Why We Train
I’ve been thinking a lot about why I train. Not programs or numbers or outcomes, but the true reason behind it all.
Training, at its best, is preparation.
Lately, that’s been tested.
Life doesn’t move in a straight line. Plans change. Things you thought were stable aren’t. You end up dealing with situations you didn’t choose and wouldn’t have scheduled.
That’s when you find out what you’ve actually built.
Training is ultimately how you build the capacity to handle more than expected. How you deliberately expose yourself to difficulty so you’re not surprised by it later. How you stay capable — not just fit — as life gets harder and more complicated.
That’s what Train to Live means to me.
This will be a short weekly note on what training is actually building, where that work shows up outside the gym, and what I’m learning along the way — from training, from building, and from watching people who do this well over the long term.
Most of the benefits of training don’t reveal themselves when things are going smoothly. They show up late. Under pressure. When plans change or don’t go as expected.
That’s when you find out what you’ve really built.
If training doesn’t prepare you for life, it’s missing the point.

