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My Beginner Workout Journey: Week Two — Finding My Rhythm

How week two felt different, what improved, and what adjustments were needed.


In This Post

  • How I Felt Going Into Week Two
  • My Week Two Workout Plan
  • What Each Workout Looked Like
  • What Was Still Hard
  • What Started to Improve
  • Key Takeaways From Week Two
  • What’s Next in the Series

How I Felt Going Into Week Two

Week two started with lingering soreness and a lot of mental negotiation. I wasn’t fully recovered, and part of me wondered if that soreness meant I should slow down.

At the same time, I felt something new — confidence. I had already endured the most soreness, and that made it easier to walk back into the gym knowing that I won’t be that sore again as long as I stayed consistent..


My Week Two Workout Plan

This was the first full week of exercises. Week two was about getting a consistent pattern of exercises and muscle groups. It was also time to put nutrition into effect and start counting calories. My ideal calorie consumption was 2500 calories.

  • Workout frequency: 3 days
  • Workout length: ~30 minutes
  • Focus: Repeating movements, improving form
  • Intensity: Low to moderate

Sticking with familiar exercises helped reduce anxiety and decision fatigue.


What Each Workout Looked Like

Each workout followed the same general structure as week one:

Warm-Up

  • Light cardio (10–15 minutes on the bike or treadmill)

Main Focus groups

  • Day 1 Leg day
  • Day 2 Upper Body
  • Day 3 Full Body

Cool Down

  • Light cardio (still improving consistency here)

The exercises felt familiar now — and that alone made a difference.


What Was Still Hard

  • Soreness: Not as intense as week one, but still present
  • Endurance: I still got winded faster than I expected
  • Mental resistance: Some days required convincing myself to go

Even so, the workouts felt more manageable overall.


What Started to Improve

  • Recovery: I bounced back faster between workouts
  • Confidence: Movements felt less awkward
  • Mindset: The gym felt less intimidating
  • Consistency: Showing up felt more automatic

I wasn’t stronger yet — but I was more comfortable.


Key Takeaways From Week Two

  • Repetition builds confidence
  • Soreness doesn’t mean stop — it means adapt
  • Familiar routines reduce mental stress
  • Progress isn’t always physical

Week two was about momentum, not milestones.


Final Thoughts

Week two showed me that consistency creates familiarity, and familiarity creates confidence. I’m still very much a beginner, but the gym no longer feels like an unknown space.

The hardest part is still getting there — but once I do, I’m glad I went.