Hey there. There is a quiet loop that so many people live in.
It sounds like this. I should have known better. I messed that up. If I had just started sooner. If I had just stayed consistent. If I had not quit.
Read MoreMost people know how to lose weight.
What they struggle with is keeping it off and building a lifestyle that supports their health for the long term. Diets often promise fast results, but they rarely help someone build a sustainable relationship with food, exercise, and themselves.
The Inside/Out Life approach focuses on something deeper. Instead of chasing external changes first, the goal is to build a healthier relationship with yourself so your actions naturally align with the life you want to live.
When the internal work comes first, habits become easier to maintain and progress becomes more sustainable.
This guide will walk you through the principles of the Inside/Out Life and how to build a forever active lifestyle step by step.
The inside/out approach focuses on developing a strong relationship with yourself first, rather than trying to fix everything externally.
Many fitness programs focus primarily on visible transformation. But changing your appearance alone does not automatically create confidence or self-acceptance. Without addressing internal beliefs and habits, the same frustrations can remain even after significant physical progress.
The Inside/Out Life shifts the focus toward:
self awareness
habit building
self acceptance
long term consistency
Fitness becomes a tool for personal growth rather than a measurement of self worth.
Diet culture often promises quick transformations. The problem is that most diets are built around restriction and short-term rules rather than sustainable habits.
Many people cycle through the same pattern:
Start a strict diet
Lose weight quickly
Feel overwhelmed or restricted
Return to old habits
Regain the weight
The Inside/Out Life approach breaks this cycle by focusing on building habits that can realistically continue for years, not weeks.
When your habits align with your preferences and values, consistency becomes far easier.
A lifestyle is not created through one big decision. It develops through repeated actions that gradually become part of everyday life.
The Your Level Fitness philosophy emphasizes building a foundation of small daily actions that reinforce long-term habits.
Examples include:
regular exercise that fits your schedule
journaling or reflection practices
gradual improvements in eating habits
consistent self awareness
Small actions repeated over time create lasting change.
One of the simplest ways to build consistency is through Minimum Daily Actions.
These are intentionally small actions designed to be achievable even on difficult days.
Examples may include:
exercising for 15 minutes
journaling for five minutes
preparing one balanced meal
spending time reflecting on your habits
The goal is not perfection. The goal is consistency.
When actions are small enough to complete regularly, they build momentum and confidence.
Consistency improves when actions are paired with reflection.
A weekly rhythm can help guide your progress:
Sunday — Plan
Look ahead at the upcoming week and set realistic goals.
Wednesday — Adjust
Check in on how the week is going and make adjustments if necessary.
Saturday — Reflect
Review what worked well and what needs improvement.
This rhythm helps you stay connected to your goals without becoming overwhelmed by perfectionism.
Food is one of the most common sources of stress during weight loss.
The Inside/Out Life approach encourages building an eating plan around your preferences rather than strict restrictions.
Key principles include:
focusing on consistency rather than perfection
gradually improving food quality
learning what works best for your body
allowing flexibility for foods you enjoy
No single meal determines your success. Long term patterns matter far more than individual choices.
Fitness should support your life, not dominate it.
Exercise can improve:
confidence
resilience
energy levels
mental clarity
But it should never become the sole source of self worth.
When fitness is treated as a tool rather than an identity, it becomes easier to maintain for the long term.
One of the most important aspects of the Inside/Out Life is learning to appreciate who you are throughout the process.
Many people delay self acceptance until they reach a certain weight or physical appearance.
The Inside/Out Life encourages appreciation at every stage.
This shift often leads to:
healthier decision making
less emotional pressure
greater long term consistency
When you respect yourself now, it becomes easier to take actions that support your future.
A forever active lifestyle means movement becomes a normal part of life rather than something temporary.
This does not require extreme workouts or rigid schedules.
Instead, it focuses on building a sustainable pattern of activity that fits your life.
Examples include:
walking regularly
strength training several times per week
stretching or mobility work
recreational activities you enjoy
The goal is to remain active for decades, not just during a short transformation phase.
Self awareness is one of the most powerful tools for long term change.
Practices that improve awareness include:
journaling
reflection
therapy or coaching
honest evaluation of habits
Understanding why you behave the way you do makes it easier to create meaningful change.
Building a lifestyle takes time.
There is no perfect starting point, and there is no need to rush the process.
Start where you are.
Focus on small actions you can repeat consistently.
Over time, these actions build the habits, confidence, and awareness needed to create a forever active lifestyle.
It means developing habits that support your health consistently rather than following temporary diets.
Yes. Long term weight maintenance becomes far easier when habits are aligned with your preferences and daily routine.
No. The approach focuses on the relationship between mindset, habits, and self awareness, with fitness serving as one tool within a broader lifestyle.
