Episode 22Dec 29, 2025· 6:37

Too Busy With Kids to Work Out? How to Get Your Whole Family Moving Together

Show notes from the creator
"I'd love to work out but I have kids" or "My partner isn't into fitness" are two of the most common excuses I hear. What if your family wasn't an obstacle to fitness, but actually part of the solution? This episode tackles the real challenge of staying active when you have a family. Whether you have young children, a partner who hates the gym, or conflicting schedules that make solo workouts impossible, there are practical ways to incorporate movement into family life without fighting your reality. I share how my husband and I solved this: I do Zumba while he plays pickleball at the same facility. Win-win. You'll get specific ideas for different family situations: dance parties for young kids, obstacle courses in the backyard, family walks after dinner, active video games with time limits, weekend hikes for older kids, bike rides together, trying new sports as a family. The key is meeting people where they are. Don't drag your partner to spin class if they hate it. Find activities they actually enjoy. Make movement feel less like "working out" and more like quality time or play. Movement doesn't have to look like traditional exercise to count. Perfect for parents struggling to find workout time, couples with different fitness interests, or anyone who thinks family responsibilities mean sacrificing health. This podcast is for entertainment purposes only and is not medical advice. Please consult a healthcare professional before starting any diet or exercise program. 🎙️🎧Be sure to follow me on social: LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashleygrant/ YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@FamousAshleyGrant Some of my favorite stretch classes on YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDPNeMw4rQKrP845UF9B3rqZXFx2TYGnV&si=tlJcF58sharBn-u1 --------------------------------------- 🙌This podcast is supported by affiliate partnerships. Please check out a few of our partners/partner offers below: – Get the gifts recommended in my fitness gifts episode: https://www.amazon.com/shop/theashleygrant/list/3GRATQ0QGVY02?ref_=cm_sw_r_cp_ud_aipsflist_0N4FW7BMAB0RW34M2217 – Start a podcast today here: https://rss.com/?via=moremovementplease – Create content from your own voice with Castmagic's Suite of AI Tools: https://get.castmagic.io/dcjy15cirnts The links above are affiliate links. This means my podcast will receive a small commission if you order through any of them at no additional cost to you. Affiliate commissions are one of the ways my podcast makes money so that I can create episodes free of charge. If you do purchase anything from my links, I sincerely would like to thank you for your support!
About this episode
Episode covers how to integrate movement into family life when gym time feels impossible — specifically for parents with young children and people with partners who dislike traditional exercise. Ashley Grant explains active playtime at the park as a workout substitute, describes her own system of parallel gym trips where she and her husband each do preferred activities (Zumba vs. pickleball), and lists concrete…
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Notable quotes

"to find time away from the kids to exercise, why not join them? Take them to the park and actually play with them. Chase them around, get on the swings, play tag, do the monkey bars."

Famous Ashley Grant

"meet them where they are. Don't drag your partner to a spin class if they hate indoor cycling."

Famous Ashley Grant

"On Mondays, I go to my Zumba and my low -impact cardio class. Afterwards, my husband does pickleball. It's a great way to get us both out. get us both active and we're doing things we enjoy and it doesn't feel as much like a chore. So here are"

Famous Ashley Grant

"intensity. It's better to do something small together every single day than to plan an elaborate family fitness routine that only happens once and never happens again because it was too much."

Famous Ashley Grant

"class together. Now, let me tell you, I am not a pickleball girly. I couldn't handle it. I didn't enjoy it. But the point is to start. Show your"

Famous Ashley Grant

Episode transcript

4 chapters — tap to expand the full text

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Mentioned in this episode
personFamous Ashley Grant
The host of More Movement Please, who shares personal experiences with her husband and a friend to frame the episode's discussion about family fitness.
Key themes
Family as fitness barrier vs. built-in workout partner
Ashley reframes the common complaint that kids and partners block exercise time, arguing instead that they can be folded into movement rather than worked around.
Active playtime instead of bench-sitting
Ashley describes the specific shift of actually chasing kids at the park and doing monkey bars rather than sitting on a bench scrolling through your phone.
Meeting partners where they are, not where you want them to be
Ashley draws on her own situation with her husband — who won't go to the gym but will play pickleball — to argue against dragging a partner into activities they hate.
Parallel activity at the same time and place
Ashley describes her actual Monday routine where she does Zumba and her husband does pickleball at the same gym, so they both get out and get active without needing to want the same thing.
Movement doesn't have to look like traditional exercise
Ashley questions what 'traditional exercise' even means and points to pickleball, dancing, dog walking, and kayaking as legitimate movement options.
Concrete activity ideas for different family setups
Ashley runs through specific suggestions split by age group — living room dance parties and backyard obstacle courses for young kids, family challenges and fun runs for older kids, active dates and recreational leagues for partners.
Modeling active habits for kids and partners
Ashley frames family fitness as showing kids and partners that movement is just part of life, not a chore that takes you away from each other.
Consistency over intensity
Ashley argues it's better to do something small together every day than to plan an elaborate family fitness routine that happens once and then never again because it was too much.
Starting where you are, not where you think you should be
Ashley tells listeners not to worry about a partner's fitness level or a kid's abilities, pointing to a 10-minute walk or five minutes of active play as legitimate starting points.