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Why your body is no longer responding to exercise: Hidden causes of exercise slump and how to break through them effectively

Aadya Jha
| TIMESOFINDIA.COM | Last updated on - Mar 31, 2026, 12:01 IST
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1/10

When exercise effort stops showing results

There comes a point when the same workouts that once felt powerful start feeling… ordinary. The sweat is still there. The discipline hasn’t dropped. But the results slow down, or worse, stop altogether.
This shift confuses many people. It feels like the body has suddenly become stubborn. In reality, the body hasn’t failed. It has simply learned too well.
As Dr Mahesh Kumar explains, “Many people notice that workouts that once delivered quick results… tend to decline after an individual has been performing similar workouts for some time. Most of the time, this is not the result of the individual working at a lower intensity but rather the result of their body becoming accustomed to the same exercise.”
That single idea explains most plateaus. But there’s more happening beneath the surface.

2/10

Your body learned your routine too well

The human body is designed to survive, not to transform endlessly. It adapts quickly to anything repeated.

In the early weeks of exercise, every movement feels new. Muscles break down, rebuild, and grow stronger. Calories burn faster. Progress feels visible. But over time, that same routine becomes predictable.

Dr Mahesh Kumar puts it simply: “The human body is highly efficient at conserving energy, so repeated routines lead to a plateau.”

This is known as the fitness plateau. The body now uses fewer resources to do the same work. So the effort feels the same, but the impact drops.


3/10

Muscles become efficient, not challenged

Repetition builds efficiency. That sounds good, but it comes at a cost.

As Dr Merrin Meria Mathew notes, “The muscles become more efficient in performing those movements, thereby now requiring lesser effort with recruitment of fewer muscle fibers.”

In simple terms, your body stops “trying hard.” It learns shortcuts.

The same squat, run, or push-up no longer activates the body fully. Fewer muscle fibers are used, and energy systems become optimized.

So while the workout looks the same from the outside, it’s doing much less inside.

4/10

Age quietly changes how your body responds

After the age of 30, subtle biological shifts begin. They don’t show up overnight, but they add up.

Dr Mahesh Kumar explains: “As you age… your body becomes less sensitive to the signals that tell it to build muscle.”

Hormones like testosterone and growth hormone decline. Cortisol, the stress hormone, often rises. Recovery slows down.

This is backed by research from the National Institute on Aging (U.S.), which outlines how muscle mass and repair capacity decline with age.

The result is simple. The same effort produces slower change.

5/10

You may be stuck in your comfort zone

Progress needs discomfort. Not pain, but challenge. Many people unknowingly stay within a fixed range. Same weights. Same pace. Same number of repetitions.


Dr Mahesh Kumar highlights this clearly: “If you use the same weights, run at the same pace, or do the same number of reps for months, your body has no reason to change further.”

This is where progress stalls. The body only adapts when it is pushed beyond what it already knows.

6/10

Recovery is no longer optional

In younger years, the body could handle poor sleep and still perform. That changes with time.

Recovery becomes the foundation, not an afterthought.

“Your recovery window has likely narrowed,” says Dr. Mahesh Kumar.

Sleep, hydration, and nutrition now directly control results. Poor sleep reduces muscle repair. High stress disrupts hormones. Even mild dehydration can reduce performance.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) also links sleep with physical performance and recovery.

7/10

Nutrition gaps quietly slow you down

Sometimes the issue is not the workout, but what surrounds it.

Low protein intake limits muscle repair. Long-term calorie restriction slows metabolism. Hidden deficiencies, like vitamin D, B12, or iron, can drain energy.

Dr Mahesh Kumar notes that even subclinical deficiencies can reduce performance despite normal reports.

This explains why someone may feel tired despite “doing everything right.”

8/10

Form, pain, and overlooked signals

Small mistakes compound over time. Poor form leads to muscle imbalances. Certain muscles overwork while others stay underused. This reduces overall output.

Dr Merrin Meria Mathew warns, “Not performing the movements with the right form can cause muscle imbalances… leading you to not getting optimal results.”

There’s another silent factor: ignoring mild pain. That discomfort is often the body asking for correction. Ignoring it can lead to chronic issues that block progress entirely.

9/10

How to wake your body up again

The good news is simple. The body hasn’t stopped responding. It just needs a new reason to.

Dr Merrin Meria Mathew suggests focusing on progressive overload:

Increase intensity with heavier weights or faster pace
Add volume through more sets or reps
Change frequency of training
Introduce new exercises or variations
Reduce rest intervals

Alongside that, Dr Mahesh Kumar recommends:

Changing routines every 4-6 weeks
Increasing protein intake
Checking vitamin levels if fatigue persists
Prioritising strength training over excessive cardio

Hydration, mobility work, and one weekly rest day are not optional anymore. They are part of the training itself.

Before starting intense strength work, basic screenings like blood sugar, cholesterol, and ECG are advisable.

10/10

A quiet truth about fitness

Fitness is not a straight line. It moves in phases. What worked once will stop working. And that’s not failure. It’s a signal to evolve.


The same idea applies here. The body adapts. And progress returns when the approach adapts too.

Medical experts consulted
​

This article includes expert inputs shared with TOI Health by:

Dr Merrin Meria Mathew, Attending Consultant – Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, KIMS Hospitals, Bengaluru.
Dr Mahesh Kumar, Lead Consultant – Internal Medicine, KIMS Hospitals (Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences),E-City, Bengaluru.
​

Insights were used to explain why the body may stop responding to exercise the same way over time, what underlying changes contribute to it, and why it’s important to adapt routines or seek expert guidance for better results.


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Copyright © May 12, 2026, 08.11AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service