Mastering Consistency with a Daily Text Check In Partner
I am mastering consistency with a daily text check in partner and it has been the most effective thing I have ever done for my health. Every morning at 7am, my partner and I send a text with our main goal for the day. At 9pm, we send a follow-up to confirm if we did it.
It is so simple but so powerful. I find that knowing I have to send that evening text keeps me honest throughout the day. I am much less likely to skip my workout or eat junk food when I know someone is waiting for my report.
If you are struggling with consistency, I highly recommend finding a daily check-in partner. It does not have to be a long conversation, just a quick status update. Does anyone else use this method? I would love to hear how it has worked for you.
Spot on, Dan. I’ve been doing this with a mate from my football club for about six weeks. It’s much harder to skip a session when you know someone’s going to ping you at 6 PM asking if you’ve done your reps. It’s that bit of external pressure that really makes the difference in a busy city like London.
I have been looking into this myself and honestly the options are overwhelming. Do you guys find it better to have a partner who is at the same fitness level or someone more advanced? I worry about being the 'slacker' in the duo if I'm not careful.
Mike, in my experience, same-level works best. It feels more like a partnership and less like a teacher-student dynamic. My buddy in BC and I just send a thumb's up emoji after our morning runs—simple, effective, and no pressure to be "perfect."
Totally agree with Dave. I tried a check-in with a semi-pro runner once and I felt proper rubbish every time I only did 2 miles. Now I check in with my sister; we just keep it casual. Even if it's just "I did my stretches in the flat today," it counts.
I actually think you need someone slightly more disciplined. My partner in Houston doesn't take any excuses. If I text saying I'm tired, he just sends back a picture of his gym shoes. It sounds harsh, but that's what gets me off the couch.
Does anyone find that the novelty wears off? I started a text chain in January but by February we both just stopped responding. How do you keep it going for the long haul?
Maple, that's where the "rules" come in. My partner and I agreed that if one of us misses two days of texting, the other has to call and do a literal welfare check. It keeps us from just drifting away into silence.
Haha, a welfare check! That's brilliant. We usually bet a pint on it—first one to miss a day without a valid excuse owes the other a drink at the weekend.
I like the idea of stakes. Maybe not booze for me since I'm cutting, but maybe the loser has to pay for the other's protein powder for the month?
Stakes are good, but don't make them so high that you start lying to your partner! I’ve seen people text "done" when they were actually just sitting on the sofa because they didn't want to lose a bet.
That's why photo evidence is key. Send a sweaty selfie or a shot of the treadmill screen. Hard to fake a 5k run when the timer is right there in the picture.
Sweaty selfies are the international language of accountability. My phone's gallery is 90% me looking like a drowned rat in a Texas garage gym.
How do you guys find partners? I don't really have any local friends into the same training style. Most of them are more into hockey or just going to the pub.
I actually found mine right here on the forum! We just messaged back and forth for a bit to make sure our timezones lined up (he's in Calgary and I'm in Chicago), and then swapped numbers.
TorontoTech, you're usually pretty active—you got an accountability partner yet?
I actually don't! I’ve been a lone wolf for a while, but reading this makes me realize why my consistency has been so patchy lately. I’m definitely open to a daily text check-in.
I’m in the same boat as TorontoTech. Looking for someone in the Central or Eastern time zone if anyone's interested.
I'm EST! Mike, shoot me a PM. I'm usually at the gym by 6 AM Toronto time.
One thing to watch out for: don't let the check-in become a chore. If you're spending 20 minutes texting about your workout, you could have used that time to actually do another set.