Christmas Holiday Fitness - Stay Active Over the Holidays
December happens to everyone. The mince pies appear. The social calendar fills. Exercise routines that worked all year suddenly seem impossible to maintain.
Here's the uncomfortable truth: the average person gains between two and five pounds over Christmas. Not because they're weak-willed or lazy, but because December conspires against fitness. More food, more alcohol, more reasons to stay on the sofa, fewer daylight hours, and a general attitude of "I'll get back to it in January."
If you're reading this, you're probably looking for a way to stay active over the holidays. Good. Let's talk about how boxing can help.
The December Fitness Problem
First, acknowledge what you're up against:
- Social eating is constant. Work parties, family gatherings, catch-ups with friends. Every event involves food. Often rich food. In quantities larger than normal.
- Alcohol is everywhere. Christmas drinks at the office. Wine with dinner. Festive cocktails. Pub catch-ups. Even if you're not a big drinker normally, December adds up.
- Routines collapse. Offices close. Schedules change. The regular gym slot that worked all year suddenly doesn't fit. Kids are home from school. Travel happens.
- Motivation disappears. When everything else is about indulgence, self-discipline feels out of step. "I'll start fresh in January" whispers seductively.
- Weather is grim. Cold, dark, wet. The idea of going outside to exercise holds zero appeal.
These are real challenges. Anyone who tells you December fitness is easy is either lying or lives a very different life than most people.

Boxing as the Counterbalance
You probably can't avoid the mince pies entirely. Nor should you - Christmas is meant to be enjoyed. But having something that maintains your fitness through the chaos makes a genuine difference.
Here's why boxing works as your December counterbalance:
One-Hour Commitment
A boxing session is about an hour. That's it. You don't need to carve out half the day or fundamentally restructure your schedule. One hour, even twice a week, maintains fitness during a period when most people let everything slide.
Burns What You Ate
Christmas food is calorific. Boxing training burns serious calories. There's something psychologically helpful about knowing that hour of training offset at least some of the office party buffet.
Scheduled Accountability
When a session is booked, you're more likely to show up than if "exercise" is just a vague intention. Having specific times in the diary, with coaches expecting you, creates accountability that's hard to manufacture alone.
Energising, Not Draining
Counter-intuitively, exercise gives energy rather than takes it. A boxing session leaves you feeling energised and positive, not depleted. That's useful during a month that can feel sluggish and heavy.
Social in a Different Way
December social events often involve sitting, eating, and drinking. Boxing offers something active - you're still seeing people and interacting, but through training rather than consumption. It's social with movement.
Our Christmas Schedule
We stay open through December, though the schedule adjusts around the bank holidays. Here's what typically happens:
- Early December. Normal schedule. No excuses.
- Week before Christmas. Slightly reduced sessions as coaches travel. We publish the specific timetable in advance.
- Christmas week. Closed Christmas Day and Boxing Day. Limited sessions other days. These are popular - book early.
- New Year's week. Building back to normal. Perfect for those who want to start the year moving rather than waiting for "proper" January.
Check our timetable for exact dates and times. We announce the Christmas schedule each year once dates are confirmed.

Practical December Training Tips
Book Sessions in Advance
December fills up. Work parties get scheduled. Family commitments materialise. Block out your training sessions early and treat them as non-negotiable appointments.
Go in the Morning
If you train in the evening, December social commitments will constantly conflict. Morning sessions, while harder to drag yourself to, are less likely to get cancelled for "unexpected" drinks invites.
Accept Imperfection
You probably won't train as much in December as other months. That's fine. Some training beats no training. Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
Lower Expectations
You're not going to achieve personal bests in December. You're maintaining. Think of it as holding the line, not advancing it. January is for pushing forward.
Use It as Stress Relief
December stress is real: financial pressures, family dynamics, end-of-year work deadlines. Boxing provides an excellent outlet. Hitting a heavy bag when you're wound up is genuinely therapeutic.
The January Advantage
Here's the real payoff: if you stay active through December, January feels completely different.
Most people start January feeling sluggish, heavy, and guilty. They've spent three weeks inactive, eating and drinking too much. The gap between where they are and where they want to be feels enormous.
But if you trained through December? You start January in shape. Maybe not peak shape, but functional. You've maintained the habit. The restart is minor, not major.
While everyone else is dragging themselves to overcrowded gyms, filled with regret and making unrealistic resolutions, you're just continuing what you've been doing. It's a completely different experience.
For Families
If you've got kids at home for Christmas holidays, boxing works for them too. We run kids sessions during school holidays, giving them an outlet for energy during a period when excitement levels are through the roof.
Getting kids to a boxing session has multiple benefits:
- Burns off sugar and excitement energy
- Provides structure in unstructured days
- Gets them off screens
- Tires them out (hello, easier bedtimes)
- Gives you a break
Family training, where parents and children attend sessions in the same block, works particularly well during holidays. Everyone's training, everyone's tired together, everyone feels accomplished.
Start Before December
If you're reading this in November: perfect. Start now. Don't wait until December to establish a habit, because December is the worst time to start new things.
Get a few weeks of training under your belt before the Christmas chaos hits. Then when December arrives, you're maintaining something that exists rather than trying to create something new during the busiest time of year.

Try a Session
Whether you're new to boxing or returning after a break, December is as good a time as any to get back on track.
We offer free trial sessions with no commitment. Come in, train for an hour, see how you feel. If it's for you, book some December sessions. If not, at least you tried.
H&G Team
Writer at Honour & Glory Boxing Club, a community boxing gym in Kidbrooke, South East London.
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