Joe Wicks: Spending less time on my phone has made me a better dad
Joe Wicks is expecting his third child with wife Rosie. Picture: PA Photo/Matt Crossick
Joe Wicks is doing âabsolutely fantasticâ right now.
Heâs just come home from taking part in the Queenâs Platinum Jubilee pageant (he was one of the celebs riding an open-top bus dedicated to culture in the 2000s) â which was âproper jubilantâ â and now heâs off on holiday.
âIâm heading to Spain for a motorbike trip with my dad and brother,â Surrey-born Wicks, aka The Body Coach, shares. âWeâre going to ride across Spain for seven days.âÂ
Thereâs no doubt he deserves a good break. His long-awaited BBC documentary â Joe Wicks: Facing My Childhood â aired recently, which saw him open up about growing up in a family with parental mental health problems, including an emotional chat with his dad, Gary, who was addicted to heroin when Wicks was young.
Itâs a taboo topic â Wicks acknowledges he was shining a light on something that desperately needs to be talked about, and heâs had loads of feedback since it aired. But the process âwas exhaustingâ, the 36-year-old admits.
âI was so just emotional and upset, it was like therapy, doing it every day was tough. I didnât want to talk to anybody, I just wanted to go to sleep, I was physically exhausted from the process of talking about these things.
âBut Iâm proud of it. Iâm proud of the conversations, the openness we all showed, the vulnerability and sensitivity, and how we dealt with a subject that was tough to talk about, in a really positive, kind way.âÂ
Wicks has long been a household name, with his down-to-earth brand of fitness and healthy eating cookbooks. But itâs fair to say he became a national hero during lockdown, with his sanity-saving PE With Joe daily YouTube videos (he was awarded an MBE for his efforts in March).

He says it âwas probably my busiest timeâ and heâs âkept the foot on the gasâ ever since â with a podcast, the BBC doc, his Children In Need challenge (which involved working out for 24 hours), and live tours all in the mix â but even heroes have limits. Wicks shared an emotional Instagram post in January, acknowledging that even the âmost upbeat and positiveâ people struggle, later admitting in his podcast that heâs no stranger to burnout.
âI am really good now at taking breaks," he says.
Wicks, who has a daughter Indie, three, and a two-year-old son Marley with wife Rosie (and baby number three on the way), says he's become a better father since decreasing his screen time.
"Iâm in a really positive place with that," he shares.
"Before I was consumed with it, I was just working and on my phone all the time, and now Iâm having better boundaries.âÂ
He says this has âreally helped my relationship with Rose and the kids. Iâm now a lot more present and less impatient and irritable, because Iâm just calmer and a lot less anxious about things. Iâm just working on being with them, rather than working on replying to millions of people every day, which is impossible.âÂ
This hasnât dented his passion for what he does though. Wicks is just as invested and driven as ever â and thereâs a lot heâs excited about right now. He headlined health and fitness festival WellFest Ireland in May (wellfest.ie) â âout of all the things I love, itâs definitely doing live events,â he says â and heâs also âreally excitedâ about welcoming baby number three in September.

âIndie and Marley are so hilarious, theyâre so funny together, but theyâre so grown up â Marleyâs two-and-a-half now, such a grown-up kid, and I miss the baby phase,â Wicks enthuses.Â
âSo Iâm very excited to bring a new baby into our life, have those early morning cuddles and push them around in the buggy, and obviously on the chest â I love the baby carrier. Iâm sure it wonât be our last baby.âÂ
When it comes to the example he hopes to set for his kids, for Wicks itâs pretty simple.
âI think the greatest thing we can do as parents is role modelling, and role modelling kindness. Teaching kids to be kind, teaching children to enjoy exercise and be active and move their bodies â letâs show them what exercise is, do it with them, do it in front of them â and cooking as well.
âIf you can teach your children to enjoy food, to engage with cooking, to love the process of creating food, then youâre giving those three skills: kindness, physical health and mental health through nutrition and food and exercise. Thatâs it, thatâs your job. Thatâs all you need to focus on,â Wicks reflects.
âEverything else â their career, their life choices, whatever they do as adults, itâs fine, theyâre going to make that decision. But youâve given them the tools they need to really have a successful and healthy life, and hopefully a positive mental health life as well.â

