How I Broke 1,000 Miles into a Doable Daily Goal
At first, 1,000 miles sounded intimidating.
But once I did the math, it immediately felt manageable.
Walking 1,000 miles in a year averages out to 2.74 miles per day. That was my target. I was already walking over two miles most days—I just wasn’t being intentional or consistent about it.
What mattered most, though, wasn’t walking the exact same distance every day.
It was understanding how the average worked.
Some days I walked everything at once. Other days I broke it up. If I missed a day, I didn’t panic—I simply walked more the next day.
On busier weekdays, I’d sometimes split walks into shorter chunks. One mile takes about 20 minutes, so three short walks spread throughout the day put me right around three miles.
On weekends, however, it looked completely different.
That’s when I had more time. My kids were napping. Those were often my longer walks—four or five miles at once—which helped balance out shorter days during the week.
Once I stopped treating the goal like a daily rule and instead started treating it like a weekly rhythm, it became much easier to stick with.
Flexibility is what made walking 1,000 miles possible.