Core Curriculum

Basics of Training

Everything you need to know about strength, cardio, nutrition, and fat loss.

Being fit and healthy can be hard. Knowing what to do shouldn’t be. These guides give you the clarity to train and eat with confidence.

We recommend you read each of the below in full - but here's a quick summary.

Strength Training

  • Strength training should be a non-negotiable in everyone's routine for preserving muscle mass and strength as we age, maintaining one's independence, reducing risk of osteoporosis and aiding in weight management.
  • Aim to train each muscle group twice a week.
  • What you do matters less than how you do it: Lift heavy and close to failure.
  • Chase stimulus, not fatigue. Muscle damage and pain are not the lead driver of muscle growth.
  • The purpose of training is to stimulate adaptation.
Learn More ↓

Cardiorespiratory Fitness

  • Cardio fitness (VO₂ max) is the greatest indicator for life expectancy.
  • Most of your cardio training should be easy and enjoyable.
  • Incorporate some high intensity cardio such as interval training once a week.
Learn More ↓

Nutrition

  • There is no perfect diet.
  • Prioritise a well-balanced and mainly whole food diet that's high in protein.
  • Carbs are not bad for you - they are your body's primary source of fuel for exercise.
Learn More ↓

Fat Loss

  • Start simple. Slow, sustainable results compound over time.
  • Muscle mass is your best friend for long-term weight management.
  • Ignore fad diets - they're all complete bullshit!
Learn More ↓

How to Get Started

  • Start simple - write down some easy goals and overachieve. Over time you can be more and more ambitious.
  • Improving diet: Start by paying attention to the foods you eat and what's in them. Look for simple swaps that are easy to make. Keep the changes small and manageable at first, once they become second nature, you can gradually build on them over time.
Learn More ↓
01

Strength Training & Muscle Mass

The Importance of Muscle Mass

Studies show a powerful connection between muscle mass, strength, and a longer life. While scientists debate the exact cause, the practical reality is undeniable:
More muscle equals a better quality of life.

As we age, strength training becomes our ultimate insurance policy to a longer, happier and healthier life.

Why You Need to Strength Train

  • Maintain Independence: Age-related muscle loss begins as early as 30, decreasing by 3–8% per decade and speeding up as we get older. Strength training slows this process, preventing frailty, falls, and a loss of independence.
  • Aids in weight management: While muscle only slightly increases your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR), it improves insulin sensitivity and supports an active lifestyle, making long-term weight management easier.
  • Protect Your Bones: Lifting weights is one of the most effective ways to prevent osteoporosis (loss of bone density) which is especially prevalent in women.
  • Protect Your Cardiorespiratory Fitness: Preserving muscle ensures you stay mobile enough to train your cardiorespiratory system - the single biggest indicator of lifespan.

The Core Philosophy: Chase Stimulus, Not Fatigue

When you exercise, your primary goal shouldn't just be to sweat, burn calories, or get tired. The ultimate goal of training is to stimulate adaptation.

Your body is incredibly smart, but it is also lazy - it will not build energy-costly muscle unless you give it an undeniable reason to. Training is simply the act of sending a clear message to your body that its current level of strength isn't enough, forcing it to adapt and grow stronger.

To get the best results, you must focus on chasing stimulus, not fatigue:

  • Chasing Stimulus (The Goal):
    Lift close to failure (the point where you couldn't possibly do another rep) to stimulate your body to adapt. Progressive overload from session to session in order to continue stimulating adaptation. Try to add 1 rep or a tiny bit of weight each session. (Note: you won't be able to do this every session, but it is always the goal.)
  • Chasing Fatigue (The Trap):
    This is the common mistake of thinking a workout is only successful if you leave the gym completely exhausted, destroyed, or unable to walk. Fatigue is just a byproduct of exercise - it is not proof of a good workout.

How to Strength Train

Fitness advice online can be incredibly confusing, filled with complicated training splits and "must-do" exercises. In reality, effective training is very simple if you just focus on a few key things.

