- Joined
- 2025-07-08
- Posts
- 254
- Location
- Philadelphia, PA
So I've been tracking attendance at my Crossfit box since January 1st and the numbers are pretty brutal. We had 47 people show up for the 6 AM class on January 2nd (first weekday back), but yesterday morning it was down to 19 people. That's a 59% drop in just two weeks.
I'm guilty of it too — signed up for the unlimited monthly plan at
Anyone else seeing this pattern at their gym?
The coaches at my box said they expect another 30% drop by February 1st based on previous years. Makes me wonder if I should just switch to a pay-per-class model instead of bleeding
- Joined
- 2024-03-26
- Posts
- 435
- Location
- Phoenix, AZ
Your numbers match exactly what I see at our affiliate. January 2nd we had waitlists for every class, now I'm running 6 AM with 12 people in a space built for 24. The pattern is so predictable we actually budget around it.
Here's the thing though — the people who stick past January 31st usually become our most consistent members. I track retention data and 73% of people who make it through the first month are still coming regularly by June. The key is building the habit before motivation dies.
My advice: switch your mindset from 5 days to 3 days minimum. Make it sustainable rather than ambitious. Also, find a workout buddy who'll drag you in when you're making excuses. We've got a text chain going with 6 regulars and it's the only reason half of us show up on brutal mornings like this.
Don't switch to drop-ins yet — the financial commitment actually helps with accountability for most people.
- Joined
- 2025-08-20
- Posts
- 147
- Location
- Denver, CO
This is exactly why I switched to outdoor running three years ago. I was paying
Last Tuesday I ran 8 miles along the lakefront in 22-degree weather and it felt amazing. No membership fees, no crowded equipment, no waiting for squat racks. I've logged 127 miles since January 1st using Strava, which is actually ahead of my training plan for the Chicago Marathon in October.
The mental game is different when you're not throwing money at the problem. When I paid for gym access, I felt entitled to skip because "I already paid." Now every run is a choice I make in the moment. Weather becomes part of the challenge instead of an excuse to stay inside.
That said, I do miss the community aspect of group classes. Running solo for hours can get lonely, especially during these long winter base-building phases.
- Joined
- 2024-04-30
- Posts
- 110
- Location
- New York, NY
Wait, is 8 out of 14 sessions actually bad? I joined Planet Fitness on January 3rd and I've only been 4 times so far. The black card membership is
Just hit a decent win on NBA props last week and trying to cash out $950 from an offshore book. They're asking for driver's license, bank statement from last 30 days, and a selfie holding my ID. Submitted everything Tuesday morning but still showing "under review" 4 days later.
Is this normal timing? The site says 24-48 hours for document verification but I'm past that window. This is my first withdrawal over $500 so maybe they're being extra careful, but getting nervous about the delay.
What's been everyone's actual experience with verification times? Trying to figure out if I should be worried or just wait it out.
4.99 monthly so I figured even going twice a month breaks even compared to day passes.Should I be tracking this stuff more seriously? I don't really have specific goals beyond "get in better shape" but maybe that's part of the problem. How do you guys stay motivated when you don't see results immediately?
- Joined
- 2024-06-08
- Posts
- 119
- Location
- Atlanta, GA
This whole resolution thing is overrated anyway. The gym industry literally banks on people failing — they sell way more memberships than their facilities can actually handle because they know 60% of people will quit by March.
You're worried about missing workouts but you should be more concerned about getting locked into that
Honestly, just embrace the fact that January motivation is fake. If you actually wanted to work out consistently, you would have started in November when the gym was empty and you could build real habits.
- Joined
- 2025-09-24
- Posts
- 572
- Location
- Chicago, IL
Funny how gym motivation works versus sports betting motivation. I can wake up at 5 AM to catch early European soccer lines at Bovada but getting to the gym at 7 AM feels impossible. Been tracking my betting activity versus workout frequency and there's definitely an inverse correlation.
December I hit the gym 23 times and only placed 12 bets. January so far: 6 gym sessions and 47 bets. The dopamine hit from a winning parlay beats the endorphin rush from deadlifts every time.
- Joined
- 2025-07-16
- Posts
- 472
- Location
- Chicago, IL
I feel this so hard. Signed up for a boutique fitness studio on New Year's Day —
Instead I've been hitting the slots at Vave way too much during my lunch breaks. Yesterday I spent 90 minutes playing Pragmatic Play games when I should have been at yoga class. Won
The irony is I'm more consistent with my gambling bankroll management than my workout schedule. I never miss a day tracking wins and losses, but I can't remember the last time I logged a proper gym session.