I never thought the simple side-step motion I learned in middle school gym class would become my secret weapon against Zoom fatigue. When pandemic-induced remote work transformed my dining table into an office, I noticed my energy plummeting during back-to-back video calls. That’s when I decided to experiment: what if I did step touches during every Zoom meeting?
The accidental fitness revolution at my desk
Step touches are exactly what they sound like—stepping to one side, touching your toe to the ground, and returning to center. This low-impact movement became my subtle rebellion against sitting still. During every virtual meeting, I’d stand just out of camera view and step rhythmically side to side.
“Micro-movements throughout the day contribute significantly to your overall caloric expenditure and metabolic health,” explains Dr. Melissa Chen, exercise physiologist at Austin Wellness Institute. “These small activities, sometimes called ‘NEAT’ or non-exercise activity thermogenesis, can burn up to 350 additional calories daily.”
My surprising 30-day results
By week two, I noticed I wasn’t experiencing the mid-afternoon energy crash. By day 30, my fitness tracker showed I was averaging an extra 2,500 steps daily—just from meeting movements! More surprisingly, my concentration during calls actually improved rather than diminished.
The benefits reminded me of what I discovered when I tried a 5-minute desk workout that continued burning calories hours afterward—small efforts yield outsized results.
Why step touches are the perfect desk exercise
- Zero equipment needed
- Can be done standing or seated
- Virtually invisible on camera
- Low-impact on joints
Unlike more intense workouts that leave you sweaty, step touches provide what fitness professionals call the “Goldilocks zone” of exertion—just enough movement to elevate your heart rate without disrupting your workday.
“The genius of integrating movement into meetings is that it transforms otherwise sedentary time into active minutes,” says Trevor Williams, corporate wellness consultant. “Your body doesn’t distinguish between ‘exercise’ and ‘movement’—it simply responds to not being stationary.”
How to incorporate step touches into your workday
Think of your Zoom schedule as a workout calendar. I started with five minutes per call, eventually working up to entire meetings. The key is consistency rather than intensity. During particularly engaging meetings where I needed to present, I’d switch to seated step touches instead.
This approach works similarly to how walking 7,500 steps daily can transform mental health—the cumulative effect is what creates meaningful change.
The unexpected mental clarity bonus
Like a meandering stream clearing sediment as it flows, step touches seemed to flush away mental fog during long meetings. The gentle rhythm created what psychologists call “active meditation”—enough physical engagement to prevent mind-wandering without requiring conscious focus.
- Improved alertness during meetings
- Reduced post-meeting fatigue
- Better retention of discussion points
Amplify your results with these variations
After two weeks, I began incorporating different movements to target various muscle groups, similar to how ditching weights for bodyweight exercises doubled core strength for some fitness enthusiasts.
Try adding arm movements, light ankle weights, or alternating between quick and slow tempos. The beauty of desk workouts is their adaptability—they grow with your fitness level without requiring additional time commitment.
From skeptic to believer: My desk workout journey
I was initially embarrassed about my “step touch habit,” hiding it from colleagues. Now I openly advocate for movement during meetings, sharing how it’s possible to burn significant calories with no-equipment routines without disrupting workflow.
Like the daily mobility move that eliminated chronic pain for some practitioners, my simple step touches transformed both my physical energy and mental approach to remote work.
Could your next Zoom call be your next workout opportunity? Your body doesn’t know the difference between exercise and movement—it only knows when you’re giving it what it needs to thrive.