  1. Frequency

    Aim to train each muscle group twice a week.
    This can easily be accomplished by two full body days. Sessions do not have to be long. Two 30-60 minute workouts focussing on compound movements (movements involving multiple muscles) is plenty.

  2. Intensity

    Train to or close to failure.

    Intensity is where most people go wrong. Workouts need to be genuinely challenging.

    Most people underestimate their capacity (e.g. stopping at 10 reps when they could actually do 15). Because of this, once technique is solid, occasionally take a safe set to true failure so you understand your limits.

    From there, most working sets should be within ~3 reps of failure.

    Building muscle is a costly process for the body, it doesn't want to do it. By training close to failure (and showing our bodies that we are currently incapable of completing the given task), you give it an undeniable reason to adapt.

    Muscular failure is the point where you physically cannot complete another rep with good form. It is not the "burn" from lighter endurance work (such as Pilates), and it is not simply choosing to stop early. It is the actual inability to continue even if you want to.

  3. Progressive Overload

    Train slightly harder each session.

    Progressive overload links closely with the above point on intensity. Progressive overload essentially means trying to train a little bit harder each session. This can be accomplished by trying to add weight, reps or sets.

    Progressive overload is key to ensuring intensity remains high, if training is effective what was hard at the start of the training block is likely not hard now.

  4. Technique

    Good technique reduces injury risk and ensures the target muscles are doing the work. If you're unsure, ask a personal trainer to check your form or use a reputable tutorial.

    Lift fast, lower under control. Perform the lifting phase with intent and control the lowering phase for at least 1 second (e.g. control the descent in a squat, then stand up quickly).

    Note: A deliberately slower lowering phase does not build more muscle than a normal, controlled lowering phase.

  5. Rep ranges and sets

    The number of repetitions you do of each exercise doesn't matter that much as long as you are pushing each set close to failure.

    Generally do between 5-12 reps for 1-3 sets. How many sets you do per muscle group per week will vary greatly depending on your training split.

  6. Rest

    Rest and recovery is key, in between sets take at least one minute rest. Listen to your body and rest as long as it needs. The more time between sets the better.

    Take at least one days rest between training each muscle group. During this time prioritise sleep and eating a protein rich diet.

    Note: when you first start training, your muscles will be very sore after working out, this is normal. Over time the feelings of fatigue will reduce.

Remember

Muscle damage/ muscle pain does not drive muscle growth. You do not need to be sore after a workout for it to be effective.

How to Make Strength Training Enjoyable

Enjoyment is the key to consistency. Strength training can feel pretty repetitive compared to other forms of activity, but there are plenty of ways to make it more fun:

  • Listen to music
  • Track your progress - it boosts motivation, you don't always realise the progress you're making and tracking helps you to progressive overload. Try an app like RepCount.
  • Have a "gym only" podcast or show that you watch/listen to while training. This way you look forward to going to the gym to watch that next episode.
  • Find a gym buddy - it's more fun and you'll keep each other accountable.
  • Create a positive routine around training - e.g. Maybe you don't like going to the gym but you do love reading in the coffee shop nearby. By combining these (Going to the cafe after your workout) you can create a positive training experience, and again you'll look forward to going to the gym.

I don't want to get bulky

A common myth is that strength training will make you bulky. In reality, building significant muscle takes years of consistent, intelligent training with a specific focus on muscle gain. It doesn't happen by accident. Most people who lift weights become leaner, stronger, and more defined, not overly muscular. Besides if you ever feel you're gaining too much muscle you can always just stop or switch to a lower rep more strength focussed training style.

02

Cardiorespiratory Fitness

VO₂ Max & Why It Matters

VO₂ max is the ultimate measure of your cardiorespiratory fitness. Simply put, your VO₂ max score indicates the maximum amount of oxygen your body can take in, transport, and utilize during exercise.

