Here’s Exactly What Cara Delevingne Does For Her Workouts

Photo credit: Cara Delevingne / Instagram
Photo credit: Cara Delevingne / Instagram


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Cara Delevingne, 29, just got back from a beach day in Oahu, Hawaii when she hops on our scheduled Zoom call.

It's a definite contrast to the small, low-light office nook at my Brooklyn apartment. It’s eight o’clock at night, New York time, so I’m a bit low-energy when I finally get a chance to speak with the model-slash-actress. As soon as I hear her bubbly British accent, though, ("this is Car-ah") I straighten up in my seat. I’m about to speak with a person who, well, everyone is talking about. And I have questions.

Fresh off a buzzy (and critique-inducing) ensemble at the Met Gala, Cara’s now chilling in Oahu. On Instagram, she shares that she's swimming with sharks, resting up, and shooting on the beach for her latest collab with Puma, and pitching in during a cleanup at Kahana Bay Beach to keep the shores free of microplastics, fishing nets, and more.

"We were lucky to use this beautiful island for our photoshoot," Cara says. “It felt natural to give back and leave the beach cleaner than we found."

Cara chatted with Women’s Health about exercise, mental health, activism, and plans to make the world a safer place for everyone —starting with herself.

Her workout routine right now is “pretty minimal.”

Because her career requires lots of worldwide travel, stunts, creative shoots, and the like, Cara considers the job "physically strenuous."

"I just finished my show and I’m pretty exhausted," she says, and I can hear the weariness in her voice through the Zoom audio. She’s tired. "My workout routine right now is pretty minimal."

If she’s preparing for a specific project, though, Cara says she enjoys doing Pilates most days.

"My workout routine isn’t something that’s fixed," she says. "I try to listen to my body and do at least 10 minutes of movement a day," she explains.

When she’s not doing Pilates, she does activities like boxing, hiking, and tennis. "It’s hard to motivate yourself to work out when it’s the same activity every day, so I can’t stand going to the gym," she says. If she feels like taking a day off, she’ll still try to fit in a "chilled" activity like swimming, too.

Cara got interested in martial arts and self-defense when she was younger, and she even earned a yellow belt. "I wanted to be able to be strong and to defend myself," she says. "It’s also interesting to learn about the history of the practice." In short, Cara just likes trying workouts that are, well, fun. A pretty healthy outlook, no?

Photo credit: Cara Delevingne / Puma
Photo credit: Cara Delevingne / Puma

She finds solace in her yoga practice.

Yoga is the way Cara gets "out of her head and into her body."

"For me, yoga is really about breathwork and meditation," she says. "It’s not an exercise, it’s a practice." It’s hard for her to pinpoint how she feels when she’s constantly on the move, but yoga gives her the chance to "take stock and check what’s going on inside."

She wants to make the planet a better place.

When it comes to matters of environment, Cara credits much of her knowledge to high school friend Christabel Reed, founder of EcoResolution, an educational platform that provides access to information about the ecological crisis and sustainability measures.

Cara says she was "very very ignorant about the state of the world," but Christabel, thankfully, informed her convictions about "the seriousness of what we’re doing to our planet." Now, Cara says she's passionate about contributing to the climate solution.

"As soon as you educate yourself and start learning, it’s impossible to deny," Cara explains. "I’m not better than anyone, I’m just lucky enough to be in situations where people have educated me."

Photo credit: Taylor Hill - Getty Images
Photo credit: Taylor Hill - Getty Images

Her latest project combines her passion for sustainability and yoga.

This year, Cara collaborated with athleticwear designer Puma to launch another collection of her yoga wear line, Exhale, which is made with what the brand calls "eco-conscious materials." Cara says they wanted to "push the bar higher" in terms of sustainability and design, creating looks that were "easy on the eyes" and textures that were comfortable, no matter what you're doing in the clothes.

The items are created with recycled cotton instead of polyester, which uses fewer resources and generates less textile waste during the production process. And while producing less clothing, in general, is the most efficient way to limit a company’s carbon footprint, in 2019, Puma stated that it would offset 35 percent of its total greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 to meet the aims of the Paris Agreement, which hopes to reduce the effects of global warming.

"I wanted people to feel good about what they’re doing when they buy it," she says.

At the end of our interview, Cara and I touched on the fact that, as a world-famous model and actress, she’s someone who people not only look up to but want to look like, physically speaking. But she says she's not here to tell anyone what to do. "If people want to get Botox or workout two hours a day, just be aware of all else you’re not doing when you do those things," she says. "I don’t want to preach to anyone."

"It makes me sad," Cara says, that people "care more about how they look" than their societal contributions. Instead, she encourages readers to think about how you can "truly, truly help someone else."

Perhaps focusing on the environment is one place to start.

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