Fitness Is Not a Trend. It Is How My Generation Lives.
I grew up in Miami, where health is not really something you talk about once a year after New Year’s.
It is part of the culture.
You see it everywhere. People running over the bridge in the heat. Training before school. Playing basketball after class. Taking a protein shake to go. Walking into the gym after a long day like it is as normal as brushing your teeth. In Miami, fitness does not feel like something separate from life. It is part of how people live, how they socialize, how they deal with stress, and how they build confidence.
I am a high school senior now, and this fall I will be going to NYU. I have been thinking a lot about what I am taking with me. Clothes, books, a laptop, probably too many shoes, and a lot of advice from my parents. But one of the most important things I am taking is a habit I built long before college: working out.
Fitness has always been part of my life. Not because I was trying to become a professional athlete, not because I was chasing some perfect image, and not because someone forced me into it. It became part of my routine because it made me feel better. Stronger. Clearer. More disciplined. More in control of my day.
For me and a lot of my friends, working out is not just about looking good. That is part of it, sure. Everyone wants to feel confident. But it is much bigger than that. It is about energy. It is about mental health. It is about having a place to put stress. It is about learning that if you show up consistently, even when you do not feel like it, you get better.
That lesson goes way beyond the gym.
High school can be stressful. There are grades, tests, sports, social pressure, college applications, family expectations, and the feeling that every decision matters more than it probably does. Working out gave me a way to reset. No matter what happened during the day, the gym was simple. Pick up the weight. Run the mile. Finish the set. Stretch. Breathe. Come back tomorrow.
There is something powerful about that.
Our generation gets criticized a lot. People say we are always on our phones, always distracted, always anxious, always looking for shortcuts. Some of that may be fair. But I also see something different in my friends. I see people who care about being healthy earlier than maybe any generation before us. We talk about sleep. We talk about protein. We talk about mental health. We talk about lifting, running, Pilates, boxing, basketball, recovery, and taking care of ourselves.
That is not shallow. That is smart.
I think fitness should be treated more seriously in schools. Not just as gym class where some kids play dodgeball and others try to disappear in the corner. I mean real education about the body, nutrition, strength, movement, sleep, stress, and long-term health.
We learn math, science, history, English, and all of that matters. But we also live inside our bodies every day. Shouldn’t we understand how to take care of them?
Students should learn how to train safely. They should learn why strength matters, why stretching matters, why food matters, and why sleep is not optional. They should learn that exercise is not punishment for eating. It is not just for athletes. It is not about embarrassing anyone. It is about giving every person tools to feel better and live better.
That kind of education could change lives.
Not every student needs to love the gym. Some people will find their health through soccer, tennis, yoga, dancing, running, swimming, martial arts, walking, or just being outside. That is the point. Fitness is not one thing. It is a relationship with your own body. The earlier you build that relationship, the better chance you have of carrying it through life.
As I get ready for college, I know things will change. New city. New schedule. New friends. New pressure. New freedom. NYU is in the middle of one of the fastest, busiest cities in the world. It would be easy to get lost in everything happening around me. But I know fitness will help keep me grounded.
I will to find a gym. I will walk the city. I will stay active. I will keep the discipline I built in Miami and bring it with me to New York. Not because I have to, but because I know how much better I feel when I do.
That is what I wish more people understood. Fitness is not really about the mirror. It is about the person you become when you keep promises to yourself.
You become more patient because progress takes time. You become more confident because you earn it. You become tougher because some days are hard and you show up anyway. You become healthier because small choices add up. You become more balanced because your body and mind are connected.
Growing up in Miami taught me that health can be normal. It does not have to be extreme. It does not have to be something you start only when something goes wrong. It can be part of your friendships, your weekends, your school life, your family life, and your future.
My generation is already living this.
We are not waiting until we are 40 to care about wellness. We are not waiting for a doctor to tell us to move. We are not treating fitness like a phase. For many of us, it is part of our identity.
That gives me hope.
Because a healthier generation is not just a generation that looks better. It is a generation that thinks clearer, handles stress better, builds stronger habits, and understands that success is not only about what you achieve, but also about how you feel while achieving it.
This fall, I will be starting a new life in New York. I know there will be a lot to figure out. But I also know this: wherever I go, fitness is coming with me and the many amazing businesses highlighted in this issue are part of the solution.











