COSO Driver Fitness

Strong on the road. Strong in the gym.
Built for drivers who refuse to fall apart behind the wheel.

Real workouts you can do at the truck stop or the gym, plus no-nonsense nutrition for life on the road — programmed by a pro, free for every COSO carrier. Because the miles are hard on the body, and you deserve a partner who actually cares about yours.

Why COSO Built This

Truck driving is one of the toughest jobs in the country on your body — long sits, tough sleep, and truck-stop food at every turn. Heart disease, weight gain, and back pain shouldn't be part of the job description. So we built a real training and nutrition system into your carrier dashboard. No gym required. No excuses needed. Just show up.

Pick Your Split. Pick Your Spot. Go.

Every workout comes two ways — an On the Road version you can do with bands and bodyweight next to the truck, and a full Gym version for when you\'re home or at a fitness center.

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Drink your water — 1 gallon a day. Dehydration is the driver's silent enemy: it feels like fatigue and hunger, spikes your blood pressure, and wrecks your focus on the road. Keep a gallon jug in the cab where you can see it and sip all day. Water first, always.
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Get your steps — aim for 7,000–10,000 a day. Every fuel stop, weigh station, and delivery is a chance to walk. Lap the lot, take the long way, park farther out. Steps are the easiest, most powerful thing you can do for your heart, your back, and your waistline. Move every chance you get.
On the road, what do you have?

Push strength and a fuller chest. Control the negative, feel the stretch, squeeze at the top.

On the Road — Chest

⏱ 15–20 min🎒 Bodyweight + a resistance band (loop it around your back).
ExerciseSetsReps
Incline push-ups (hands on trailer bumper/step) Higher hands = easier. Lower the surface as you get stronger. 4 12–20
Standard push-ups Elbows ~45°, full range, chest to the ground. 3 To 2 reps shy of failure
Band chest press (band behind back) Press and squeeze hands together at the front. 3 15–20
Deep push-up stretch hold Bottom of a push-up, let the chest open up. Great for desk/wheel posture. 2 20–30 sec
Dumbbell floor press (20 lb) Got dumbbells in the truck? Lie on the bunk/mat, press up, control down. Great chest builder. 3 10–15
3 10-15
3 12-15
3 12-15

Finisher: Burnout: max clean push-ups, rest 30 sec, repeat twice.

Gym — Chest Hypertrophy

⏱ 35–45 min🎒 Dumbbells, cables, bench.
ExerciseSetsReps
Incline dumbbell press Upper chest first while you're fresh. Stop 1–2 reps from failure. 4 8–12
Flat machine or dumbbell press Control the way down for 2 seconds. 3 10–12
Cable fly (mid or low-to-high) Long stretch, squeeze hands together, don't just drop the weight. 3 12–15
Push-ups (bodyweight burnout) Finish the pump. 2 To failure
Machine chest fly Intermediate Pyramid the weight up each set. On the last set run a drop set — cut ~30% and rep to failure for a huge stretch/pump. 3 15 / 12 / 10
Superset: dips + cable fly Advanced Do dips straight into a cable fly with no rest between. Finishes the chest off. 3 To failure

Finisher: Optional drop set on cable fly: 3 weight drops, no rest.

The antidote to hours behind the wheel. Builds width, thickness, and bulletproofs your posture.

On the Road — Back

⏱ 15–20 min🎒 Resistance band (anchor it in a door or around a mirror arm).
ExerciseSetsReps
Band bent-over row Stand on the band, hinge at hips, drive elbows back, squeeze shoulder blades. 4 15–20
Band lat pulldown (anchor high) Pull to your collarbone, control the return. 3 15
Single-arm band row Full stretch forward, full squeeze back. 3 12–15 each
Doorway/trailer-edge rows (feet forward, lean back, pull in) Body-row using a solid grip point. Keep a straight line head to heels. 3 10–15
Band pull-apart Rear delts + upper back. Fixes rounded shoulders. 3 20
Dumbbell bent-over row (20 lb) Hinge at the hips, drive the dumbbell to your hip, squeeze the back. Real thickness builder. 4 10–12 each
3 15
3 8-10 each
3 20-30 sec
4 12-15

Finisher: Superman holds: 3 × 20–30 sec on the sleeper bunk floor.

