Fitness Myths, Busted
The fitness world of Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter (not calling it X) have a lot of helpful information we can use and apply to our health and fitness journey. However, it also has a lot of ideas that get repeated so often they start to sound like facts.
Over time these myths can make training feel more complicated than it needs to be. They create unnecessary pressure, confusion, or unrealistic expectations about what progress should look like.
So, without further ado, here are some of those repeated myths that we would love to see disappear once and for all!
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BIG ONES!
You have to be sore after every workout
Soreness often gets treated like a scoreboard for how good a workout was.
If you wake up the next day and everything hurts, people assume the workout worked. If you feel mostly fine, it can feel like you didn’t push hard enough. In reality, soreness usually comes from doing something new or increasing volume. Once your body adapts, you can have very productive workouts without feeling sore at all. Progress is much more about consistency than soreness.
You need to work out every day to see results
It’s easy to think more workouts automatically means more progress. For many adults, though, three to five well-paced workouts each week is plenty. The body actually adapts and improves during recovery, not during the workout.
Trying to train hard every single day often leads to fatigue, plateaus, or injury.
Lifting weights will make you bulky
This one has been around for decades and still shows up surprisingly often.
Building large amounts of muscle requires a lot of specific training, high food intake, and years of consistency. Most people lifting weights a few times per week will simply get stronger, move better, and build some muscle over time.
Strength training is one of the best tools for improving body composition and staying healthy long term.
Cardio is the only way to burn fat
Cardio is helpful for conditioning and overall health, but it’s not the only way people improve body composition.
Strength training builds muscle, improves metabolism, and helps maintain strength as people lose body fat. Nutrition habits also play a major role. Most successful long-term approaches include some combination of strength work, conditioning, and sustainable eating habits.
Scaling means you are doing the “easy” workout
Scaling is often misunderstood as a step backward.
In reality, scaling helps match the workout to the person. Adjusting weights, reps, or movement keeps the intended pace and stimulus of the workout intact. Done well, scaling often makes the workout more productive!
You have to feel motivated to train
Motivation gets talked about a lot in fitness, but the people who stay consistent rarely rely on motivation alone. They build routines. Some days workouts feel great, other days they don’t, but the habit of showing up keeps progress moving forward.
Motivation will come and go, but consistency is what actually builds results.
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QUICK ONES!
Myth: If you miss a week of workouts you lose all your progress
Reality: It takes several weeks of inactivity to lose meaningful fitness.
Myth: You should never train if you're tired
Reality: There’s a difference between exhausted and just not feeling motivated. Many workouts actually improve energy once you get moving.
Myth: The goal is to PR every workout
Reality: Most training days are practice days. PRs happen occasionally because of consistent work, not because every session should be max effort.
Myth: More sweat means a better workout
Reality: Sweat mostly reflects temperature, hydration, and genetics, not workout quality.
Myth: You have to fix everything before you start training
Reality: People sometimes think they need perfect mobility, perfect movement, or to “get in shape first.” Training itself is often what improves those things.
Myth: You need a perfect program to make progress
Reality: A decent program followed consistently will outperform a perfect program followed occasionally.
Myth: You should wait until you're in better shape to join a gym
Reality: Gyms exist to help people get into shape, not just maintain it.
Myth: If a workout feels hard, you're doing something wrong
Reality: Hard effort is part of adaptation. The goal is controlled difficulty, not avoiding discomfort entirely.
Myth: Progress should happen every week
Reality: Progress is about a general trend over months, but week to week it's rarely linear.
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Most fitness myths start with a small piece of truth but get exaggerated over time.
The basics still tend to matter most: consistent training, reasonable intensity, good recovery, and sustainable habits around food and sleep.
Did we miss any big ones?
Hart











