Tag: health hack

  • It Wasn’t Motivation. It Was the Environment.

    He thought he was the problem.

    Busy job. High stress. Long days. By the time evening rolled around, the plan to walk, lift, or wind down early had already lost.

    Not because he didn’t care.
    Not because he wasn’t trying.
    But because it felt… hard. Most days.

    We set a simple baseline: walk daily, lift twice per week, and protect sleep. Nothing extreme. Nothing unrealistic.

    And yet, consistency was spotty.

    Then he went on vacation.

    No structured plan. No coaching cues. No accountability.

    And somehow, things shifted.

    He averaged 10,000–12,000 steps per day. He felt more energized. Sleep came easier. Movement wasn’t something he had to force—it just happened.

    Same person. Same body.

    Different environment.

    When he got home, things felt different again. Not necessarily a full regression, not a collapse of habits—but the same ease wasn’t there. Some days were harder. He was also coming off being sick, and his normal routine hadn’t quite settled back in yet.

    That’s when it clicked:

    The issue wasn’t discipline. It was context.


    The Lie We Tell Ourselves About Motivation

    Most people explain inconsistency the same way:

    “I just need to be more motivated.”
    “I need to be more disciplined.”
    “I need to want it more.”

    That sounds logical. It’s also usually wrong.

    Motivation isn’t a stable resource—it fluctuates. And more importantly, it’s heavily influenced by your environment.

    When things feel easy, we credit motivation. When things feel hard, we blame ourselves.

    But you’re not operating in a vacuum. You’re operating inside a system. And that system is either helping you or quietly working against you.


    Stress Changes the Game

    When that client was on vacation, his stress dropped.

    That alone changes everything.

    Lower stress means lower cognitive load. Lower cognitive load means more available capacity.

    And capacity is what drives behavior.

    Back home, the primary stressor waiting for him was his job. And when that stress ramps up, even simple habits can start to feel heavier than they should.

    By the end of the day, asking yourself to “just go for a walk” isn’t always simple. It can feel like one more thing in a day that’s already taken a lot out of you.

    Behavior change doesn’t happen in isolation. It happens within your available bandwidth.

    And stress shrinks that bandwidth fast.


    Behavior Is a Product of Environment

    Here’s the shift most people need:

    Behavior isn’t just a reflection of who you are. It’s a reflection of where you are.

    On vacation, movement was built into the day. The environment invited it. There were fewer competing demands, and decisions were simpler.

    At home, movement required more intention. Time felt tighter. Stress competed for attention. And every habit required a bit more effort to initiate.

    Same person. Different inputs.

    Different outputs.

    That’s not a character flaw. That’s environmental influence.


    Why “Trying Harder” Fails

    When people notice inconsistency, their first instinct is to push harder—more rules, more pressure, more expectations.

    But effort doesn’t scale well under stress.

    If your environment is already creating friction, trying harder just means you’re fighting upstream every day. And eventually, that gets exhausting.

    Not because you’re weak. Because the system is working against you.

    You can’t outwork a poorly designed environment forever.


    Make the Environment Do the Heavy Lifting

    If behavior is influenced by environment, then the goal isn’t to become more disciplined.

    It’s to make the desired behavior easier to execute.

    Less friction. More default.

    Here’s what that looks like in practice:

    1. Reduce Friction Wherever Possible

    The harder something is to start, the less likely you are to do it. So lower the barrier.

    Lay out your workout clothes ahead of time. Choose routes that naturally increase your steps, like parking a little farther away or building in short walking loops. Make sure to keep healthy snacks on hand so better choices are the easy choices.

    Don’t rely on energy you may not have at the end of the day.

    Make the first step obvious and easy.


    2. Build Defaults Into Your Day

    On vacation, movement wasn’t optional—it just happened.

    You can replicate that in small ways.

    Take calls while walking. Add a short walk after dinner. Attach movement to something you already do daily.

    Defaults remove decision-making, and decisions are expensive under stress.

    If you have to decide every time, you’ve already made it harder than it needs to be.


    3. Simplify the Plan

    Complex plans tend to fall apart in complex lives.

    When stress is high, your plan needs to get simpler—not more detailed.

    Instead of setting a rigid expectation like going to the gym four days a week for an hour, zoom out. Focus on moving your body for 10–20 minutes, no matter what that looks like.

