Friday, August 24, 2018
Thursday, August 23, 2018
First, we turn into hippos...
The first principle for
doctors, based on Hippocrates, is not to cause harm. This is actually good advice for all of us,
and particularly as we approach our fitness.
Sometimes we get super
excited about doing All The Fitness! We
want to lift everything, run forever, play with the professionals, and then go
dancing. I am the very last person to
squash anyone’s enthusiasm. But I draw
the line at the part where we hurt ourselves by overdoing.
Rest and sleep are
essential parts of fitness, as are food and drink. There are days when the absolutely right
decision is to go for a short walk, eat some fruit, and take a nice long nap in
order to maximize our fitness. Other
days it can be all about the weights or it can be our personal Day of Kale or
whatever. We need to pay attention to
what we actually need.
We’re in this for life,
after all.
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
Three hours are probably not necessary...
Martin Luther once said,
more or less, that he had so much work to do that he needed to spend the first
three hours of his day in prayer.
Presumably, what he meant was that those hours of prayer enabled the
rest of his work.
Now, Martin Luther is not
exactly famous for his exercise programs or fitness. And prayer during exercise is strictly
optional (much like in schools, where, as someone once said, it will occur as
long as there are tests; in an exercise context, I think that prayer is
connected to lunges or burpees and can be summarized as “Please God let these
be over soon!”). Nonetheless, I would
argue that exercise, for many of us, can have the same kind of effect on our
work. (No, I am not saying that exercise
is a religion, or that we can sweat instead of pray, or actually anything about
faith at all. That is well beyond the
scope of my practice or my intelligence.
I’m just making an analogy. Which
I will get around to in the next paragraphs.)
We often think we don’t
have time to exercise. We’re too
tired. We have too many things to do. This could very easily have been Martin
Luther’s attitude toward the discipline of prayer. But he chose differently. We can, too.
We need to squeeze in at
least a little cardio anyway.
It will give us more
energy, sharpen our brains, and create a sense of accomplishment.
Tuesday, August 21, 2018
Two at a Time!
When we exercise, we
sometimes need to hold two opposing ideas in our minds at the same time. (We get bonus points for working our brains
along with our bodies!)
One of those ideas is
that doing something is better than doing nothing. Maybe we don’t run all that far or fast. Maybe we don’t have the world’s greatest
range of motion. Maybe our weights have
very small numbers on them. That is all
okay.
The other idea is that we
need to do things right. We want to hold
ourselves to the goal of perfect form, of progress, of achievement.
The first idea gets us to
show up in the first place. It helps us
take ourselves lightly and to let go of the extreme critical voice inside. The second one builds character and
self-esteem. It gives us the big picture
motivation.
We can do it.
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