Archives for posts with tag: fitness motivation

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Sometime it seems that gyms are like foreign countries, with everyone speaking a strange language, and as if you need a passport to get in. Despite working out quite regularly, and being genuinely interested in fitness and exercise motivation, I don’t feel like I belong in this world. Even though I do it myself, I still think there’s something strange about people who wear lycra, drink bottled water, and pick up heavy objects that don’t really need to be moved. It’s as illogical as moving furniture for fun: ‘Just leave it there, for Pete’s sake, it looks fine’.

But like all good tourists, I’m trying to blend in with the locals. I’m taking an interest, wearing bright colours, and trying to stammer out of few phrases in the local lingo. After a few months of perusing fitness blogs, and wondering what fitspo was, I finally googled it, and was quite surprised by the result. I was under the impression that fitspiration was something to do with fit people’s sweat. (It does sound like perspiration).

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Of course, since my fitness blog reading hobby started, I’ve been happy to stumble across the great Maria Kang ‘fat-shaming or fitspiration’ debate. (Here’s a sympathetic voice and a critical view). When I first saw this image, I assumed it was an older sister with her three younger siblings. Then I read the caption and slowly the lights went on. ‘What’s my excuse for what?’ I wondered. Gradually, with the excruciating slowness of ice plates converging, the purpose of the image became clear. ‘Well’ I thought, ‘what a pretty woman. But that’s her journey, not mine’. I’ve since, rather meanly, taken to referring to the image as Maria Kangaroo, just because of her large eyes and alert expression.

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I’ve recently been along to a couple of Boot Camp classes. My local gym runs them on the beach volleyball courts, so the experience has changed my relationship with sand. Sand used to conjour up happy thoughts of family holidays by the beach, Reef coconut tanning oil and lazy days in the sun. Not anymore. As one woman said, as we crawled through the sand, butts high, from one end of the volleyball court to the other, ‘this must be the exfoliation stage of the process’. ‘I’ll be doing the mud mask by the end’ I replied.

Similarly, the word ‘dip’ used to make me feel quite perky. ‘French onion or avocado?’ I’d muse, ‘both equally good’. But sadly my Boot Camp instructor, a guy who looks like he’s been chewed up and spat out by a sabre-toothed tiger, thinks dips are just great, and I don’t mean the cheese and bikkie kind. ‘Dips!’ he howls, as our exhausted triceps quiver, muscle fibres now the texture of melted parmesan. ‘Biscuits!’ I feel like screaming back.

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(Photo courtesy of mamacino

 

 

 

 

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Lately I have been meditating on strength. It began simply enough, thinking about physical strength and has since expanded outwards, until everything seems connected to the idea. For the last few days everything I see, think, feel and do seems connected to the process of becoming stronger. Here’s how it all started…

About a week ago, I was in the gym, lifting something heavy, and musing about other things to distract myself. I’ve found that when an exercise gets tough, letting the mind wander, and thinking about something else, anything else, usually helps. On this particular day, it occurred to me, rather depressingly, that the exercise I was doing would only get more and more difficult as I aged. Each year the same weight would feel heavier.

After this prime piece of motivation, I thought ‘well, what’s the point?’ If exercise functions simply to slow inevitable physical decline, then is it really worth the effort? I’ve always been curious about why people exercise, and like to try and unpick my own motivations: if you’re honest with yourself, it’s kind of fun. Meanwhile, pop music blared and my class moved onto another exercise. So I was thinking about life, and about doing things that make you stronger, and pondering the link between these two things.

Suddenly it hit me: bam! That was the whole point. We live to become stronger. It doesn’t matter if our efforts become less and less effective as we age, as it’s the process that counts. It’s written into our life cycle. We emerge into the world, helpless and mewling; through childhood we learn the ropes of the world, yet even as young adults, we are unsure about many things. It’s only as we get older, and face many trials, that strength begins to settle into our bones.

Tomorrow my young daughter will have eye surgery. It’s an important operation, and I’m lucky to have a good surgeon and hospital, and a short wait on the public system’s notoriously meandering list. More broadly, I know I’m privileged to live in a country where I can take healthcare for granted. But still, she’s only five, and my only child, and when I think about the mechanics of the procedure I shudder.

As a parent, I know that my strength is my daughter’s strength, and that I can transmit anxiety as easily as I can communicate optimism: the choice is mine. This, obviously, is easier said than done. But perhaps strength is best thought of as a series of choices, rather than a single battle. It’s facing something that we don’t want to face, or doing something that we don’t want to do, and doing this over and over again. Here’s my bumper sticker summary: Strength is the tension between the urge to run and hide, and the determination to stay and fight.

Interestingly, I was reading a cracking extract from Mike Tyson’s upcoming biography, and he says pretty much the same thing. His first trainer taught him that fear is a force, either destructive or positive, depending on how you use it. Tyson writes about the gladiatorial combat within, and how the process of wrestling with fear made him tough. He talks about being bullied as a child and how this drove his ferocious fighting technique. Tyson never just climbed through the ropes: he ripped them apart like a beast seeking prey.

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(Photo credit: ESPN The magazine)

Another good read is to be found here. Fitness blogger Jen Sinkler interviews Jack Clark, a well known rugby coach, in an article titled ‘How to Win’. While rugby remains largely incomprehensible to me, I just don’t get it, I respond to Clark’s detailed knowledge of team dynamics. Essentially, his argument is that winning is a social process, and that you can build a team culture that facilitates collaboration and collective responsibility.  Clark believes resilience is a key aspect of mental strength: ‘The best fortune cookie you ever opened says ‘get knocked down nine times, get up ten’’. And that while its good to spend time talking about a team’s achievements, close attention needs to be paid to targeting weaknesses.

I’m amazed by the close alignment between physical and mental strength, how the process of training our bodies trains our minds, and vice versa. And how even the simple act of picking up a heavy weight mirrors how we tackle a real problem: it’s not something that we want to do, we imagine it as much worse than it is, but once we step forward and take action, fear dissipates, and the result is usually different from what we expect. Afterwards our sense of release always surprises us.

As I’ve got older, the line between body and mind hasn’t evaporated, but it has become much less clear. I remember years ago, interviewing a prima ballerina, and her comment that ‘all movement begins in the mind’. Like all top dancers, this woman was a steel angel, with formidable mental toughness and a ridiculously high pain barrier. Her art form was all about thinking your way to physically demanding outcome. 

It seems that strength, however we define it, comes from many places: experience/forgiveness, aligning mind and body, embracing fear, practising resilience, transforming weaknesses into personal strengths, family, friendships and love.