Hey there. There is a quiet loop that so many people live in.
It sounds like this. I should have known better. I messed that up. If I had just started sooner. If I had just stayed consistent. If I had not quit.
Read MoreHey there. For years, maybe decades, you have been aware of your body.
Aware of how it looks.
Aware of how it compares.
Aware of how it measures up to whatever standard was put in front of you.
Hey there. There is a version of you that you do not want to see.
The petty version. The defensive version. The bitter version. The one that knows better but still reacts anyway. The one that justifies the behavior because it protects the ego.
Read MoreHey there. Fear is one of the most misunderstood emotions in your life.
You feel it when you step on the scale. You feel it when you start a new program. You feel it when you consider changing careers, setting a boundary, or speaking up for yourself. You feel it when you look in the mirror and wonder if you will ever truly be comfortable in your own skin.
Read MoreHey there. For a long time I believed I was behind.
Behind in my career. Behind in business. Behind in life. And if I was behind, the only logical solution was to work harder than everyone else. Grind longer. Stay available. Push through exhaustion. Prove I was worth something.
Read MoreHey there. Most people on a long weight loss journey are not stuck because they do not know what to do. They are stuck because they have spent years believing they are not good enough yet. Not good enough until the scale changes. Not good enough until the mirror looks different. Not good enough until they finally feel confident.
Read MoreHey there. If you have been on a weight loss journey for years, there is a good chance you have replayed parts of your life in your head.
Read MoreHey there. You have likely experienced both kinds of people. The ones who are around you when things are going well. And the ones who are truly there for you when things feel heavy.
The distinction matters more than we often admit.
Read MoreHey there. At some point in your 30’s or 40’s, especially if you have been on a weight loss journey for years, you may look around and quietly think, this is not where I thought I would be.
Read MoreHey there. If you have been in the same place for a long time, it can start to feel permanent.
Not just physically, but mentally. Emotionally. You begin to believe that this is simply who you are. This is your ceiling. This is your reality. Whether it is your weight, your habits, your confidence, or your life situation, the longer something stays the same, the easier it is to believe it cannot change.
But your circumstance is not your identity.
Read MoreHey there. There is something powerful about the people who support you when you are struggling, not when you have already succeeded.
Anyone can celebrate you when the results are obvious. When the weight is off. When the confidence is visible. When the outcome matches what people expect success to look like. But the people who support you when you are still in the middle of the process, when you are still figuring things out, when the progress is quiet and internal, those people are rare.
Those people matter more than you realize.
Read MoreHey there. When we were younger, people used to ask us where we saw ourselves in five years. It was a standard question. It showed up in classrooms, job interviews, and casual conversations. Back then, it felt like something we were supposed to know. Like if we were thoughtful enough or disciplined enough, we could map out our future and simply follow that path.
Read MoreHey there. One of the biggest misconceptions in fitness, and in life, is that change has to begin with something dramatic.
Read MoreHey there. What is the biggest dream you have right now, and why have you not taken the first step toward it?
Not the practical version. Not the safe version. The real one.
Most people who have been on a weight loss journey for years do not struggle because they lack knowledge. You already know how to eat better. You already know how to move your body. You already know what consistency looks like. You have lived it. You have tried it. You have seen progress before.
Read MoreHey there. There is something that quietly shapes more decisions in your life than you probably realize. It is not your discipline. It is not your knowledge. It is not your plan.
It is their opinion.
Read MoreHey there. Obstacles are not a sign that something has gone wrong. They are a sign that something is happening.
Read MoreHey there. If you are going to obsess over anything, obsess over protecting your mind.
Not forcing it. Not draining it. Not pushing it to exhaustion in the name of discipline. Protecting it so it can actually support you.
Read MoreHey there. For most of my life, I thought fitness was something I had to fix.
Fix my weight. Fix my body. Fix how I looked compared to everyone else.
If you grew up in the 80’s or 90’s like I did, you probably remember being labeled early. Husky. Big boned. Out of shape. Different.
Read MoreHey there. If you have been trying to lose weight for years, maybe even decades, I want you to slow down for a second and really hear this. You are not behind. You are not broken. And you are definitely not bad at this. You are just tired. Tired of starting over. Tired of doing great for a few weeks, then feeling like you fell off. Tired of thinking the next plan is finally going to be the one that fixes everything. I talk to people every single week who feel like they have been on a weight loss journey their entire adult life. Mid 30s, 40s, 50s. They can list every diet they have tried. Keto, macros, Weight Watchers, paleo, fasting, challenges, cleanses, meal plans. They have done everything and somehow still feel like they are the problem. But here is the truth. You are not the problem. The approach is.
Read MoreHey there. If you are going to obsess over anything on your fitness or weight loss journey, obsess over your headspace.
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