Story time
So way back in 2016.
I started training early morning.
BEFORE my early morning clients.
I’d wake up at 3.40 am.
Get the 36 bus from Porchester Road in Bayswater to the gym in Mayfair.
There was one every 20 minutes.
So if I missed it, I wouldn’t have been able to get my full training hour in.
I never did miss, thankfully.
Tim Ferriss’ podcast blasting away in my headphones.
Open the gym up. Turn all the lights on.
Train myself for an hour from 4.30 - 5.30 am.
Then be showered, breakfasted & ready for my 6 am client.
Which was the start of a 13 session day.
And I did that for 2 solid years. 5-6 days a week.
And you know what?
I got SO much pushback from people about my new regime.
When I very first made the switch from regular PT afternoon training.
To before the crack of dawn training.
Some of the best ones:
“That’s not sustainable. I’d rather have the extra hours of sleep”
(kinda agree with that one, but at the time I didn’t have the luxury)
“How do you train fasted? I need at least 2 meals in me before I train”
(still strongly disagree with this one)
Or the very best one:
“Isn’t training that early in the morning bad for your heart…? Won’t you have a heart attack??”
(that genuinely was the first one I got)
I heard it all.
The last one being the most surprising one to hear.
Does anyone else believe that?!
Luckily I didn’t listen and went about my own business getting it all done.
And looking back on it.
Pretty glad I did.
But image if I had listened?
And taken on all that advice?
I was so busy at the time, training clients back to back all day.
That I wouldn’t have had any other time to train myself.
Apart from that 4.30 - 5.30 am slot.
So I wouldn’t have trained much myself in those 2 years.
>
A good example of not letting the excuses get to you, even when there are plenty there to choose from
Have a great Tuesday 👊
Harry







