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Yes, without a doubt.
A few months ago, a new gym set up near where I live - like, five minutes walking distance away.
We took a tour of it, and saw that it's a really nice facility. The ventilation and spacing of equipment is good (for avoiding disease), the variety of equipment is good, and it just seems like the ideal gym.
So my family and I thought, "Why not? Let's get a family membership." Now I head down there most mornings, spend an hour or so exercising, and then walk back, sometimes with coffee from a nice nearby cafe in hand.
I hadn't noticed the slow decline in how I felt about my body and my life. I've always been a pretty fit guy, but the pandemic made me more sedentary than usual, and it was slowly affecting my self-esteem and mental health.
And I didn't realize that until the effects of working out regularly showed up and I started looking and feeling better again. It was a "boiled frog" situation.
That gym moving nearby might have saved my life long-term, because I don't know how I would have gotten the impetus to go to a more distant one otherwise.
It's just been a few months, but I've already put on visible muscle and lowered noticeable belly fat substantially. And more importantly, I feel stronger than I have for several years. Like, lifting things is easier, carrying furniture is easier, just... moving is easier. I probably weigh more, because muscle is denser than fat, but I feel lighter.
It's a good feeling. It's clearing away a brain fog I didn't know I had. My software work is improving, I'm writing again, and I'm re-engaging with hobbies and interests that had fallen by the wayside.
If you can't or don't want to get a gym membership, learn some body weight exercises, find a park you can jog at.. Do something physical every day. Your brain and body are one system, and keeping all of it tuned and maintained is important for mental health.