You want to feel strong, healthy, and capable in your body, and you may have already tried different ways to get there.
Maybe you’ve even joined a fitness program or worked with a personal trainer before.
And while some of what you learned in those spaces may have been helpful, somewhere along the way, you may have started to notice that you weren’t actually feeling good in your body anymore.
Maybe the training intensity ramped up too quickly, and instead of feeling challenged in a good way, you felt pushed past your limits.
Maybe the constant focus on body shapes, kilos, centimeters, and calorie counts made it hard not to compare yourself to others or question whether you were “doing enough.”
Perhaps the nutrition advice left you feeling drained, deprived, conflicted, or even anxious, and you started fearing and avoiding foods you used to love.
And despite a lot of talk about good vibes, inclusion, or community, it was still obvious that some people were treated differently than others.
Wanting to look good may have been one of the reasons you started exercising, but it probably wasn’t the main reason you joined a program or worked with a trainer.
Challenge yourself in a healthy way and discover what your body is capable of
Stay mobile, strong, and independent well into your 80s, and beyond
Have a body that supports your life, whether that’s hiking, carrying groceries, rearranging furniture, or simply moving through the world with more ease and energy
Feel good mentally and physically.
You noticed that movement gives you more energy, clears your mind, and helps you feel more like yourself.
On one hand, you value guidance, feedback, and knowing that what you’re doing is actually helping you progress.
You enjoy learning alongside people who are working toward similar goals and supporting each other along the way.
On the other hand, you may worry that joining another program will just lead to more of the same experiences you’ve already had.
This space was built to help people build strength, energy, and confidence through movement that actually feels good to come back to.
Where exercise supports your life instead of becoming your life.
Where food and nutrition are approached with understanding rather than fear.
Where your body is seen as something to work with, not constantly fight against or punish.
A big part of why this community exists comes from our own experiences with fitness, body image, and the freedom that came from learning to approach movement differently.
Annabelle
Community leader
I first started working out when I was 13, not because I wanted to, but because I was told I needed to lose weight.
As a chubby kid who looked different from my peers, I learned very early to fear food and see exercise as something you do to make your body more acceptable.
Over time, that mindset slowly turned into an eating disorder that took over my life for 15 years.What helped me recover was realizing that my body was never meant to exist just to be looked at, praised, or approved of by other people.
My body was here to support me through life, and if I wanted that support, I needed to start supporting it too.That’s when my relationship with exercise started to change.
I stopped working out to make myself smaller, and started working out to feel stronger and more connected to myself.
Today, my relationship with food and movement comes from a place of respect, curiosity, and care rather than punishment.
I no longer tie my worth to how my body looks, and because of that, I move through most days feeling comfortable in my own skin.Getting here wasn’t easy, especially with how loud, confusing, and contradictory the fitness and nutrition world can be.
But I was determined to find a way to live peacefully with my body, because nothing compares to the freedom that comes with that.
And now, I’m on a mission to help you live with that freedom as well!
Marcus
SNS Founder & Coach
Pressure to perform well in competitive sport as a teenager quickly led me to body composition tests, restrictive diets, 5am training sessions, and constant mental noise around food and body image.
The short version of the next 15 years is that the whole journey was exhausting, frustrating, and disappointing.
After over a decade trying to get the body I wanted, the relationship I had with my body, with food, with the gym... it was all a mess.
By 2018 I had been a personal trainer for 10 years.
My back and elbows were in constant pain from workout plans I'd bought from well-known YouTubers promising physique transformations. Every weekend I'd eat my way through a mountain of pizza and ice cream alone, then spend the rest of the week trying to make up for it.
Food and working out took up almost all my mental space, and even when I did look good, I was too stressed and hungry to enjoy it.
So I decided enough was enough, and went searching for answers outside the world of YouTubers and fitness magazines.
The next 8 became a deep dive on how to be strong and healthy, while living a fulfilling life, which is what Strong Not Starving is all about!
That means:
Learning how to make exercise feel more approachable on the days when your brain is trying to convince you not to do it, even when you know you’ll feel better afterward.
Finding a pace that feels sustainable, so you don’t end up stuck in the cycle of going all in, burning out, and feeling like you have to start over again.
Exploring forms of movement that feel enjoyable and supportive, rather than forcing yourself through workouts that feel rigid, draining, or disconnected from real life.
Focusing on the small wins and foundations that matter, especially during the phase where progress can feel slow or hard to notice.
Creating routines with less friction, so taking care of yourself feels easier to return to, even during busy or overwhelming seasons of life.
Simplifying the process, so you’re not overwhelmed by endless information, conflicting advice, or feeling like you need to do everything perfectly.
Building consistency through self-understanding and support, rather than blame, guilt, or the belief that you’re simply “bad at sticking to things.”
If you’re looking to be a part of a fitness program where:
You can train your body without getting pulled into comparison or aesthetic obsession
Exercise is approached as a way to support your energy, strength, wellbeing, and everyday life
You’re encouraged to work with your body instead of constantly fighting against it
Rest, flexibility, and real life are considered part of the process, not signs that you’re failing
You can show up as you are, without needing to already be fit, confident, or experienced
The people around you care more about feeling strong, capable, and healthy than chasing extremes and quick fixes
We’ll be happy to have you join us!
If you’re looking to be a part of a fitness program where:
You can train your body without getting pulled into comparison or aesthetic obsession
Exercise is approached as a way to support your energy, strength, wellbeing, and everyday life
You’re encouraged to work with your body instead of constantly fighting against it
Rest, flexibility, and real life are considered part of the process, not signs that you’re failing
You can show up as you are, without needing to already be fit, confident, or experienced
The people around you care more about feeling strong, capable, and healthy than chasing extremes and quick fixes
We’ll be happy to have you join us!