A good analogy for VO₂ max is your body’s engine size. It isn't just an elite fitness metric for athletes; it is the combined output of your lungs moving air, your heart pumping blood, and your muscles using that oxygen to make energy. If any of these systems begin to decline, your VO₂ max drops.

Because it measures your entire body’s systemic health, it is a staggering indicator of life expectancy:

  • The Ultimate Predictor: Large, long-term clinical studies show that your cardiorespiratory fitness is more predictive of how long you will live than traditional risk factors like smoking, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and type 2 diabetes combined.

Do I need to test my VO₂ max?

Absolutely not. While you can estimate it using a smartwatch or fitness tracker, you don't need a lab test to reap the benefits. The target isn't a specific number; the target is simply moving your current baseline upward.

How to Train
Your Cardiorespiratory System

Improving your heart and lung health comes down to consistency over perfection.

If you have any underlying medical or cardiac issues, consult a healthcare professional before beginning a rigorous exercise routine.

Find Cardio You Enjoy

Any form of activity can be used to improve your cardiorespiratory system. The key is to find something you enjoy so it doesn't feel like a chore. Dancing, hiking, playing tennis, cycling, swimming, or brisk walking are all great. Anything that elevates your heart rate for a sustained period of time works.

If you can’t find a sport or activity you love, build an entertaining environment around it. Watch your favorite TV show on a treadmill, save a specific highly engaging podcast exclusively for your walks, or recruit a friend so you have built-in accountability and social time.

Ditch the Zones: The Mostly Easy/Some Hard Rule

Fitness influencers love to overcomplicate cardio with phrases like the "fat-burning zone" or "Zone 2 cardio". While heart rate zones absolutely have a place in training athletes or those chasing a specific goal (e.g. Marathon Training), for the average person just looking to improve their overall health and longevity, these terms create unnecessary confusion. You can lose fat and will improve fitness across all intensities.

Instead of tracking complicated heart rate zones, simplify your training by structuring your week into a mostly easy/some hard intensity mix:

  • The Majority (Easy & Moderate Intensity): You can spend the majority of your cardio time here. Your heart rate should be elevated, but you should easily be able to maintain a conversation without gasping for breath (often called the "talk test"). This form of cardio provides immense health benefits without draining your daily energy. This "easy" cardio can be anything you like; running, walking, dancing, hiking, playing tennis, spin classes. If it elevates your heart rate, it works.
  • Some Hard (High-Intensity Intervals): Once or twice a week, include a brief session where you push hard enough to challenge your lungs, making holding a conversation impossible. This is the stimulus that forces your maximum engine size (VO₂ max) to expand.

How to Use High-Intensity Intervals

The most effective way to tackle that 20% high-intensity work is through interval training (alternating periods of hard work with periods of rest). Depending on your goals, you can tweak the length of your intervals to chase different adaptations:

  • Short Intervals (Under 2 Minutes): Pushing at maximum effort for short bursts primarily targets and improves your anaerobic (without oxygen) system - your power and sprint capacity, as well as your anaerobic tolerance.
  • Longer Intervals (2 to 5 Minutes): Sustaining a hard, near maximal effort for slightly longer blocks provides the absolute greatest stimulus for expanding your VO₂ max, stroke volume, cardiac output, and overall cardiovascular endurance.

Keeping it Simple

If you want to take your training to a higher level later on, you can design specific protocols for specific adaptations. But for the average person looking to live a long, healthy life: Master the mostly easy/some hard mix, find a type of movement you actually enjoy, and you have already won.

The Strength Connection

Strength

Preserves muscle and connective tissue, keeping your joints resilient and your body structurally capable of handling endurance work over time.

Cardio

Builds fitness - but strength maintains the framework that allows you to keep doing it safely and efficiently.

03

Nutrition

Practical Nutrition

Nutrition can seem complicated online. One person says carbs are evil, another says you need a dozen supplements, and someone else insists a single "cheat meal" will ruin your progress.

For most people, nutrition is much simpler.

You do not need a perfect diet. You need a diet that provides sufficient nutrients, supports your goals, and is realistic to follow consistently.