Gym — Back Hypertrophy

⏱ 40–50 min🎒 Pull-up bar, cables, rows.
ExerciseSetsReps
Lat pulldown or assisted pull-up Drive elbows down and in. Full stretch at the top. 4 8–12
Chest-supported or seated row Thickness. Squeeze 1 sec, don't heave with your lower back. 4 10–12
Single-arm dumbbell row Big stretch, big squeeze, no torso rotation. 3 10–12 each
Straight-arm cable pulldown Isolate the lats, keep arms mostly straight. 3 12–15
Face pull Rear delts + rotator cuff. Do these — your shoulders will thank you. 3 15–20
Straight-arm pulldown Intermediate Isolates the lats. Last set: drop the weight twice and keep repping for a deep lat burn. 3 12–15
Superset: lat pulldown + seated row Advanced Vertical pull straight into a horizontal pull, no rest. Width + thickness in one. 3 To failure

Finisher: Dead hang from the bar, 2 × max time. Decompresses the spine.

Round, capped delts make you look built even in a t-shirt. Also keeps shoulders healthy for loading/strapping.

On the Road — Shoulders

⏱ 12–18 min🎒 Resistance band + optional two water jugs.
ExerciseSetsReps
Band overhead press Stand on the band, press straight up, don't flare the ribs. 4 12–15
Band lateral raise Side delts = width. Lead with the elbows, control the drop. 4 15–20
Pike push-ups (hips high, head toward ground) Feet on a curb makes it harder. Great overhead builder. 3 8–15
Band rear-delt fly / pull-apart Rear delts balance the look and protect the joint. 3 20
Dumbbell overhead press (20 lb) Press straight overhead, don't flare the ribs. Builds real shoulder size. 4 8–12
Dumbbell lateral raise (20 lb or lighter) Side-delt width. Lighter is fine — strict form beats heavy swinging. 4 12–20
3 12-15
3 10-12
3 12-15
3 20-40 sec

Finisher: Lateral raise burnout: 1 × max reps with a lighter band.

Gym — Shoulder Hypertrophy

⏱ 35–45 min🎒 Dumbbells, cables, machine press.
ExerciseSetsReps
Seated dumbbell or machine shoulder press Press while fresh. Don't bounce out of the bottom. 4 8–12
Dumbbell lateral raise The #1 delt-width builder. Lighter weight, strict form, high reps. 4 12–20
Cable lateral raise (single arm) Constant tension the dumbbells can't give you. 3 12–15 each
Reverse pec-deck or cable rear fly Rear delts. 3 15–20
Dumbbell shrugs Traps. Hold the top for a beat. 3 12–15
Cable lateral raise Intermediate Pyramid the weight up, then a drop set on the final set — constant tension the dumbbells can't match. 3 15 / 12 / 10
Superset: overhead press + lateral raise Advanced Press then straight into laterals with no rest. Delt-destroyer for real caps. 3 To failure

Finisher: Lateral raise triple drop set to finish the delts off.

Biceps and triceps — the show muscles. Triceps are 2/3 of your arm, so hit both.

