How Executives and Working Professionals Can Stay Fit Through the Holidays (Without Missing the Party)
By Groundwork Athletics — Vancouver’s Movement Experts
The holidays are almost upon us, cue the collective panic. Between year-end deadlines, client dinners, holiday parties, and family travel, it’s easy to let fitness slide into “I’ll pick it back up in January.”
But for the executives and professionals we train at Groundwork Athletics, staying fit during the holiday season isn’t about perfection. It’s about having a simple, sustainable plan that preserves your energy, keeps your stress in check, and leaves you feeling good heading into the new year.
Here’s our suggestions on how to maintain your health—without sitting out the celebrations.
1. Keep the Workouts Short, Efficient, and Scheduled
Don’t rely on motivation—rely on structure.
During December, that means:
- Don’t have time for a 60-minute training session? Try 30 minutes instead.
- Prioritizing movement consistency over volume
- Scheduling training in the calendar just like any meeting
Short, intelligently designed strength sessions can maintain muscle mass, improve resilience, and drive the mental clarity needed to handle a high-demand month.
Pro Tip: For a quick but effective session, ask a GWA coach to build a customized “Holiday Express Workout” based on your goals.
2. Treat Movement as a Stress-Management Strategy (Not a Chore)
The holidays bring joy—but also stress.
Movement is one of the most potent tools for:
- Regulating cortisol
- Boosting mood
- Improving cognitive function
- Creating mental clarity for high-stakes decisions
We remind clients that exercise is not just about staying fit—it’s the ultimate longevity and mental-health drug.
3. Use Simple Nutrition Rules That Don’t Kill the Party
Executives who stay on track don’t skip parties or avoid festive foods—they simply anchor themselves with a few basics:
- Hydrate before and after events
- Load protein early in the day
- Avoid arriving to parties starving
- Mix alcohol with water
- Have a “go-to” morning reset routine (protein + greens + movement)
No restriction. No guilt. Just balance.
4. Work With Support—Not in Isolation
Groundwork Athletics clients succeed because they don’t leave their holiday fitness to chance.
A coach helps them:
- Plan a realistic holiday training schedule
- Keep workouts efficient and targeted
- Stay accountable during the busiest month of the year
- Maintain energy levels through movement, strength, and recovery strategies
You don’t need to white-knuckle your way through the season. You just need a plan—and someone in your corner.
5. Focus on Longevity, Not Damage Control
The holidays aren’t a problem to be solved.
They’re an opportunity to:
- Stay strong
- Support your mental health
- Build resilient habits
- Enter the new year already ahead
Small wins in December lead to major momentum in January.