How a former rugby player turned the fitness industry on its head—and why your husband needs to know about itAt 12, Kieran O'Mara couldn't get out of bed. Severe arthritis had taken over his body, leaving this sporty kid unable to dress himself some mornings. By 16, something miraculous happened—the arthritis went dormant. Six months after picking up a rugby ball for the first time, he was signed professionally with St. Helens, one of the UK's top clubs.That meteoric rise taught him everything wrong with the fitness industry."They treat you like you're a grown-ass man when you're 16," Kieran recalls about his rugby days. "There was something called Fat Club—if you were above a certain body fat percentage, you had to do extra cardio on top of all your other training. It was brutal, and I realized I never wanted to be like that with people."Fast forward through years of professional rugby, a stint as an aerospace engineer building missiles, and a devastating hit-and-run accident that left him with a fused wrist and screws in his shoulder. What emerged? A coach who actually gives a damn about real life.Kieran's philosophy is refreshingly simple: "I'm not here to make gladiators for the colosseum." His company, Condition, operates on what he calls "1% power"—some weeks you push for 10% growth, others you just stay above the cruising line."If a client has had a crazy week at work or they've got a sick kid at home and they're barely getting any sleep, me pushing them harder isn't going to be a win," he explains. "It's just going to cause them to burn out."Most fitness influencers, he argues, live in a bubble where they're paid to look good and have hours each day to train. "For 99.9% of people, you can never do that approach."The 23-Hour TruthHere's Kieran's reality bomb: "There's 24 hours in a day. You're in the gym for 1 hour max. Where do you think you're going to make the most progress—1 hour or 23 hours?"The majority of people could lose weight and get to their desired shape just through steps, food, and lifestyle changes. You don't need to kill yourself for hours every day. You need to look after your sleep, manage your food, and build small habit wins.His approach isn't about perfection—it's about integration. "We create something that fits into your lifestyle, rather than something you need to fit into," he says.For busy parents, Kieran's nutrition philosophy is game-changing. His three-phase system starts with set meal plans to build foundations, moves to customized meal options that are interchangeable, and eventually teaches calorie tracking—but only when you're ready."If the kids are eating normal food anyway, we create something the whole family can eat," he explains. "If the kids only like turkey dinosaurs and waffles, we work around that too."The key is the 80-20 rule: eat what you need 80% of the time, have what you want 20% of the time. Want McDonald's? Factor it into your calories. Craving chocolate? Have one or two pieces during the week instead of binging a whole bar on the weekend."Macronutrients determine how you look. Micronutrients determine how you feel," he says. "I could eat 2,000 calories of McDonald's every day and still lose weight. I'd feel like shit, but I'd still lose weight."What sets Kieran apart isn't just his realistic approach to food and exercise—it's his understanding of the mental side. Diagnosed with ADHD at 27 and severely dyslexic, he gets the neurodivergent struggle from the inside."I've been fat, I've been overweight, I've struggled with food, I've struggled with getting stuff right because of my head," he admits. "Everything I do with people is something I've lived firsthand."His coaching isn't just about reps and sets—it's about understanding that 70% of transformation happens in your head. "If you can get your head to a position where you understand you're human, you understand you're going to make mistakes, and you understand it's okay to not be perfect—that's half the battle."How It Actually WorksKieran's system functions like "a full-time PT in your pocket." Clients get a custom app with personalized programs, tutorial videos for every exercise, and 24/7 communication access."We actually give a fuck. No one is just a number," he says. "Every single client we deal with is different, so we do not give cookie-cutter programs to people."The process starts with understanding your actual life—school drop-offs, regular meetings, when you can realistically fit in 45-60 minutes of training 2-3 times a week. The program evolves as they learn more about you, constantly adapting rather than forcing you to adapt to some unrealistic standard.After years of watching The Biggest Loser-style transformation culture leave people worse off than when they started, Kieran's message is refreshingly honest: life's not perfect, it's never going to be perfect, and it's never going to be a good time to start."If people wait for the best time to start, they will never do it," he says. "Ask yourself this question: If you do nothing about this right now and continue on the path you're on, how will you feel in 12 months?"The answer, he notes, is normally "shit."His advice for anyone thinking about starting? "You don't have to be perfect to start, but you do need to start to be perfect." It's about understanding that you're going to mess up, fall off, have days where you're tired and don't want to eat clean—and that's normal.For the partners of men who won't ask for help, his advice is simple: organization and support are key. "Get a friend to do it with you for accountability. Sit down once a week and map out your schedule. Find those pockets of time and optimize them."In a fitness industry built on transformation fantasies and before-and-after mythology, Kieran O'Mara is selling something different: sustainability. His clients aren't chasing six-pack selfies—they just want to run around with their kids and wake up without feeling like they've been hit by a truck."Instagram and these fitness influencers—what they show is not real life," he says. "They don't understand the struggles people go through. It's okay to mess up. You're going to get stuff wrong. You are going to fail."That's not defeatist talk—that's the foundation of lasting change. And for busy families tired of fitness programs that ignore the chaos of real life, it might just be exactly what they've been looking for.Kieran O'Mara's online coaching starts at $250 per month. Learn more at kieranthecoach.org