A lot of the rhetoric around
exercise is about suffering and compulsion.No pain, no gain.Trainers are drill sergeants, torturers, dominatrixes, punishers.Gym time is penance for the sins of the
table.
Nope.
At base, exercise is about
love.It is about life and wanting
to be around for it.It’s about
growth and victory and power.We
exercise because we matter.That
special thing that we are, that crazy, wonderful human who wants to climb trees
or solve world hunger or balance the checkbook just once is worth preserving
and cherishing.That is why we run
and lift and sweat and stretch.
News flash:we are all different.What this means is that it is difficult
to say how much exercise we each need.Our government suggests we get at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise
most days a week.That is not a
bad place to start, but most of us could use more.
This does not mean that we should
spend more time at the gym than, say, sleeping.People who are not into endurance sports, who are not
professional athletes, who hold actual jobs don’t need to spend hours and hours
a day working out.Do some
cardio.Lift some weights.Stretch.Find the amount of exercise (more than zero!) that makes you
feel best.
The Amazing Stickie works her
lower abdominals by doing femur arcs.The movement is simple, but a few form details make all the difference.
She begins lying in tabletop
position, which is on her back with her thighs pointing toward the ceiling and
her shins parallel to the floor.For those of us who remember geometry, we recognize that the two
segments of her legs make a 90 degree angle.This angle is important because she needs to maintain it
throughout the exercise.
Stickie inhales as she lowers one
leg toward the ground using ONLY her hip.It is extremely tempting to touch the foot to the ground by bending the
knee, but that is much, much easier and does not give the abdominals the
challenge they need and want.As
she exhales, she brings the leg back up to meet the other leg.As she moves, she works to keep her
abdominals flat; they will want to poof up, but that just trains them to stick
out, which is not our goal.She
alternates legs until she has completed a set of ten.After a rest, she does a couple more sets.
Maniac Magee by Jerry Spinelli is the inaugural selection for kids
from Andrew Luck’s book club.If
all his selections are this good, we all need to join his club.
While there are sports in the
book, they are not the focus.Maniac has incredible athletic talent.It does not even come close to his talent for living under
extremely difficult circumstances.One way he copes with those circumstances is by running.
Fitness is not an end in
itself.This book acknowledges the
importance of sports for character development while pointing out that we
develop character to do things with our lives.
The writing is spectacular, funny
and touching.What is not to like
about a book with an incidental mention of a tricycle gang of little kids
called Heck’s Angels?
Read it, share it, give it to a
kid or grown-up you know who needs to be inspired.
Oliver Wendell Holmes said,
"For the simplicity that lies this side of complexity, I would not give a
fig, but for the simplicity that lies on the other side of complexity, I would
give my life."
This quote was mentioned in
something I was reading recently.I have always liked it because it neatly sums up a very messy
process:change.So many times, as we think about changing,
we decide all we need to do is simple: do it.Then reality sets in and we have to deal with obstacles
ranging from uncomfortable shoes to unwilling family members to poor nights’
sleep.If we persevere, we
eventually find that new habit becomes simple again.
Embrace the mess and we can
make it to the simplicity beyond.
I am going to go out on a limb
here and say that very few people probably find brushing their teeth all that
exciting.We all, I hope, do it,
but it is most likely not the high point of the day.Sometimes exercise falls into that tooth-brushing spot:boring, habitual, and useful.
I love what is habitual and
useful.If our fitness routines
are both of those things, great!
It’s the boring that gets
me.Unfortunately, boring also
tends to undermine the habitual and useful part.When we always do the same exercise, we don’t have to think
about it.Our bodies go through
the motions and our brains check out rather than connect with what we are
doing.We work the same muscles in
the same way over and over.
Let’s shake it up a bit.If we’ve been doing all circuits, let’s
throw in a heavy lifting day.If
it has been treadmill for months, let’s go outside.The new muscle movements will wake up body and mind and
reinvigorate the practice.
By happy accident, I ended up
with a yoga personal training session.Which is to say, the other people who normally show up for the yoga
class I take didn’t make it and I was the only student.It has happened to me once before, but
I forgot how different it is.
For background, I am not a
particularly gifted yogi.I’m more
like Yogi (“hand over the picnic basket!).I take yoga not because I’m good at it, but because I am bad
at it.I need to spend conscious
time on flexibility and I need to unplug the whirring fan of my brain.I tend to be a back-of-the-class
student so I can see what to do and mostly not be seen as I try to figure out
exactly how I’m supposed to get my foot over there with all those other body
parts in the way.
When I am the only student, there
is no incognito.
What that meant, in the moment,
was that I got to learn things that were directly relevant to me.When class is large, a teacher’s
recommendation to lengthen one side of the body or lower shoulders or level hips
may or may not apply to me.That
day, it was my movement compensations that were on view and under scrutiny.
It made me realize, again, why
personal training is both important and scary.I learned a lot about how to move my body, my particular, history-laden
body that struggles more to do things on the left, that probably shouldn’t
interlace fingers anymore, that needs to keep an eye on knee alignment.I learned about what I was doing
wrong.I also learned about what I
was doing right.The instructor
encouraged as she corrected, gave me a feeling of safety by recognizing where I
was and gently moving me toward where I should go.
I am grateful for the good
example of that teacher.May I do
likewise!