On the Road — Arms

⏱ 15–20 min🎒 Resistance band + the trailer bumper/step for dips.
ExerciseSetsReps
Band curls Stand on the band, elbows pinned, squeeze at the top. 4 15–20
Bench/bumper dips (hands behind you on a step) Triceps. Bend at the elbows, keep them tucked. 4 10–15
Band hammer curls Hits the brachialis for arm thickness. 3 15
Band overhead triceps extension Long head of the triceps. Full stretch overhead. 3 15
Close-grip push-ups (diamond) Triceps finisher. 2 To failure
Dumbbell curls (20 lb) No swing, elbows pinned, squeeze the top. Real load for real biceps growth. 4 10–12
Dumbbell overhead triceps extension (20 lb) Both hands on one bell, lower behind the head, full stretch. 3 10–12
3 12
3 12-15
3 15-20
3 12-15
3 10-15

Finisher: 21s on band curls: 7 bottom-half, 7 top-half, 7 full.

Gym — Arm Hypertrophy

⏱ 35–45 min🎒 Dumbbells, cables, EZ bar.
ExerciseSetsReps
Dumbbell or EZ-bar curl No swinging. Control the negative. 4 8–12
Cable rope triceps pushdown Spread the rope at the bottom, full lockout. 4 10–15
Incline dumbbell curl Arms behind the body = max biceps stretch. 3 10–12
Overhead cable or dumbbell triceps extension Long head. Deep stretch each rep. 3 12–15
Hammer curl Brachialis + forearms. 3 12
Preacher or cable curl Intermediate Strict, elbows locked in. Last set: drop the weight and rep to failure for a peak-biceps burn. 3 10–12
Superset: curls + triceps pushdowns Advanced Biceps straight into triceps, back to back, 2–3 rounds. Skin-splitting arm pump. 3 To failure

Finisher: Superset curls + pushdowns, 2 rounds to failure for the pump.

The most neglected and most important. Strong legs = better circulation, energy, and back health on long hauls.

On the Road — Legs

⏱ 18–25 min🎒 Bodyweight + band. All doable next to the truck.
ExerciseSetsReps
Bodyweight squats Full depth, chest up, drive through the heels. 4 20–30
Reverse lunges (each leg) Step back, knee toward the ground, stand tall. 3 12–15
Bulgarian split squat (back foot on the step) The best bodyweight leg builder. Slow and controlled. 3 10–12 each
Band or single-leg Romanian deadlift Hamstrings + glutes. Hinge at the hips, feel the stretch. 3 12–15
Standing calf raises (on a curb) Full stretch at the bottom, squeeze at the top. 4 20–25
Dumbbell goblet squat (20 lb) Hold one bell at your chest, sit deep, drive up. Adds real load to leg day. 4 12–15
Dumbbell Romanian deadlift (20 lb) Hinge at the hips, dumbbells down the thighs, feel the hamstrings stretch. 3 12–15
4 10-12
3 12 each
3 30-40 steps
3 12 each
3 10-12
3 15-20 each

Finisher: Wall sit: 3 × 45–60 sec. Legs will be shaking.

Gym — Leg Hypertrophy

⏱ 45–55 min🎒 Squat rack, leg press, machines.
ExerciseSetsReps
Leg press or hack squat Joint-friendly quad builder. Full depth, control the descent. 4 10–15
Romanian deadlift Hamstrings + glutes. Hinge, soft knees, feel the stretch. 4 8–12
Walking lunges or split squat Balance and single-leg strength. 3 12 each
Leg extension Quad isolation. Squeeze hard at the top. 3 12–15
Seated or lying leg curl Hamstring isolation — don't skip it. 3 12–15
Standing calf raise Big stretch, pause at the top. 4 15–20
Leg extension + leg curl Intermediate Pyramid the weight up. Drop set the final set of each — quads and hams on fire. 3 15 / 12 / 10
Superset: leg press + walking lunges Advanced Press then lunge with no rest between. Legs will be jelly — that's the point. 3 To failure

Finisher: Leg press drop set, or 100 total bodyweight-squat reps to close.

A strong core protects your lower back on every haul and every strap you throw. Abs are built in the kitchen too.

