Sports

I Could Not Do a Single Push-Up. So I Started Doing One.

By David Kim — *Could not do a push-up at 30. Can now do 10. Still not impressive, but different.*

Last updated: April 2026


I was 30 years old when I realized I could not do a single push-up.

Not one. I got on the floor. I lowered myself halfway. My arms shook. I collapsed. I tried again. Same result.

I was not overweight. I was not unhealthy. I just had no upper body strength. I had never needed it. My job did not require it. My hobbies did not involve it.

I told myself it did not matter. Push-ups are not a life skill. No one was testing me.

But it bothered me. Not because I wanted to be strong. Because I could not do something that seemed so basic. So I decided to fix it.

Not with a gym membership. Not with a personal trainer. Just with the floor in my living room.


What I Did

I looked up how to build up to a push-up. The advice was simple: start easier.

Week 1: Wall push-ups

I stood two feet from a wall. Leaned forward. Pushed back. That was easy. I could do 20. I did them every morning.

Week 2: Incline push-ups

I used a couch. Hands on the seat. Feet on the floor. Harder than the wall. But still doable. I did as many as I could. Usually 8 to 10.

Week 3: Lower incline

I used a coffee table. Lower than the couch. Harder. I could only do 5 or 6. That was fine.

Week 4: Knee push-ups

I got on the floor. Knees down. Hands on the ground. I could do 3. Then 4. Then 5. Slow progress.

Week 5: The real thing

I tried a real push-up. I got one. Barely. My arms shook. My form was bad. But I did it.

I kept doing knee push-ups until I could do 10. Then I tried real push-ups again. I could do 2. Then 3. Then 5.

It took me almost three months to do 10 real push-ups in a row.


What I Learned

LessonWhat It Means
Start where you areI started at zero. Not at “almost.” Zero. That was okay.
Make it easier firstWall push-ups felt silly. They worked anyway.
Do not compareOther people could do 50. I could do 0. Their number did not matter.
Show up oftenA few minutes every day was better than one long session per week.
Progress is slowThree months for 10 push-ups. That felt slow. But it was still progress.

What Changed

I can now do push-ups. That is the main change. Not a dramatic transformation. Not a six-pack. Not a fitness journey.

Just one skill I did not have before.

But a few other things changed too.

I stopped feeling weak. Not because I am strong now. Because I proved to myself that I could improve at something physical.

I stopped avoiding hard things. The push-up experiment taught me that “I cannot do this” is often just “I cannot do this yet.”

I started other small habits. After push-ups, I added squats. Then planks. Then pull-up negatives (still cannot do a real pull-up). Each one started the same way: at zero.


What I Am Not Saying

I am not saying push-ups are a life skill. They are not.

I am not saying everyone should want to do push-ups. If you do not care, that is fine.

I am not saying three months is fast. It is slow. But it worked.

I am just saying: if there is a basic physical thing you cannot do and it bothers you, you can probably learn to do it. Not quickly. Not easily. But slowly.


A Small Suggestion

Pick one physical thing you cannot do.

  • One push-up
  • Touch your toes
  • Stand on one leg for 30 seconds
  • Climb three flights of stairs without stopping

Look up the easiest version of that thing. Wall push-ups. Stretching while sitting. Holding a chair. Whatever.

Do the easy version every day. Just a few minutes.

After a month, try the real thing again. You might still fail. That is fine. Keep doing the easy version.

Eventually, you might surprise yourself.


The Bottom Line

I could not do a single push-up at 30. At 31, I could do 10.

That is not impressive to anyone who works out. But it is impressive to me.

I did not get strong overnight. I did not follow a complicated plan. I just started with the easiest version and showed up most days.

That is all it took.


About the author: David Kim is not a fitness expert. He is just someone who could not do a push-up and then learned how. His form is still not perfect.

This article reflects personal experience. Different bodies have different abilities. Consult a doctor before starting a new exercise routine, especially if you have injuries or health concerns.