You Don’t Need Closure For Your Broken Heart. You Need a Routine.

Breakups don’t just break hearts, they break the routine that you’ve built over time. When you lose a relationship, you lose the scaffolding that held your days together, from the morning WhatsApp check-ins to the after-work debrief, and even the shared Sunday rituals. All of it suddenly gone, replaced with a heavy ache and a glaring blank space on your calendar.

That’s why starting over after divorce or heartbreak isn’t really about ‘moving on’. It’s about rebuilding structure, and through that structure, slowly finding clarity again.

At Planet Fitness, we’ve seen this truth play out first-hand. Earlier this year, in partnership with Brad and Jaco, we ran the DadBod Challenge – a meticulously designed training and nutrition programme that supported men in transforming not just their bodies, but their lives.

Many of these men were navigating major life changes like separation, divorce, and the long tail of pandemic burnout. The gym became their anchor point – a space to channel pain into discipline, and discipline into transformation.

So this right here isn’t a breakup blog. It’s a discipline story in disguise. Let’s unpack the hero’s journey at play.

The Trigger for Change

If you’ve read The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg, you’ll know that habits run on a loop: cue, routine, reward. Break the loop, and chaos creeps in.

Nowhere is this more true than in the aftermath of heartbreak. The loss of relationship cues leaves an emotional vacuum. Instead of reaching for training clothes, you might decide to sink into the comfort of the couch. Instead of nourishing meals, you might opt for takeaways and endless scrolling. Sleep? Forget about it.

In South Africa, this is no small social story. In 2022 alone, 20,196 divorces were granted, which is up 10.9% from the previous year (Stats SA). Over half of these divorces (55.3%) involved children under 18. That’s a lot of adults navigating fractured routines while still needing to show up for others.

For the men in our DadBod Challenge, the trigger for change was often this sense of spiralling, which sounded something like, “I’m not okay. I can’t keep going like this.”

That single thought is the cue. And it’s powerful.

The New Routine of Training, Small Wins and Discipline

This is where the shift really happens. You can’t think your way out of heartbreak, but you can move your way through it. Physical routine gives the brain new anchors and patterns to lean on – and that’s exactly where the gym comes in.

Our DadBod Challenge provided a clear, structured programme that really helped cement this shift. It included:

  • Progressive training plans with a focus on strength and functional conditioning
  • Meticulous eating plans designed by nutrition experts
  • Community check-ins with Brad, Jaco, and Planet Fitness coaches
  • A supportive peer group sharing the same vulnerable space

One of the participants summed it up perfectly, “I was waking up feeling like I had no control over anything. The gym became the first place I took control again.” And that’s the core of it. It’s not about abs or glow-ups, it’s about reclaiming agency, one training session at a time.

The small wins matter more than you think, too. A consistent training schedule rebuilds circadian rhythms, improves sleep, and reduces cortisol, which are all proven ways to support emotional healing according to Harvard Health Publishing.

We witnessed this shift week after week. One of the participants came into the challenge after finalising his divorce, and he simply couldn’t imagine how life would ever feel stable again. But by week four, training was his non-negotiable, and in fact, became the spine
of his new daily rhythm.

Reap the Rewards of Clarity, Calm and Control

This is where the loop is finally complete. When the cue is chaos, and the new routine is training, the reward isn’t just physical transformation. It’s clarity. It’s calm. It’s a felt sense of I am okay, and I can hold this.

Participants in the Planet Fitness DadBod Challenge often reported an emotional reset alongside their physical progress, “I thought I needed to feel better about my ex. What I actually needed was to feel stronger in myself.”

That’s the real reward right there. Training doesn’t erase grief or regret, but it certainly creates a parallel track for growth. It gives your nervous system proof of resilience.

The most reassuring part is that science backs this all the way. Regular strength training has been shown to reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression, while improving emotional regulation (Frontiers in Psychology, 2020). In other words: training helps your body hold hard emotions without spiralling.

For the dads in our challenge, this often had ripple effects at home. Rebuilding physical structure helped them show up more present for their kids, colleagues, friends – and for themselves.

You Don’t Have to Be Over Them To Show Up for You

One of the biggest myths of heartbreak is that you need closure to move forward. You don’t. Closure is a story we tell ourselves – that one perfect conversation or one moment of understanding will tidy it all up. The truth is that life is messier, people are messier, and your healing doesn’t have to wait for a neat ending.

You can start now. You can put on your training shoes and step into the gym, even if your heart is still heavy. In fact, especially when your heart is still heavy.

As one DadBod Challenge participant told us, “I wasn’t over it. But I stopped waiting to be over it to start living again.” That is the invitation we’re encouraging you to extend to your best, most vibrant self. And that is what we aim to offer at Planet Fitness – not a quick fix,
but a space where physical structure supports emotional rebuilding.

Train your way to feeling healed and whole.

You don’t need closure. You need a routine that reminds you who you are.

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