On the Road — Abs & Core

⏱ 10–15 min🎒 Bodyweight. Do it on the bunk or a mat next to the cab.
ExerciseSetsReps
Plank Straight line, brace the whole core, don't sag the hips. 3 30–60 sec
Dead bug Low back flat, slow opposite arm/leg. Great for spine health. 3 10 each side
Bicycle crunches Obliques. Slow and controlled beats fast and sloppy. 3 20 total
Leg raises Lower abs. Keep the low back pressed down. 3 12–15
Side plank Obliques + anti-rotation strength. 2 20–30 sec each
3 15
3 15
3 20 total

Finisher: Hollow-body hold: 3 × 20 sec.

Gym — Abs & Core

⏱ 15–20 min🎒 Cable, hanging bar, ab wheel.
ExerciseSetsReps
Cable crunch Weighted abs grow just like any muscle. Crunch with the abs, not the hips. 4 12–15
Hanging knee/leg raise Lower abs. Control the swing. 3 10–15
Ab-wheel rollout or plank Anti-extension core strength. 3 8–12 / 45 sec
Cable or machine oblique twist Rotational strength for strapping/loading. 3 12–15 each

Finisher: Plank to failure to close it out.

Heart health is the #1 killer of drivers. 20–30 minutes most days changes everything — energy, sleep, blood pressure, waistline.

On the Road — Cardio

⏱ 20–30 min🎒 Just you and a pair of shoes. Do it at the truck stop.
ExerciseSetsReps
Brisk walk / lap the lot Every fuel/rest stop, walk instead of sitting. It adds up fast. 1 15–30 min
Jumping jacks Rest 30 sec between rounds. 4 30–45 sec
High knees / jog in place Keep the intensity up. 4 30 sec
Bodyweight squat-to-press or burpees Full-body conditioning. Scale to squats only if needed. 4 10–15
Cool-down walk + stretch Bring the heart rate down, loosen the hips and hamstrings. 1 5 min

Finisher: Optional: 6–8 rounds of 20 sec hard / 40 sec easy (intervals torch calories).

Gym — Cardio & Conditioning

⏱ 20–35 min🎒 Treadmill, bike, rower, or stair climber.
ExerciseSetsReps
Incline treadmill walk Incline 8–12%, brisk pace. Low-impact fat burner, easy on the knees. 1 20–30 min
Intervals (bike or rower) Best bang-for-buck conditioning. Great for a time crunch. 8–10 30 sec hard / 60 sec easy
Stair climber steady state Builds legs and lungs at the same time. 1 15–20 min

Finisher: 5-minute easy cool-down + full-body stretch.

Hours in the seat lock up your hips, low back, and shoulders. Five minutes of this keeps you loose, mobile, and out of pain. Do it every fuel stop.

On the Road — Stretch & Loosen Up

⏱ 8–12 min🎒 Just you. Do it standing next to the cab or leaning on the trailer.
ExerciseSetsReps
Standing hip-flexor stretch (lunge, tuck hips) The #1 fix for driver low-back and hip tightness. Feel the front of the back hip open. 2 30 sec each
Standing hamstring stretch (foot on bumper) Tight hamstrings pull on your low back all day. Keep a soft knee. 2 30 sec each
Doorway / trailer chest stretch Opens the chest and shoulders that round forward on the wheel. 2 30 sec
Standing figure-4 glute stretch Ankle over the opposite knee, sit back. Loosens the hips and helps sciatica. 2 30 sec each
Neck + upper-trap stretch Ear toward shoulder, gentle. Melts driving-tension in the neck. 2 20 sec each
Standing cat-cow / back rounds Hands on knees, round and arch the spine to wake it up. 1 10 slow

Finisher: Big overhead reach + side bend, 3 breaths each side. Reset and roll out.

