honestly.

At first glance, her incision looked fine, but I plan to do a more careful inspection with my wife later. In the meantime, I reset the situation: recapture the cat, reinstall the onesie, restore order.

Temporary victory.

Her Restless Kitten Syndrome continues at full strength.

After securing the onesie (round two), I gave her another dose of pain medication, followed by food and fresh water. Her appetite, by the way, is thriving. She has already finished four bowls of food—and it is only midday.

At this rate, the onesie is not shrinking. She is expanding.

My wife noticed the same thing last night while adjusting the onesie during another escape attempt. Between limited movement and increased eating, our little patient has entered what I would call a very successful recovery phase.

On the bright side, I have become surprisingly skilled at giving her medication. My wife taught me the technique: distract generously, act quickly, and make sure the cat never fully realizes what just happened. Efficiency is key. Confusion is helpful.

So far, it works.

Despite all the chaos—the escapes, the climbing, the constant supervision—I am genuinely happy we have her. She has added a lot of life (and activity) to my days. I have always been a cat person, and even this tiny troublemaker has completely won me over.

Now we are both waiting for the same thing:
the end of the onesie, the reopening of the room, and her return to full freedom.

I suspect she will celebrate that moment dramatically.

The Bedtime Blueprint: How Sleep Awareness Improves Recovery and Performance

Day 15 of 100 Days Muscle Resistance Workout Challenge

Topic: Start with Awareness – Notice what time you went to bed and how long you slept.

Learning Material 

Before you can improve your sleep, you first need to notice it. Just like tracking workouts or nutrition, simply observing your bedtime and sleep duration builds awareness. Awareness doesn’t require immediate change—it creates a foundation for making smarter adjustments later.

Key Insights

1. Awareness is the First Rep


In psychology, self-monitoring is one of the most effective tools for habit change1. By writing down when you went to bed and how long you slept, you start seeing patterns: maybe you sleep less after late-night screens, or you recover better with an earlier bedtime. The act of noticing primes your brain for change.

2. Sleep = the Body’s Recovery Mode

 During deep sleep, growth hormone is released—critical for muscle repair. REM sleep supports memory and learning, which matters just as much if you’re coding, writing, or problem-solving. Without enough quality sleep, workouts feel heavier, reaction times slow, and fat loss stalls. Sleep isn’t “time off”—it’s part of training.

3. Small Patterns, Big Insights

 You don’t need fancy trackers to start. A simple journal entry like “Bed at 11:15, woke at 6:30, 7 hours total” is enough. Over a week, you’ll see whether your body thrives on a consistent schedule or struggles with irregularity. Awareness alone can motivate earlier adjustments, much like seeing your step count motivates you to move more.

Metaphor Example:


Think of sleep like charging your phone. If you only ever plug it in for 30 minutes here and there, the battery never reaches full power. Consistency in bedtime is like plugging into the charger overnight—you wake up with a full charge, ready to perform.

My Reflection

I keep close track of my sleep, and if I had to rate it on a scale of 1 to 10, it usually lands around a 9. My Fitbit regularly shows a sleep score above 90%. I tend to get slightly more REM sleep than the benchmark and enough deep sleep to feel fully restored. On average, I’m awake only about 10–15 minutes during the night.

To support good sleep, I stay active during the day, avoid eating after 6 p.m., and skip late workouts. I also step away from the computer after 8 p.m. because I know how much my sleep quality matters—if I get less than seven hours, I feel sluggish the next day.

Most nights, I fall asleep around 9:30 p.m. and don’t wake up until 3 a.m. or later. Sometimes I sleep straight through without interruption. The only things that disturb me are my cat jumping on the bed or the occasional thunderstorm. Last week’s heavy storms, for example, kept me from sleeping as soundly.

Interestingly, ever since I began eating more adequately, my sleep has noticeably improved. I’m not sure if there’s a direct connection, but it’s something I’d like to explore further.

Biometric data

Change in Weight from Day 1: -1.8 lb.

Skeletal Muscle: 39.10%

Muscle Mass: 94.8 lb.