Essential Principles

  • Prioritize protein at every meal.
  • Eat plenty of fruits, vegetables, and high-fiber foods.
  • Aim for most of your diet to come from minimally processed foods.
  • Stay hydrated.
  • Consistency beats perfection.

The Basics

  1. Protein: The Priority

    Protein helps repair tissue, preserve muscle, support recovery, and keeps you feeling full.

    Aim for 1.5–2.2g of protein per kilogram of body weight daily.

    Good sources include:

    • Meat and poultry
    • Fish
    • Eggs
    • Dairy products
    • Tofu and soy products
    • Beans and legumes
  2. Carbohydrates: The Fuel

    Carbohydrates are your body's preferred fuel source, particularly during exercise.

    Simple (fast-digesting) carbs are best placed around training to support performance and recovery. Slower-digesting (complex) carbs are generally better outside of training windows, as they provide steadier energy, improve satiety, and reduce the likelihood of overeating.

    Complex (slow-digesting)

    • Oats
    • Potatoes
    • Whole grains (brown rice, quinoa)
    • Beans and legumes
    • Vegetables

    Simple (fast-digesting)

    • Fruit (bananas, berries)
    • White rice and bread
    • Honey
    • Sports drinks and juice


    Carbohydrates are not bad for you, and they do not inherently cause weight gain - excess calories do.

  3. Fats: The Support System

    Dietary fats support hormone production, brain function, and overall health.

    Example sources of fats:

    • Olive oil
    • Nuts and seeds
    • Avocados
    • Fatty fish


    While saturated fat is not universally harmful, most health organizations recommend keeping it below approximately 10% of total calorie intake.

    Industrial trans fats should be avoided whenever possible due to their well-established association with cardiovascular disease. WHO Guidelines

Build Better Plates

For most meals:

  • Include a source of protein.
  • Fill roughly half your plate with fruits and vegetables.
  • Include a carbohydrate source.
  • Add a source of healthy fat.

Aim for at least five portions of fruits and vegetables per day. WHO recommendations

Stay Hydrated

Hydration supports physical performance, recovery, and cognitive function.

A practical target is approximately 30–40ml of water per kilogram of body weight daily (2.8L for a 70kg person), with additional intake during exercise or hot weather.

Supplements

Supplements should supplement a good diet, not replace one.

  1. Creatine monohydrate (3–5g daily)

    One of the most extensively researched supplements available. Consistently shown to be safe and effective for improving strength, power output, training performance, and muscle growth. Emerging research also suggests benefits for cognitive function and healthy aging, making it one of the few supplements with strong scientific support. ISSN position on creatine

  2. Protein powder (if struggling to meet protein targets)

    Nothing magic, just a convenient source of protein. Whey protein is simply a byproduct of cheese and yogurt production that has been filtered and dried into a powder. It can be a useful tool for busy people or anyone struggling to hit their daily protein target.

Other supplements may have a role in supporting your health but remember, supplements are not necessary. They should support your diet, not make up for a bad one.

Make Healthy Eating Easy

The easiest way to improve nutrition is to make good choices convenient.

  • Keep fruit visible and accessible.
  • Stock frozen fruits and vegetables.
  • Batch-prep ingredients when possible.
  • Avoid keeping foods you regularly overeat within easy reach.

Remember

You do not need to eat perfectly. Focus on consistently getting the basics right and your health, body composition, and performance will improve over time.

04

Fat Loss Dynamics

Fat loss requires patience.
To lose weight you need a sustained calorie deficit (consuming slightly fewer calories than you burn). The mistake most people make is chasing speed; aggressive deficits destroy adherence, muscle, and energy.

The goal is fat loss, not weight loss. Aggressive dieting can slash muscle and energy, a small consistent deficit over time paired with strength training ensures you are losing fat and not muscle.

Track trends over weeks, not single days. Daily weight fluctuates with water, salt, sleep, stress, your menstrual cycle, and many other factors.