Gym — Mobility & Foam Roll

⏱ 12–15 min🎒 Foam roller + open floor.
ExerciseSetsReps
Foam roll: upper back, quads, IT band, glutes Roll slow, pause on tender spots and breathe. 1 30–45 sec each
Couch / kneeling hip-flexor stretch Deep hip opener — undoes the seated position. 2 45 sec each
90/90 hip stretch Rotational hip mobility for getting in and out of the cab pain-free. 2 30 sec each
Cat-cow + thread-the-needle Spine and thoracic mobility. 2 8 reps each
Deep squat hold (hang on a rack if needed) Opens hips, ankles, and low back all at once. 2 30–45 sec

Finisher: Dead hang from the pull-up bar, 2 × 20–30 sec, to decompress the whole spine.

Low back, neck, and knee pain are the drivers' curse — mostly from sitting, not from being broken. These target the real cause. Move gently; sharp pain means stop and see a pro.

On the Road — Ease the Aches

⏱ 8–12 min🎒 Bodyweight. Bunk floor or standing by the truck.
ExerciseSetsReps
Pelvic tilts (standing or on the bunk) Gently flatten and arch the low back. Wakes up a stiff spine safely. 2 10 slow
Glute bridges Strong glutes take load off the low back — the real low-back fix. 3 12–15
Knee-to-chest + gentle spinal twist Decompresses the low back and calms sciatica. 2 30 sec each
Chin tucks (for neck/tech-neck) Pull the chin straight back, make a double chin. Fixes forward-head neck pain. 3 10
Wall angels (shoulder/upper-back relief) Back to a flat surface, slide arms up and down. Undoes rounded shoulders. 2 10
Calf + ankle pumps for the driving leg Circulation for the throttle leg — helps swelling and knee stiffness. 2 20

Finisher: Slow walk for 5 minutes. Motion is lotion — gentle movement beats sitting still.

Gym — Fix the Root Cause

⏱ 15–20 min🎒 Bands, mat, light machines.
ExerciseSetsReps
Bird dog Core stability that protects the low back. Slow and controlled. 3 8 each side
Glute bridge / hip thrust (light) Builds the glutes that unload your spine. 3 12–15
Band pull-apart + face pull Reverses the rounded-shoulder posture behind neck/upper-back pain. 3 15
McGill curl-up + side plank Back-friendly core that builds endurance without loading the spine. 2 20–30 sec
Terminal knee extensions (band) Strengthens around the knee to calm achy driving knees. 3 15

Finisher: Foam-roll the tight spots and finish with 5 minutes of easy walking.

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The Secret to Real Growth: Progressive Overload

Here\'s the one rule that separates guys who actually change from guys who spin their wheels: every week, do a little more. Add a rep, add a little weight, or do one more set than last time. Your muscles grow by being broken down and rebuilt bigger and stronger — but only when you give them a reason to. If you lift the same weight for the same reps forever, your body has no reason to change.

The move: keep it simple — beat last week by something. One more rep. Five more pounds. A cleaner, slower rep. Write it down so you know what to beat. Constantly challenge yourself and the growth takes care of itself.

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Best $40 You\'ll Spend: A Pair of Dumbbells in the Truck

Bands and bodyweight will get you far — but a single pair of 20 lb dumbbells in the cab unlocks a whole new level. Presses, rows, curls, shoulder work, lunges, Romanian deadlifts, carries — you can hit every muscle group with real, scalable resistance right beside the truck. They store under the bunk, never need Wi-Fi or a gym membership, and progressive overload is as easy as slowing the rep down or adding a set.

Once 20s feel easy, grab a pair of 30s or 35s. Use the Dumbbells filter above to see the dumbbell moves for each body part.

A Gym Membership Is a Driver's Best-Kept Secret

A national gym membership is one of the smartest, cheapest tools an OTR driver can carry — often $10–$40 a month for way more than just a workout.

Any Location, Anywhere You Run

Chains like Planet Fitness, Anytime Fitness, LA Fitness, Crunch, and Gold's Gym let you use your membership at any location nationwide. Wherever your route takes you, there's a gym waiting. Anytime Fitness is 24/7 — perfect for odd-hour schedules.