Adjustment Ideas (Strategic adjustment)

  1. Sleep: Set a “bedtime reminder” alarm 30 minutes before your ideal sleep time.
  2. Mindset: Treat sleep as active training—your recovery session, not wasted time.
  3. Micro-habit: Keep a small bedside notebook to record sleep and wake times in under 1 minute.

Note

  1. S. Michie et al., “Effective Techniques in Healthy Eating and Physical Activity Interventions: A Meta-Regression,” in Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE): Quality-Assessed Reviews [Internet] (Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (UK), 2009), https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK77075/. ↩︎

Closing the Gaps: Training That Fits Your Life

Day 14 of 100 Days Muscle Resistance Workout Challenge

 Topic: Where am I lacking? What fits my lifestyle?

Learning Material 

One of the biggest mistakes in fitness is following someone else’s plan without checking if it fits your own life. Muscle growth isn’t about chasing a “perfect” program—it’s about creating one that works for you consistently. Knowing your gaps and adapting training to your lifestyle makes the difference between quick burnout and long-term success.

Key Insights

1. Spotting Weak Links
Sometimes progress stalls not because of effort, but because of gaps—too little sleep, missing nutrients, or training that doesn’t match your energy rhythm. For example, someone who always trains late at night but sleeps poorly may see slower recovery. Identifying where you’re lacking helps you fix the weakest link, not just work harder.

2. Lifestyle Shapes Training
Research shows that adherence—the ability to stick with a program—matters more than intensity in the long run1. If you dislike morning workouts but force them anyway, you’ll likely quit. The best plan is the one you’ll actually do. Lifestyle alignment increases consistency, which is the real driver of muscle progress.

3. Balance Over Perfection
Think of your training like a budget. If you overspend (overtrain) or underspend (skip workouts), the balance sheet shows it. But if you regularly invest what you can, even small amounts add up. Muscle gains compound just like savings. Missing one category—like skipping recovery or ignoring nutrition—creates debt your body must repay.

Metaphor Example:


Imagine your fitness routine as a three-legged stool: training, nutrition, and recovery. If one leg is shorter than the others, the stool wobbles. Strength comes not from making one leg taller, but from evening them out.

My Reflection

The most significant change I’ve made, aside from adding resistance training to my cardio routine, is increasing my protein intake throughout the day. My body is responding by gradually building muscle. I’ve noticed a pattern: I gain some muscle mass, drop a little weight, and overall, my body composition improves. The key difference is that I’m no longer losing weight too quickly. This morning, I was about 0.8 pounds lighter than when I started, and my muscle mass decreased by 0.2 pounds.

Another big improvement has been sleep quality. My sleep scores used to hover between 80 and 85, but now they range from 83 to 95. I’m getting longer REM cycles and deeper sleep, which I suspect comes not only from the added exercise but also from the mental demands of my daily research, coding, and writing.

Starting tomorrow, I plan to increase my HIIT (high-intensity interval training) sessions to twice a day and observe how it affects fat burning. I don’t yet know the right number of burpees per set, so I’ll begin with a 30-second-on/30-second-off approach and gradually increase the duration.

Ultimately, my goal is to “win the game”: to lose weight steadily while preserving—and ideally increasing—muscle mass. I’m especially focused on strengthening my legs, as building a solid foundation there supports both endurance and overall strength.

Biometric data

Change in Weight from Day 1: -0.8 lb.

Skeletal Muscle: 38.9%

Muscle Mass: 94.8lb.

Adjustment Ideas (Strategic adjustment)

  1. Diet: Identify one meal that could be more balanced (protein + carb + fat) and adjust it this week.
  2. Sleep: Set a consistent bedtime alarm—even 15 minutes earlier than usual—to improve recovery.
  3. Mindset: Shift focus from “ideal training” to “sustainable training”—ask daily: Does this routine fit my life today?

Note

  1. (PDF) The Pleasure and Displeasure People Feel When They Exercise at Different Intensities Decennial Update and Progress towards a Tripartite Rationale for Exercise Intensity Prescription,” ResearchGate, ahead of print, August 5, 2025, https://doi.org/10.2165/11590680-000000000-00000. ↩︎