Starting structured fitness training for the first time can feel daunting — and a lot of the information available online makes it more confusing, not less. This post gives you a clear, honest introduction to what to expect, what matters, and how to avoid the most common beginner mistakes.
You Don’t Need to Be Fit to Start
This is the most important thing to understand. Coaching is not for people who are already fit — it’s for people who want to become fit. You don’t need any prior experience, any particular fitness level, or any specific equipment. The programme is designed around where you are right now, not where you think you should be.
Many of our best client transformations have started with people who hadn’t exercised in years.
The First Few Sessions Are About Learning, Not Burning
In your first two or three sessions, the focus is on technique — learning how to squat, hinge, push, and pull correctly. This is not glamorous, and you won’t leave those sessions exhausted. But getting this right is the foundation of every session that follows. Trying to train hard before you can move well leads to injury, not results.
Be patient with this phase. It pays off quickly.
Expect Some Soreness
Delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) — the stiffness and soreness that peaks 24–48 hours after a new training stimulus — is normal and expected when you start training or after your first sessions. It’s a sign your muscles have been challenged.
DOMS typically reduces significantly after the first two to four sessions as your body adapts. If severe soreness persists beyond this, your programme load may need adjusting — discuss this with your coach.
Nutrition Matters from Day One
You don’t need to follow a strict diet to start training. But eating enough protein (at least 1.6g per kg of body weight per day is a useful starting target) and not being in a severe calorie deficit will support your recovery and make training feel better from early on.
You’ll get more detailed nutritional guidance as part of your coaching, but this is the one thing worth starting immediately.
Consistency Beats Intensity
Two or three sessions per week, done consistently for three months, will produce dramatically better results than six sessions a week for two weeks followed by a break. Building the habit of training regularly is the single most important thing a beginner can do.
Start Your Fitness Journey at Core and More Fitness in Clapham
We specialise in helping people at the very beginning of their fitness journey. Book a free consultation at our studio near Clapham Common — there’s no commitment, just an honest conversation about your goals and how we can help.