Room to Park the Truck

Most of these gyms sit in big commercial lots or near shopping centers with space to get a truck in and out. Plan a stop, knock out a workout, and roll — a productive way to burn a break or reset the clock.

A Hot Shower + Locker Room

This one's underrated. For the price of one truck-stop shower, a monthly membership gets you unlimited hot showers, clean locker rooms, and sometimes a sauna or hot tub. Show up rested and clean without hunting for a shower credit.

And Obviously — a Real Workout

Full racks of dumbbells, machines, cardio, and space to move. Use the In the Gym workouts above and pick your level. It beats the truck-side routine when you\'ve got access — and it gets you out of the cab and moving.

Sauna & Recovery

Lots of these gyms — LA Fitness, Crunch, and many Planet Fitness "Black Card" locations — have a sauna, steam room, or hot tub. After days of sitting, 15 minutes in the sauna loosens tight muscles, helps you unwind, and is one of the best ways to reset before you climb back in the cab.

Do the Math — It Pays for Itself

Truck-stop showers run about $12–$15 each. If you\'re showering even once every other day, that\'s roughly $180–$225 a month. A gym membership is often $10–$40 a month — with unlimited showers, a locker room, sauna, and a full gym included. For a lot of drivers, the membership is flat-out cheaper than paying for showers.

COSO isn\'t affiliated with these gyms — just pointing you to tools that make staying healthy on the road realistic. Check each chain\'s plan for nationwide/"all-club" access.

What to Eat — Meal Planner

Pick On the Road or At Home, then the meal. Real options with protein, calories, and simple hand-size targets — no weighing, no guessing.

Breakfast — Truck Stop / Gas Station

🎯 A palm of protein + a piece of fruit + water first.
FoodProteinCals
Greek yogurt cup (plain/low-sugar) 15–17g 120
2 hard-boiled eggs (grab-n-go) 12g 140
Protein shake / RTD (Fairlife, Premier) 30g 160
Banana or apple 1g 100
Beef stick + string cheese 13g 160
Oatmeal cup (add a scoop of protein) 5–25g 150–280

Breakfast — Real Fuel

🎯 Two palms of protein + a cupped hand of carbs + fruit.
FoodProteinCals
3–4 whole eggs (or eggs + whites) scrambled 24–30g 300
Overnight oats + protein powder + berries 30g 400
Greek yogurt bowl + granola + fruit 25g 350
Turkey/chicken sausage + toast + fruit 28g 420
Protein pancakes 30g 400

Lunch — On the Move

🎯 A palm (or two) of protein + a fist of veggies. Skip the fries.
FoodProteinCals
Grilled chicken sandwich (skip mayo) 30g 400
Tuna or chicken pouch + crackers 20–25g 250
Subway-style turkey/chicken, double meat, veggies 30–40g 400
Rotisserie chicken (half) from a truck-stop deli 40g+ 350
Side salad + grilled protein 25g 300
Jerky (1–2 oz) + fruit in a pinch 18g 180

Lunch — Prep-Friendly

🎯 Palm of protein, fist of veggies, cupped hand of rice/potato.
FoodProteinCals
Chicken, rice & broccoli (classic prep) 40g 500
Lean beef + sweet potato + green beans 38g 520
Big salad + grilled chicken + olive oil 35g 450
Turkey chili + rice 35g 480
Tuna/egg salad (Greek yogurt base) + wrap 30g 400

Dinner — Keep It Lean

🎯 Palm of protein, fist of veggies, one cupped hand of carbs.
FoodProteinCals
Grilled chicken or sirloin + steamed veggies 40g 450
Chili (cup/bowl, lean) 20g 300
Baked potato + grilled protein + side salad 35g 500
Grilled fish sandwich (skip tartar/fries) 25g 380
Microwave rice pouch + chicken pouch + hot sauce 30g 450

