Staying Active This Winter: Tips to Beat the Cold

We know it sounds crazy when it's almost 90 degrees in October, but winter is coming...

Picture this: the alarm goes off, it’s still pitch black outside, and your blanket has formed a loving cocoon around you like it never wants to let you go. Outside, the air bites harder than a jealous ex. Inside, your motivation is buried under layers of sweaters and excuses.

Welcome to winter training season.

Most people hibernate when the temps drop. But the truth is, staying active in winter isn’t just about keeping your six-pack visible under that puffy coat, it’s about protecting your mood, your momentum, and your future springtime self who will thank you for not backsliding into couch-potato mode.

Let’s dig into why winter workouts matter, and how to outsmart the season.

Why Winter Feels Like a Motivation Graveyard

There are two big culprits that make fitness in the cold months harder than burpees after pizza:

- Dark mornings and long nights. With less sunlight, your serotonin (the “feel-good” brain chemical) takes a nosedive. Translation: your motivation and mood crash like a sled without brakes.

- The sneaky loss of momentum. You worked hard all year. But if you ghost your workouts for two or three months, your strength and endurance will drop faster than the temperature outside.

The good news? You don’t need superhuman discipline. You just need a plan that makes winter your ally instead of your enemy.

Strategy 1: Lower the Bar (On Purpose)

Winter workouts aren’t about chasing lifetime PRs. They’re about keeping the flame alive when it’s tempting to go dark.

Instead of demanding perfection, build “minimum standard workouts.” These are short, simple sessions you can do no matter what:

- 20 minutes of bodyweight moves at home.

- A quick barbell complex in the garage.

- Even a brisk walk that makes your cheeks feel like popsicles.

The point isn’t to conquer the mountain every day, it’s to keep climbing, one step at a time.

Strategy 2: Warm Up Like a Pro

One of the most common excuses I hear is, “I just can’t get moving when it’s that cold.” Fair. (Especially in a warehouse or garage gym) But here’s the truth: once your blood starts flowing, you’ll feel like a furnace on wheels.

Try this 5-minute warm-up hack before any winter workout:

- 30 seconds of jumping jacks

- 30 seconds of air squats

- 30 seconds of high knees

- Repeat 3 times

By the end, you’ll feel like you’ve shed three layers without touching the thermostat. Bonus: your joints and muscles will be ready for action, lowering your risk of injury.

Strategy 3: Trick Your Brain With Rewards

Humans are basically sophisticated dogs—we respond to rewards. Use that to your advantage:

- Pair workouts with something cozy, like a hot shower or your favorite coffee afterward.

- Save your best podcast for gym time only.

- Schedule a workout date with a friend so you’re accountable (and less likely to bail).

When you connect sweat with something enjoyable, your brain stops fighting you and starts begging for the routine.

Strategy 4: Reframe Your Goal

Instead of obsessing over aesthetics (which are under layers of hoodies anyway), focus on winter as the maintenance season.

Think of it like putting your fitness into “survival mode”:

- Maintain strength with 2–3 lifting sessions a week.

- Keep cardio conditioning sharp with short, intense bursts.

- Avoid slipping backward, so spring training feels like building, not starting over.

In other words, winter isn’t a setback. It’s the preseason for the best version of you.

The Bottom Line: Momentum Beats Hibernation

You don’t need to love winter training. You don’t even need to thrive in it. You just need to keep the engine running.

- Stay consistent with small, manageable workouts.

- Use warm-up hacks to conquer the cold.

- Bribe yourself shamelessly with cozy rewards.

- Remember: this is about maintenance, not perfection.

One Final Tip

Commit to a “never miss twice” rule.  If you skip a workout (life happens), just don’t skip the next one. Momentum is fragile, but once you’ve got it, it’s unstoppable.

So this winter, when the blanket cocoon begs you to stay, remind yourself: hibernation is for bears. You? You’re building strength, grit, and a story your spring self will brag about.

~Coach Christie