Essential Principles

  • Create a gentle calorie deficit - small enough to sustain for months.
  • Aim for slow trends (roughly 0.25–1% body weight per week for most people).
  • Keep protein high and keep lifting - muscle is the asset you are protecting.
  • Use your weight as guidance - not a goal!

Understanding Bodyweight

Tracking your bodyweight can be a useful guide and monitor of progress, but it is not the be all and end all.

The goal is fat loss, not weight loss.

Be aware of how bodyweight fluctuates - always try to weigh yourself at the same time of day, under the same conditions. Ideally, first thing in the morning after going to the bathroom.

Women should be especially aware of how bodyweight shifts throughout your cycle. If you are monitoring weight, compare against your average at this phase of your last cycle.

How to Start Your Fat Loss Journey

  • Step 1) Focus on your training - Try to strength train 2x/week and incorporate some cardio as described above. Add easy movement to your daily life (e.g. Walk to work instead of driving) small efforts compound.
  • Step 2) Awareness - become aware of what you are eating; the ingredients and nutrients in them.
  • Step 3) Easy Swaps - See where you can seamlessly swap in healthier options.
  • Step 4) Progress as needed - Once you have the basics nailed, you are training consistently, and you are eating healthy, you can start to monitor your body weight and reduce your calorie intake if needed.

Building Your Deficit

  • Start with food: Reduce portions slightly, swap out calorie-dense extras, or structure meals. Don't slash everything at once, start simple!
  • Add movement: Extra steps or cardio can help, but diet does most of the work; you can't out-train a poor diet.
  • Diet breaks & maintenance: Planned higher-calorie (maintainance) weeks can improve adherence and hormones on long cuts, these can be mapped to your calendar.

Spot Reducing Fat Loss

You cannot choose where your body loses fat. Doing endless crunches will not burn belly fat, and leg exercises will not strip fat from your thighs - your body pulls from fat stores systemically based on genetics and hormones, not based on which muscles you train.

Training specific areas still matters: it builds muscle in those regions, which improves shape and definition as overall body fat drops. But the fat itself comes off through a sustained calorie deficit - not through targeted exercises, wraps, creams, or gadgets that claim to melt fat in one spot.

What to Ignore

  • Crash diets and "metabolism hacks".
  • viewing weigh-ins as pass/fail, look at rolling averages, not individual readings.
  • Cutting carbs or fats entirely.

Key Point

Ignore all fad diets or products claiming to make you lose fat - it's all complete bullshit.

05

How to Start

Start Easy. Overachieve Later.

The number one reason people fail isn't a lack of willpower - it's an excess of ambition. They try to overhaul their entire life overnight, burn out within a fortnight, and quit.

If you want real, lifelong results, you need to lower the barrier to entry. Make a simple plan, write it down, set baseline goals that feel almost too easy, commit to them, and then work to overachieve on them over time.

Phase 1: Small Nutrition Tweaks

Don't completely clear out your fridge or start an aggressive, miserable diet. Instead, focus on awareness and seamless swaps.

  • Build Food Awareness: Before changing how much you eat, simply start paying attention to what you are eating and the ingredients inside them.
  • Simple Swaps: Look for effortless substitutions that save hundreds of calories without altering your daily habits. Examples: Swap regular mayonnaise for a low-calorie version, or find healthier snack alternatives to keep at your desk.
  • Crowd, Don't Restrict: To begin, focus on adding a single healthy element to your day (like an extra glass of water or a source of protein) rather than aggressively stripping away the foods you enjoy.

Phase 2:
Set yourself up for success

When it comes to the gym, consistency beats ambition. Setting realistic expectations gives you the chance to build confidence and create a routine you can actually stick to. Every time you meet or exceed your goal, you reinforce the identity of someone who follows through.

