Maybe I’ve trained my phone’s algorithm well enough that I haven’t been bombarded with viral fitness challenges for this current end of year, and honestly, I don’t want to be.

December is the time I want to stay warm indoors, enjoy good food, and spend quality time with the people I care about. Challenges like 75-Hard promise a dramatic reset, but they aren’t for everyone, and you don’t need them to make progress.

This year, I’m focusing on something simple and practical: building foundational strength in a way that feels manageable and sustainable. A few consistent, well-chosen moves now — some of which can even be done with a pair of the best adjustable dumbbells at home — can make January easier and set you up for real gains without pressure or burnout.

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Dr. Joey Masri, founder of Vice City Sports Medicine, board-certified orthopedic physical therapist and certified Strength and Conditioning SpecialistDr. Joey Masri

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Dr. Joey Masri, founder of Vice City Sports Medicine, is a board-certified orthopedic physical therapist and Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist. 

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Stand with feet about hip-width apart and place a kettlebell on the floor between your mid-feet.Hinge at your hips by pushing them back, keeping a slight bend in your knees and your chest lifted.Lower your hands to the kettlebell handle while keeping your spine relatively flat.Grip the handle firmly and engage your lats by gently pulling your shoulders back and down (Masri cues it as squeezing a pair of tennis balls in your armpits).Stand up by pushing the floor away through your heels and mid-foot, driving your hips forward, and squeezing your glutes at the top without leaning back.Lower the weight by reversing the motion: push hips back, keep the kettlebell close, shins vertical, and spine neutral.Reset your brace between reps, keep the movement slow and controlled, and maintain steady breathing.Recommended sets and reps: 3 sets of 6–8.

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Set a bench at a low incline (about 30–45 degrees) and lie chest down with a dumbbell in each hand, arms hanging straight toward the floor. Keep your neck lightly tucked.Pull the dumbbells up toward your lower ribcage by driving your elbows back and slightly out, squeezing your shoulder blades together at the top without shrugging.Lower the weights under control until your arms are straight again, then repeat.Recommended sets and reps: 3 sets of 10–12.

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