    Consistency comes from sustainability.

    Win the day with something you can always do.


    4. Design for Your Worst Days

    Most people build plans around their best days.

    That’s a mistake.

    You need a version of your habits that works when you’re tired, when work is stressful, and when time is limited. Because those days aren’t rare—they’re part of real life.

    If your plan only works when life is easy, it’s not a good plan.


    5. Remove Unnecessary Decisions

    Every extra decision is another opportunity to opt out.

    Pre-plan meals when you can. Set consistent windows for movement. Create simple, repeatable routines.

    The goal isn’t rigidity—it’s reducing mental load.

    Clarity beats motivation. Every time.


    Reframing Consistency

    This is the part most people need to hear:

    Inconsistency is rarely a character issue. It’s usually a systems issue.

    When your environment supports the behavior, consistency feels natural.

    When it doesn’t, everything feels like a grind.

    That doesn’t mean you’re broken. It means your setup needs attention.


    A Better Question to Ask

    Instead of asking, “Why can’t I stay consistent?” try asking:

    “What about my environment is making this harder than it needs to be?”

    That question shifts the focus from self-blame to problem-solving.

    And that’s where real change starts.


    The Takeaway

    You don’t need more motivation. You need a better setup.

    Make it easier to succeed. Make it harder to drift. Let your environment carry more of the weight.

    Because when the system is right, consistency stops feeling like a fight—and starts feeling like something that just fits into your life.

  • Welcome to Real life: The origin story of Better health

    Hi, I’m Kyri Jones.

    And like a lot of people I work with today, I didn’t start in a good place with my health.

    In my late teens and early adulthood, I struggled with my weight. When I tried to enlist in the U.S. Army, I was classified as obese—33% body fat—and told to come back after I got it under control. I wanted to change, but I had no real understanding of how.

    So I did what most people do.

    I chased trends.
    I bought supplements.
    I followed whatever advice was loudest at the time.

    And I ended up swinging from one extreme to another—overweight to underweight. At one point, I looked and felt worse than when I started.

    That’s when it clicked:
    The problem wasn’t just what I was doing—it was how I understood health in the first place.


    A Different Approach to Health

    In 2018, I decided to take a different path.

    I invested in learning—earning my certification as a personal trainer through the American Council on Exercise (ACE), and later adding specialties in fitness nutrition, functional training, and sleep and recovery coaching.

    But more importantly, I kept going beyond certifications.

    I spent time studying physiology, diving into research, and learning from experts like Dr. Matthew Walker on sleep, Dr. Robert Sapolsky on stress, and evidence-based approaches to nutrition and long-term health.

    Because I didn’t just want better health habits—I wanted to understand why it works.

    And over time, things started to change.

    Not through extremes.
    Not through hacks.
    But through small, consistent habits that actually fit into real life.


    Why This Exists

    Fast forward to today—after military service, deployments, building a family, and stepping into life as a stay-at-home parent—and I kept noticing something:

    The same problems are still everywhere.

    People are overwhelmed.
    They’re exhausted.
    They’ve tried everything—and nothing sticks.

    And every day, they’re being sold quick fixes instead of being taught how to build something that lasts.

    That’s where this comes in.


    Who This Is For

    This is for the people who don’t have perfect schedules.

    Busy parents.
    Working professionals.
    People trying to juggle responsibilities while running on low energy and low time.

    It’s for the ones who:

    • Struggle with consistency
    • Feel stuck with their weight or energy
    • Know they need to make a change, but don’t know where to start

    And maybe most importantly—it’s for people who are tired of starting over.


    What I Believe

    I don’t believe in extreme diets.
    I don’t believe in shortcuts or “hacks.”
    And I don’t believe in one-size-fits-all solutions.

    Health isn’t something you force—it’s something you build.

    Small habits. Big change.
    Build health that lasts.

    My approach is simple: meet you where you are, help you build momentum, and guide you step-by-step until you don’t need me anymore.

    Because the goal isn’t dependence—it’s independence.


    If You’re Here

    You don’t need to overhaul your entire life overnight.

    You don’t need more noise, more pressure, or another plan you can’t stick to.

    You need a way forward to better health habits that actually work in the life you’re living right now.

    That’s what this is about.

    If that’s what you’ve been looking for—stick around.