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'I Worked Out Like Halle Berry For A Week—Here's What It Was Like'

When it comes to the fit women of Hollywood, few truly impress me as much as Halle Berry. Take one look at her Instagram and it's clear: The woman works. As in, if you told me she decide to swap the big screen for a professional sports arena, I wouldn't even be surprised.

'I Worked Out Like Halle Berry For A Week'

I mean, not only has Halle sculpted herself the most impressive abs I've ever seen, but she can also knock out like 15 pullups in one shot. (I consider myself pretty fit and I can eek out *maybe* one...to save my life.) Halle's got more than 25 years on me, but there's not a doubt in my mind that she could absolutely whoop my butt.

Perhaps the coolest thing about Halle, though, is her perspective on her next-level fitness. Here's the thing: She's not in it for the six-pack! Whether on the 'gram or in the columns she's written for WH, Halle shares that she's all-in on taking care of her health and being as strong as possible in every way, both for herself and her kids. The abs? They're just a bonus. (I'm here for this.)

Inspired by Halle's fit philosophy (and yes, okay, her abs, too), I decided to try her routine out for myself. Luckily, she's not one to keep the secret sauce all to herself.

Halle takes a kitchen sink approach to working out; she literally does it all. Though she typically only has time for four full-on workout sessions per week (at least one of which is often just 20 minutes or so long ), she incorporates everything from strength training to yoga to jumping rope.

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Eager to mix up my own routine (which had been feeling pretty stale, TBH), I channeled my inner Halle for a weekand though I may not have come out of it with cut-up abs, I sweat (and learned!) a lot.

In true Halle fashion, I set out to conquer four solidand uniqueworkout sessions for my little experiment: her go-to 20-minute workout , an intense full-body strength training challenge she wrote about for WH recently, a long yoga sesh, and a jump rope burner dreamt up by her trainer Peter Lee Thomas .

Conquering four workouts for the week felt totally doable (score!)and I seriously appreciated the variety.

Halle's 20-minute workouta fast-and-dirty circuit of moves like mountain climbers with sit-outs (see my video attempt below) and pli squatscame in clutch on a busy, deadline-filled day when a full hour-long workout just didn't feel realistic. It left me dripping and feeling super accomplished.

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For my third workout, I was ready for a little active recovery . A good yoga practice always reminds me that movement is about so much more than burning calories or building a particular muscleand I have no doubts that Halle's regular yoga practice helps her keep both her mind and body right.

Making time to turn inward and slow down amidst a hectic schedule and otherwise-heart-pumping workouts helped me feel grounded and at peace, and physically and mentally strong.

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I followed along with a 30-minute Peloton yoga video to get the full effect, but Halle says she feels better after even just a few minutes of stretching or child's pose .

A long-time lover of anything involving a barbell, my routine hasn't consisted of much light-weight/high-rep work in yearsbut Halle may have once again made me a believer.

I went into her two-move, strength-training challenge workout a little (okay, a lot) overconfident. However, as I slowly descended the long ladder of lunges (wearing a booty band , might I add) with biceps curls and squats with overhead pressesbasically, you start with 40 lunges and 20 squats and repeat, slowly slicing off reps until you get down to zerothe ~literal~ fire in my muscles put me in my place. I think I did 200 lungesand man, did I feel them the next morning.

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I used a single 15-pound dumbbell for the workout (a far cry from my usual barbell) and halfway through the workout, I realized even half the weight would have absolutely crushed me.

By the end, my legs quivered with every repand I was sore for not one, not two, but THREE days afterward. Ego, checked.

Never much of a jump-roper back in my blacktop days, this was the only workout of Halle's that I was truly nervous about: her 1,500-rotation jump rope challenge. Yeah, she did that for fun.

Halle describes jumping rope as a Zen, in-the-zone experience. She finds her rhythm and just jumps and jumps and jumps. As a result, she cranks out 1,500 rotations in just about 15 minutes.

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I don't think I've ever made it through more than 20 rotations at a time without tripping over myself or somehow entangling my ponytail in the rope, so I figured 1,500 skips would probably take me, oh, like an hour.

In the end, I completed my skips in about 25 minutes. At first, I could get through maybe 10 at a time; but towards the end, I understood Halle's jump-roping zone. Once I found my groove, momentum kept me going. (At one point, I hit 47 consecutive rotations!)

After a week of working out like her, I totally understand why Halle stays so committed to her fitness. Mixing it up is fun! And framing workouts as challenges? The competitive vibes made me feel like an athlete again.

Most of all, though, Halle's routine struck me as *sustainable.* By striking the perfect balance of different types of training and just the right level of intensity (plus, of course, her truly health-oriented motivations), Halle has found a way to somehow get fitter and fitter as she gets older and you'd better believe I'll be taking a page out of that book.

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