One of the fastest ways I can tell how serious someone is about their training is by asking a simple question: Why are you doing that exercise?
Not how it feels. Not where they saw it. Not who they copied. Why it’s in their program.
A lot of people train on autopilot. They bounce from movement to movement because it’s written on a screen, because it’s trendy, or because it looks impressive. There’s no intention behind it — just motion. The workout feels busy, but it isn’t directional. And when training doesn’t have direction, progress becomes accidental at best.
Every exercise in your program should have a job. It should exist to build something specific: a muscle group, a portion of a muscle, a pattern, a weak point, or a skill. If you can’t explain what that job is, you’re guessing. And guessing is expensive in a sport that already asks for years of patience.

This becomes obvious in bodybuilding, where you’re not rewarded for variety or creativity — you’re rewarded for outcomes. You don’t get points for doing a cool-looking movement. You get points for proportions, balance, and detail. That forces you to think differently. You start choosing exercises because of how they load a muscle, how stable they are when you’re fatigued, and how well you can repeat them week after week without breaking down.
I see this a lot with people who chase novelty. Every session has new exercises, new angles, new techniques. It feels productive because it’s unfamiliar, but it’s impossible to measure. You don’t know if you’re improving because you’re never repeating the same stimulus long enough to see adaptation. You’re entertained, but you’re not informed.

When I add an exercise, I know exactly what it’s supposed to do. I know where I should feel it. I know what it’s replacing or complementing. And I know when it’s done its job and needs to be rotated out. That clarity makes training simpler, not more complicated. The session runs cleaner. The feedback is clearer. The results are easier to track.
So here’s a quick check you can use in your own training: before you start a movement, ask yourself what problem it’s solving. If you can’t answer that in one sentence, pause. Either learn why it’s there, or pick something you understand better.
Because movement without purpose is just noise. And the gym rewards people who know exactly what they’re building.
































