The Supplements I Take Every Day (And Why I’m Not Here To Hype Them)

The Supplements I Take Every Day (And Why I’m Not Here To Hype Them)

Coach JP shares the daily supplements he personally uses and why, including protein powder, creatine, omega-3s, vitamins D3, K2 and C, ZMA, and NAC. A clear, non-prescriptive look at performance, recovery, inflammation, sleep, and long-term health, plus what he avoids and why.

What Counts as 'Hard Work'? (Hint: It’s Not Just Sweating and Suffering)

What Counts as 'Hard Work'? (Hint: It’s Not Just Sweating and Suffering)

Hard work in fitness is not just sweating and suffering. Real progress comes from training with intent, sticking with the basics long enough to adapt, prioritising recovery, and having the discipline to hold back when needed. Here is how to tell the difference between feeling tired and getting better.

Always Ready: Building for the Long Run in 2026

Always Ready: Building for the Long Run in 2026

Always Ready is a long-term training project about building durability, balance, and real-world capability. This opening article explores why I’m shifting away from specialisation, what this year’s events demand, and how plans start changing as soon as real life shows up.

When The Work Feels Pointless (And Why You Keep Going Anyway)

When The Work Feels Pointless (And Why You Keep Going Anyway)

When progress feels invisible, doubt gets loud. Coach JP shares what it is like to keep showing up in training, nutrition, and business when results are slow, feedback is missing, and quitting would be easier. A grounded look at integrity, patience, and staying the course without pretending it is fun.

Accountability Changes Everything (When It’s Done Right)

Accountability Changes Everything (When It’s Done Right)

Hard work is not the issue, consistency is. This article explains why accountability works best when it is supportive and peer-based, how small group training reduces decision fatigue, and why community and structure help people stick with training long enough to see real results.

You Are Not Broken (Even If It Feels Like It Right Now)

You Are Not Broken (Even If It Feels Like It Right Now)

Struggling to stay consistent with health or fitness? You’re not broken, you’re stuck in patterns that don’t hold up under real life. This practical post explains why extreme approaches fail and how structure, not willpower, supports sustainable change.

Eating for Consistency, Not Perfection

In January, it is easy to tighten rules, skip meals, and overcorrect after normal life meals. This article brings things back to centre with a simpler approach: steady meal rhythm, protein and veg as anchors, and fewer emotional reactions to food. Sustainable eating is often unremarkable, and that is the point.

Why Boring Training Is Usually the Most Effective

Why Boring Training Is Usually the Most Effective

Boring training is often the training that works. Learn why simple, repeatable workouts build strength, muscle, and confidence faster than constant novelty, how to spot the difference between boredom and a plateau, and how to stay consistent long enough for progress to compound.

You’re Not Falling Behind. You’re Right Where This Gets Real.

Mid-January is where progress often starts to feel slower and quieter, and where most people start doubting themselves. This article reframes that phase as the part that matters most, showing why consistency beats motivation, why habits form in the middle, and how to keep showing up without needing perfection.

Why Diets Fail, but Skills Stick

Why Diets Fail, but Skills Stick

Most diets fail because they rely on rules instead of skills. Learn the practical habits that make fat loss sustainable, including how to handle real life, build confidence through repetition, and practise maintenance so you stop guessing and start eating with consistency.

That Moment When January Starts to Wobble

That Moment When January Starts to Wobble

By mid January, the plan that looked great on paper starts colliding with real life. This article shows how to scale back without quitting, build confidence through repeatable training, and stay consistent long after the gyms empty out.

Motivation Is a Spark, Not the Engine (And Here’s What Really Drives Progress)

Motivation Is a Spark, Not the Engine (And Here’s What Really Drives Progress)

Motivation is a spark, not the engine. Discover how small habits, adaptable systems, and steady action drive real progress—especially when motivation fades.

Eat Like You Train, Not Like You’re Dieting

Eat Like You Train, Not Like You’re Dieting

A calmer way to eat in January, without swinging between restriction and chaos. Learn how training-minded eating builds consistency through regular meals, protein as an anchor, and simple, repeatable choices that support recovery, performance, and real life.

Consistency Beats Intensity Every January

Consistency Beats Intensity Every January

January motivation is high, but intensity first is fragile. Learn how to start training and habits in a way you can repeat, avoid burnout, and build momentum that still holds when life gets messy later in the month.

Why This Time Can Be Different (If You Let It Be)

Why This Time Can Be Different (If You Let It Be)

January fails for most people because they repeat the same urgent, all-or-nothing approach. This piece reframes why past Januarys broke down, how self-trust gets damaged, and what changes when you swap hype for calm, durable discipline you can actually sustain.

The First Thing to Fix After the Holidays (It’s Not Calories)

The First Thing to Fix After the Holidays (It’s Not Calories)

Early January isn’t the time to clamp down on calories. It’s the time to rebuild structure: regular meals, protein and fibre as anchors, and less grazing. This approach calms the noise, restores rhythm, and sets you up for sustainable fat loss without another crash diet.

Training for the Long Game Starts Right Here

Training for the Long Game Starts Right Here

January does not need to hurt to work. Learn how to start training in a way you can actually sustain, build confidence in the first few weeks, avoid burnout and injury, and create a steady plan you can still be doing next January.

You Don’t Need a Reset, You Need Direction

You Don’t Need a Reset, You Need Direction

Reset culture is seductive, but it’s brittle. If you want real change this January, focus on direction, not perfection. Learn how to build consistency that survives weekends, holidays, and low motivation, using permission, resilience, and a simple plan you can repeat.