I’ll be honest — the first time I strapped on a pair of AR-enabled glasses for a workout, I felt ridiculous. Standing in my living room, trying to squat while little holographic arrows pointed at my knees, I knocked over a plant and nearly tripped over my dog. Classic. But here’s the thing: three weeks …
I remember the first time I strapped on a pair of AR fitness glasses and launched a workout app. I was hyped. Like, genuinely excited in a way I hadn’t been about exercise in years. The virtual coach was right there in my living room, arrows floating in the air showing me where to place …
I’ll be honest — the first time I tried an AR fitness app, I looked absolutely ridiculous. I was standing in my living room, arms flailing at invisible targets, nearly knocking over a lamp, while my dog watched me with what I can only describe as deep concern. But here’s the thing: I had just …
My first week trying AR fitness was genuinely humbling. I had watched a few YouTube videos, bought into the hype, strapped on a headset, and immediately walked into my coffee table. Then I spent the next twenty minutes trying to figure out why the app wasn’t tracking my movements properly. By the end of it, …
The first time I heard someone say “I do AR workouts,” I genuinely thought they were talking about Arkansas. I had no idea what augmented reality fitness even meant, and honestly, I didn’t care to find out — it sounded like something only tech bros with expensive headsets and too much time on their hands …
Let me be honest with you — there was a point last year where I had downloaded probably eleven different workout apps, used each one for maybe three days, and then quietly abandoned them all. The problem wasn’t that I was lazy. The problem was that none of them actually felt like anything. Open app, …
Okay, real talk — I downloaded my first AR fitness app on a random Tuesday night when I was lying on my couch, telling myself I’d “start working out seriously next Monday.” You know how that goes. A friend had sent me a reel of someone doing squats with virtual coaching overlays on their phone …
So here’s what happened. A few months back I completely gave up on my home workout routine — again. I had the mat, the resistance bands, the YouTube playlist pinned. But the moment I stepped into my living room and stared at the blank wall, I just… didn’t want to do it. It felt like …
I’ll be honest — when I first heard about augmented reality fitness apps, I rolled my eyes a little. I pictured gamers in headsets doing virtual squats, not real people actually breaking a sweat. Then a friend basically dared me to try one for two weeks straight, and I haven’t looked at working out the …
I’ll be honest — there was a point last year where I’d set my alarm for a 6 AM workout, wake up, stare at the ceiling, and just… not go. The gym felt like a chore. Running felt boring. Even my favorite playlist wasn’t cutting it anymore. Then a friend showed me what he was …









