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Health and Fitness

Try Everything, Trust Yourself: Exercise, Nutrition, Recovery, and Practical Examples on How to Expe

Asma Kassam Darpan, 21 May, 2026
  • Try Everything, Trust Yourself: Exercise, Nutrition, Recovery, and Practical Examples on How to Expe

As a kinesiologist and personal trainer of 15 years, fitness isn’t as simple as it used to be. 

We have a large variety of options for exercise, multiple opinions about which option is best, and our own lived experience to consider. The terms ‘decision fatigue’ and ‘procrastination’ are real for so many, so let’s dive in, clear some of the noise, and finish with a sense of easy empowerment.

   
 
When decisions feel big, require us to extend ourselves, and come with no real guarantee, they are subconsciously put off. Somewhere deep down, we know that big, all-or-nothing commitments are not the solution to true wellness. Wellness and progress are a sum of small, consistent daily actions. Fitness and feeling well are gradual adaptation processes. We need to find intensities that don’t drain our energy, and routines that align mentally - perhaps even with a sense of community. 


 
Exercise 

When we consider exercise, instead of feeling the need to over-commit in order to see results, approach it with a mindset of wellness and curiosity. No lofty goals - rather, a mini experiment that has some built-in structure. Maybe a personal trainer you know is offering a 6-week program, or a fitness studio nearby has a class package that suits you, or there’s a community office run/walk club. I have a client attending her local community center. She enjoys the social aspect and continues to renew her class pack. The nervous system loves a plan. Let the environment carry the habit until it becomes your own. Making smaller commitments with set times and clear end or expiry dates proves effective. Show up, check the box, and fuel your dopamine reward loop. Everything you do adds to the equation.

Nutrition 

Next up, nutrition. This is admittedly a complex conversation, so let’s break it down into two effective ways to take your dietary habits up a notch without overhauling. The same principles of bite-sized timeframes are especially relevant here. In fact, timeframes and structure are often why people gravitate toward protocols like intermittent fasting. There is minimal room to deviate. 
 
However, some research has shown counterproductive effects of dieting, such as metabolic fatigue, nutrient depletion, muscle loss, and disordered eating disguised as health. 

Rather than full overhauls, the most practical place to start is stabilizing blood sugar. Eating every 3–4 hours is a simple and effective rule of thumb. Balanced blood sugar results in more sustained energy, fewer crashes and cravings, improved fat burning, and hormone balance as insulin and cortisol become regulated. Identify the single meal you struggle with—the one you tend to miss, rush through, or default to convenience, and begin experimenting on how you can improve it. Again, no lofty goals, just know the benefits of balancing your blood sugar, and reap big rewards. Be willing to invest either time or money, or both. And always remember to set a time frame so your brain has a plan it can digest (pun intended). 


 
Recovery

Now to the part that should feel restorative yet often falls to the bottom of the list. Self-care used to mean booking a massage, having a bath, or carving out quiet time. In the longevity era we are in, there is red light therapy, ice baths, infrared saunas, breathwork, sound healing, laughing yoga, and even injectables are being used for wellness and injury management.   

While recovery rituals can reinforce a sense of self-nurture, and I do recommend trying practices like breathwork or sauna, we must also create consistent time where we are inputting energy, not constantly outputting it. Sometimes, a simple stress-free walk in nature can recharge your cells. Remember to stop, close your eyes, smell the trees, and take in the fresh British Columbia air.

When all else goes out the window, at the end of the day, we have access to the most restorative modality of all: sleep. Sleep is when our body cleanses, detoxifies, regenerates, and repairs. Personally, as a business owner for most of my life, I saw an immediate correlation between my health and fitness and lack of sleep. Deep breathing throughout the day was the greatest protocol I ever adopted and encourage everyone to do. I protect my sleep routine so I can live aligned with my purpose of helping others. First, a cup of herbal tea, a homemade cookie or two, magnesium glycinate, followed by teeth brushing and moisturizing routine. Feel free to borrow, experiment, and find your flow.  

In closing, while we are fortunate to have many options available, the pressure to choose the right routine can feel overwhelming. Clarity isn’t something we find by thinking harder or researching longer. It’s something we build by engaging, experimenting, and paying attention to what feels supportive, what feels draining, and what you’re more likely to return to. 

Not every attempt will be perfect, and not every routine will stick. Trust your intuition, invest a little bit of time and energy, and remind yourself that health is a journey. 

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