Anyone can push themselves in a workout, but pushing with intention is what actually creates the results we’re looking for. Without a clear purpose in mind, intensity becomes misplaced stress disguised as progress. Your goals are usually quick to think of when you know what you want but it most certainly needs to work with a plan. Pair your efforts with direction by focusing on form, specific goals, and smart pacing. Training intensity will become way more productive, more sustainable, and far less likely to burn you out.
I see a lot of people treat intensity like an on or off switch: you’re either going all out or not trying. It’s something I’ve been guilty of in my training from time to time. Whether you’re getting back into it or took longer than expected of a break, that feeling of picking up right where you left off is normal. But that intensity should actually feel more fluid to ease you back in. Some days you’ll crank it up and really challenge yourself while other days you should tighten your form, taking it a little easier, and build the mechanics. Even professional athletes don’t go max effort all the time. They actually train with phases, focus points, and clear intention behind each session. For everyday people, this matters even more. Life already hands you enough stress, fatigue, and chaos so training shouldn’t be another thing to pile on; it should sharpen you.
When you go into a workout with intention, whether dialing in technique, pushing speed, improving conditioning, or just getting some much needed movement in, you get a whole different result. You stay consistent, avoid burnout, and build progress that actually last. And at the end of the day, intensity isn’t all about going harder, it should be done smarter with intention. It’s about knowing when to push, when to adjust, and when to recover. When your effort lines up with your purpose, your body changes in the way you actually want it to.
#unleashthepotential
Written by:
Dan Aquino
BS, ASFA-CPT
Take action… Now!
Voorhees Flyers Training center.
The Hollydell ice arena, in the main building.


