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Spring clean your fitness routine and boost motivation

Sunday People

|

March 01, 2026

Don't fret if your new year's fitness goals seem to be slipping out of reach. Experts reckon March is when even the most driven among us hit a wall. Sports nutrition specialist MIKE O'LEARY shares his tips on how to get your focus back...

Whether you're building muscle, boosting cardio or trying to shift a few pounds, March is a common time of year to feel like fitness progress has slowed.

The motivation spike of the new year has settled, fatigue has caught up and visible changes naturally begin to level out. In January, you're more consistent, more focused, and often making simple but impactful changes like eating better or exercising regularly for the first time in months. Those early gains are absolutely real, but they're partly due to your nervous system adapting quickly.

When you start training, your body rapidly becomes more coordinated and efficient at performing movements. That means you can lift heavier weights or feel stronger before you've actually built a significant amount of new muscle.

By March, your body has moved past the early “quick wins” stage and into a more steady, long-term phase of progress. In the beginning, improvements happen fast because everything is new. But once your body adapts, results naturally come more gradually.

Not knowing this, however, can leave you feeling demotivated and wondering where to turn, but the key thing to understand is that this is normal. Here are five reasons progress often slows and what you can do about it:

MUSCLE FATIGUE MASKING FITNESS

After eight to 12 weeks of consistent training, the body can accumulate residual fatigue. Even if you feel mentally motivated, your nervous system and muscles may not be fully recovering between sessions. When recovery lags behind, performance can feel flat and weights that once moved easily may feel heavier.

Sessions feel tougher despite there being no obvious reason for them to do so, and this can be confusing.

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