Dinner — Build & Recover

🎯 Two palms of protein, two fists of veggies, one cupped carb.
FoodProteinCals
Grilled steak or salmon + potatoes + salad 45g 600
Baked chicken thighs + rice + roasted veggies 40g 550
Lean ground beef tacos (corn tortillas) 35g 520
Stir-fry: shrimp/chicken + veggies + rice 38g 520
Pork tenderloin + sweet potato + asparagus 40g 540

Snacks — Keep the Cab Stocked

🎯 Protein-first snacks. If it has no protein or fiber, skip it.
FoodProteinCals
Beef/turkey jerky (1 oz) 9–11g 80
String cheese / cheese cubes 7g 80
Protein bar (check sugar < 10g) 20g 210
Almonds (small handful) 6g 170
Deli meat roll-ups 10g 70
Apple + a slice of cheese 7g 180

Snacks — Smart Extras

🎯 Use snacks to hit protein, not to kill boredom.
FoodProteinCals
Cottage cheese + pineapple 24g 220
Greek yogurt + honey + nuts 20g 250
Protein shake 30g 150
Rice cakes + turkey + mustard 15g 200
Apple + 1 tbsp peanut butter 5g 200
Beef jerky + fruit 11g 180

Estimates for quick eyeballing — brands and portions vary. The goal isn\'t perfection, it\'s hitting your protein and keeping portions in check. Hand guide: palm = protein, fist = veggies, cupped hand = carbs, thumb = fats.

Eat to Perform — Nutrition for the Road

You can\'t out-train a bad diet. Here\'s how to eat well anywhere, even at 2 a.m. at a truck stop.

The One Rule That Matters Most: Protein

If you do nothing else, hit your protein. Aim for roughly 0.7–1 gram per pound of bodyweight per day. It keeps you full, protects muscle, and is the hardest macro to eat on the road — so make it the priority at every stop.

Easy road protein: beef jerky, tuna/chicken pouches, hard-boiled eggs, Greek yogurt, cottage cheese, protein shakes, rotisserie chicken, string cheese, deli meat, protein bars (check the sugar).

Winning the Truck Stop

You can eat clean anywhere if you know the moves. Build the plate around a lean protein and a vegetable, keep the sauces and fried stuff on the side.

  • Grab: grilled chicken, rotisserie, salads, hard-boiled eggs, fruit, jerky, nuts (a small handful), string cheese, plain Greek yogurt.
  • Swap: grilled instead of fried, water/black coffee instead of soda, mustard instead of mayo, side salad instead of fries.
  • Limit: giant fountain sodas, energy-drink stacking, candy, and the second helping of anything fried.

Prep Like a Pro (Cooler Game)

A 12V cooler or fridge in the cab is the single best investment for your health and your wallet. Prep 2–3 days at a time:

  • Cooked chicken/lean beef in containers, rice or potatoes, and pre-cut veggies.
  • Overnight oats in jars for fast breakfasts.
  • Fruit, Greek yogurt, and pre-portioned nuts for snacks that aren\'t candy.
  • A gallon jug so hydration is always in sight.

Hydration & Energy

Dehydration feels exactly like fatigue and hunger. Most tired-afternoon snack cravings are really thirst.

  • Target at least a gallon of water a day. Keep it where you can see it.
  • Use caffeine strategically — a cup or two early, then taper so it doesn\'t wreck your sleep.
  • Ditch the sugar-bomb energy drinks. The crash costs you more than the boost gives.

Portions, Not Perfection

You don\'t need to weigh every gram. Use your hand: a palm of protein, a fist of veggies, a cupped hand of carbs, a thumb of fats per meal. Adjust up if you\'re dropping weight too fast, down if the belt\'s getting tight.

The 80/20 Mindset

Eat well 80% of the time and stop stressing the other 20%. Consistency beats perfection every single time. One bad meal never made anyone fat, just like one good meal never made anyone fit. Play the long game — you\'ve got a lot of miles ahead.

