

If you’ve ever felt like the moment the pumpkin spice latte drops, your fitness routine and mental clarity start to crumble, you’re not alone. The holiday season—with its endless social events, travel, pressure, and overall chaos—is famous for being the biggest saboteur of consistency.
You’re a smart, busy woman who is normally nailing her goals, so why does this time of year always feel like a battlefield for your wellness?
The lie we’ve been fed is that to maintain physical consistency and manage stress during the holidays, you need morewillpower and more time. I’m here to—thankfully—call BS.
The true enemy of your health goals isn’t the endless supply of delicious cookies; it’s the all-or-nothing thinking that takes over when your routine gets derailed.
When you get off track, one missed workout turns into three weeks of guilt—and eventually, the familiar promise: “I’ll start over in January.”
The game-changing shift you can expect to leave this blog with? Shifting your focus from perfection to self-trust—so you can feel strong, resilient, and actually enjoy the festive season by honoring your commitments, protecting your mental health, and doing it all with unshakable confidence.
Why “Busyness” Is the Biggest Holiday Lie
Let’s be direct: The feeling of being too busy to maintain consistency is usually a cover for a lack of structure.
Your calendar might be packed with shopping and family visits, but the real time-suck is often unmanaged stress and inefficient time use.
Every year, you swear up and down that you don’t have 30 minutes for a quick stress-relief walk or lifting session amid the holiday hoopla—yet you somehow spend 45 minutes scrolling through a cousin’s vacation photos, feeling low-key guilty about your own plans.
You do have the time. You just aren’t protecting it.
And even if you don’t have as much time as you normally would (for example, your typical workout is an hour, but you’re working with 20–30-minute chunks), you can still make it work.
Modify Your Goal, Don’t Ditch It
This is the most liberating shift you can make.
The reason you quit isn’t because you lack discipline—it’s because your ideal routine suddenly becomes impossible to fit into your holiday schedule. When the goal feels impossible, your brain says, “Forget it, I’ll just throw in the towel until January.”
Instead of aiming for all-or-nothing, apply this powerful principle: Mini-wins are the new consistency.
Instead of beating yourself up for skipping your 45-minute strength training session, modify the goal. Aim for a 15-minute sequence of lunges and push-ups in your sister’s basement—because that time counts.
Consistency is about showing up, not the intensity.
Can’t find time for a full journaling session? Great. Just commit to writing three bullet points of gratitude or mental clarity before you answer your kids’ hundred questions about when Santa is coming. That 90 seconds of focused intention is your mindset win for the day.
The 5-Minute Rule for Staying Grounded During the Holidays
When everything feels overwhelming—whether it’s packing, travel, or dealing with challenging relatives—your nervous system is probably running on fumes.
Your goal during chaos isn’t perfection. It’s regulation.
Focus on just five minutes of nervous system regulation each day. For example, schedule “5 minutes of deep belly breathing for stress management” in your car before you walk into that big office party. Literally put it in your calendar.
This small, intentional act builds self-trust (and helps you regulate pre-chaos). You prove to yourself, in the moment of highest pressure, that you can manage your internal state—and that ability is the foundation of unshakable confidence.
Mini-Holiday Wins, Compounded
The holiday season does not have to be a wipeout for your health goals.
By abandoning the toxic lie of all-or-nothing thinking, modifying your goals instead of ditching them, and prioritizing tiny self-care acts like mindful breathing for clarity, you build resilience that lasts far beyond January 1st.
You don’t need more time—you need more intentionality.
Protect your peace. Move your body. Build your confidence one tiny mini-win at a time.
Your Turn
What is one thing you can commit to doing for just five minutes during the holidays to protect your peace? — Alex