  • The Lower-Baseline Hack: If you think you can realistically handle three or four gym sessions a week, start with two.
  • Prove Consistency First: Commit to those two days strictly for six weeks. If you find yourself naturally squeezing in a third session because you have the energy, you are now overachieving.
  • Build Momentum: It is infinitely better for your long-term consistency to set a low bar and smash past it every week than to set a high bar and constantly fall short.

Phase 3: Progress

When the changes you made in Phases 1 and 2 become second nature, it's time to gradually progress. Continue making small, manageable changes, but now you're building from a much stronger foundation.

The big results you're chasing aren't the product of dramatic changes, but of small, consistent improvements repeated week after week.

06

Your Built By Basics Blueprint

Below is some practical recommendations to help you get started. These are the key takeaways from what is discuessed above, overtime you should aim to check all these boxes each week.
Following the practical recommendations is a guide on how to slowly add these into your life.
Remember, Start Slow! Consistency is key!

Practical Recommendations

Everything above, distilled into what to actually do. Don't take it all on at once, build up step by step.

  1. Strength

    • Strength train 2+ times per week. Two full-body sessions (30-60 minutes) is enough to hit every muscle group twice.
    • Train close to failure. Chase stimulus, not fatigue - soreness is not proof of a good workout.
    • Progress slightly each session - when you can add a rep or a little weight.
  2. Cardio

    • Do easy cardio as much as you like - the more, the better. Walk, hike, cycle, dance - if it elevates your heart rate, it counts.
    • Incorporate high-intensity cardio 1+ time per week. A brief session where conversation becomes impossible is enough. Consider intervals as described above.
    • Pick activities you actually enjoy - consistency matters more than the specific sport.
  3. Nutrition

    • Prioritise protein at every meal and aim for a mostly whole-food diet.
    • Start with awareness and simple swaps - don't overhaul everything at once.
    • Consistency beats perfection. There is no perfect diet - you need one you can stick to.
  4. Fat Loss

    • Nail training and nutrition basics first - This is the foundation upon which everything else is built.
    • When ready: a gentle calorie deficit, keep protein high, and keep lifting to protect muscle.
    • Ignore fad diets. Slow, sustainable results compound over time.

Step by Step

Don't try to do everything at once. Each week, pick one goal in nutrition, strength, and cardio - write them down, follow through, and only level up once the current step feels natural/manageable.

Step One: Set Your Baseline

Pick one nutrition goal, one strength training goal, and one cardio goal for the week. Write them down.

Nutrition

Ensure my breakfast every day has a protein source.

Strength

Do a 30-minute strength session.

Cardio

Play tennis for 45 minutes with Bob.

Step Two: Progress

Once Step One feels natural, raise the bar slightly - one small upgrade in each area.

Nutrition

Become more aware of the calories and macronutrients in my three main meals.

Strength

Do two 30-minute strength sessions this week.

Cardio

Do one moderate/high intensity cardio workout.

Step Three: Build the Habit

Continue building upon previous steps.

Nutrition

Make one or two simple food swaps (e.g. lower-calorie mayo, healthier snacks) and keep protein at every meal.

Strength

Train twice a week and push each set close to failure - try to add a rep or a little weight when you can.

Cardio

Do easy cardio as often as you like, plus one high-intensity interval session this week.

Step... Continue making small incremental improvements

Planning Your Week

Write your plan down every week - that's how you stay consistent.

  1. A) Non-negotiables

    The floor - what you commit to no matter how chaotic the week gets. The primary purpose is to protect the habit.

    Example: I will go to the gym and do at least 5 minutes of strength training twice this week. Even on days you don't feel like it, show up, do one set, and leave. The habit stays intact.

  2. B) Standards

    What you aim for on a normal week - your realistic standard when life is running smoothly.

    Example: I will do two 45-minute strength training workouts this week.

  3. C) Goals

    Where you push the boat out and try to improve on past weeks.

    Example: I will try to fit in an extra cardio session this week - but if I don't have time, it was still a successful week.

Nail the basics and you'll make incredible progress on your own. If you want a system tailored to your schedule and lifestyle, get in touch below and we can discuss how I can help.

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