Know Your Numbers — Heart Rate & Wearables

Your resting heart rate is one of the best free health signals you have. For most adults it lands around 60–80 bpm — as you get fitter, it drops, and a resting rate creeping up over time is an early warning worth watching. During cardio, a simple target is 180 minus your age for easy fat-burning zone-2 work.

Worth every penny: an Apple Watch or Garmin tracks your heart rate, steps, calories, and sleep automatically — so you actually see your progress instead of guessing. Garmin\'s battery lasts days between charges (great for the road), and both will nudge you to move and flag an abnormally high or low heart rate. What gets measured gets managed.

Drop Fat & Build Real Strength

The winning formula for a driver isn\'t complicated: hit your protein, stay in a small calorie deficit, lift a few times a week, and walk every day. Muscle is your metabolism\'s engine — the more you keep, the more you burn just sitting in the seat.

  • Protein at every meal keeps you full and protects muscle while you lean out.
  • Lift heavy-ish, 2–4× a week (even the truck/band workouts here) to build and hold strength as you age.
  • Walk after meals — even 10 minutes blunts blood-sugar spikes and adds up to real fat loss.
  • Cut the liquid calories — soda, sweet tea, and energy drinks are the fastest way to undo a good day.
  • Sleep 7+ hours when you can. Short sleep tanks fat loss and cranks up cravings.

Men 30–60: Keep Your Testosterone Strong

Most drivers are men in their prime working years, and natural testosterone slowly declines with age — but your daily habits move that needle more than anything. The same things that build strength and drop fat also help keep your hormones healthy:

  • Lift and keep muscle — resistance training is one of the strongest natural levers for testosterone.
  • Prioritize sleep — most of your testosterone is produced while you sleep; chronic short sleep hammers it.
  • Manage bodyfat — excess belly fat converts testosterone to estrogen. Leaning out helps.
  • Don\'t fear healthy fats — eggs, olive oil, nuts, and fatty fish give your body the raw materials it needs.
  • Get sunlight & enough vitamin D, zinc, and magnesium — common shortfalls for guys on the road.
  • Go easy on alcohol and chronic stress — both quietly drag your levels down.

Feeling wiped out, foggy, or low-drive for weeks? That\'s worth a simple blood test — ask your doctor to check your levels. This is general wellness info, not medical advice.

Supplements Worth Your Money

You don\'t need a cabinet full of powders — food comes first. But a few basics genuinely help, and they travel easy in the truck:

  • Whey or protein powder — the easiest way to hit your protein on the road. One scoop = ~25g.
  • Creatine monohydrate (5g/day) — the most proven supplement there is for strength and muscle. Cheap, safe, take it any time.
  • Electrolytes — for long hot days in the cab; keeps energy and focus up when plain water isn\'t enough.
  • Caffeine — a pre-workout or black coffee before training. Use it early so it doesn\'t wreck your sleep.

Daily Vitamins for Life on the Road

Truck-stop diets and long hours in the cab leave a lot of guys short on a few key nutrients. A simple daily stack covers the gaps:

  • Vitamin D3 — most drivers are low (not enough sunlight). Supports mood, immunity, and testosterone.
  • Magnesium — helps sleep, muscle cramps, and recovery. Great taken at night.
  • Fish oil (omega-3) — heart, joints, and brain — all things this job is hard on.
  • A solid multivitamin — cheap insurance for the days the diet isn\'t perfect.
  • Fiber / greens — keeps digestion regular when road food doesn\'t.

Check with your doctor or pharmacist before adding supplements, especially if you take medication.

General wellness information for COSO carriers — not medical or dietary advice. Check with your doctor before starting a new nutrition or exercise program, especially if you have any health conditions.

Got a Fitness or Nutrition Question?

This program is put together by our own Austin — a pro. Have a question the site doesn\'t cover? Want help dialing in a plan for your goals, your body, or your schedule on the road? Email him directly and he\'ll be more than happy to help.

Ask Austin — austinn@cosologistics.com

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