I’m pretty sure that, if I didn’t exercise, I would go
crazy. Cos
when you’re working out hard, you simply don’t have the capacity to churn stuff
over in your head. Yes, I do a lot of
exercise already but I’d love to do more. Why? Because it not only cuts out the mental crap but it makes me feel good, really good. I love the way muscles appear out of fat; and I love the sheer endorphin high I get when I'm in the 'zone'. I can be feeling as miserable as sin, as low as low can go and getting up and going out to exercise can feel like the last thing I want to do. But it's much easier just to slump on the sofa, right? Or stick your paw in the cookie jar to blunt your feelings. So really, I push myself out there because I know damn well that exercise will sort me out - for a little while at least. :-)
And there's a good reason why. We weren't meant to be couch potatoes. We weren’t designed to sit for ten hours a
day behind a computer screen and then slump for the evening in front of a
television. Our bodies were designed to
move, to work, to be fit and active. In
the past most of us would have relied on the earth for our livelihood and our
daily bread - days would have been spent in the open, working physically very
hard. Nowadays our daily bread tends
to come from the supermarket (and is full of crap but let's not go there for the moment) and so we need to find other, more artificial
ways, to keep active and fit.
kettlebells really tone muscle |
Do you really have to exercise? Of course not. You don't have to do anything. But if you want to live longer and in
better health, it's not a bad idea to give it a whirl. Exercising regularly allegedly reduces your risk of early death by a pretty impressive seventy per cent. It keeps your lungs and heart working at
optimum levels and prevents the dangers of heart disease. Stress levels drop when you exercise and your
mood naturally elevates. Regular
exercise can even help you sleep and perk up your sex life.
On a more prosaic note it can control your
blood pressure and boost your immune system.
Some physiologists even reckon it can increase your creativity. On the other hand, if you don't exercise you
will be putting yourself in danger of heart and artery disease; your muscles
and bones could develop problems; you could find yourself prone to
gastrointestinal problems and you will be more likely to suffer nervous or
emotional upsets and illnesses.
But - and it's a big but - it has to be enjoyable. Enjoyable exercise sound like an oxymoron? Nah. It doesn't have to be. The good news is that you don't have to live down the
gym or run for hours every day. But it’s worth doing some form of exercise
regularly.
weights do NOT bulk you out. |
The main problem is that people take up forms
of exercise they don't enjoy, they aren't naturally good at or that they feel
they should do and so they get bored,
disillusioned and give up. The key to
making exercise work for you is to find something you actually enjoy - not what
you feel you should do but what you
would really like to do.
So you don't have to race out and buy on-line
skates when you have absolutely no sense of balance and are
terrified of speed. And you don't have
to do Zumba because all your friends do or play squash because your husband
wants some practice. People fork out a
small fortune on gym memberships only to find they hate pumping iron and they
loathe spinning. Before you join a club
test it out for a while - any club worth its salt will offer trial memberships
for a month or so.
Throughout my book The Natural Year I give ideas on
how to incorporate exercise into your life and suggestions on different
things to try. But for now, just try
something...anything.
Take a look at your local sports centre – where I used
to live the local one offered everything
from trampolining to five-a-side football, from ballroom dancing to table
tennis (and it was only a small rural centre).
Think about the sports you enjoyed in school - are there any you'd like
to take up again? Netball can be good
fun, or volleyball or softball - if you like team games. Or get back into badminton or squash or
tennis. Many adults take up gymnastics or
ballet again and love it without the peer pressure of youth - or learn something new like (ye gods) golf. The key issue is fun. You don't have to be brilliant or the best -
you just need to do it and enjoy it. A
friend of mine has taken up belly-dancing and adores it. She reckons she's the worst belly-dancer ever
but doesn't give a toss. And if one thing doesn't work out, try something else. Sometimes you have to ferret around a bit to find what works for you. You might have the right sport but the wrong class, the wrong teacher - it's a real case of horses for courses. Just don't give up, okay?
Physically unable to exercise? Try qigong (chi kung) –
you can even do it sitting in a chair – and it still gives great results. Broke?
Walking, running, wild swimming don’t cost a penny.
KEEPING MOTIVATION HIGH
In order to keep exercising you have to keep your
motivation high.
* Be realistic about your
size shape and body shape. Hordes of
exercisers lose heart because however hard they work they don't end up looking
like supermodels. Dump unrealistic role
models ‑ these people spend hours, and a small fortune in personal trainer
bills, to look that way. Plus your body type might be against you (I discuss this more in the book and will try to put up a blog post on it soon).
* Start slowly. You shouldn't try to change your exercise
habits overnight or you will become demotivated because you don't see changes
happening immediately. Make gradual
changes to your lifestyle and they will become a permanent way of life without
any special effort.
* Break through the one
week barrier. Yup, just one week. Sports psychologists
promise that if you can get past the first week, you've passed the period in
which half the drop-outs occur. Needless to say, this means exercising more than once a week. :-) If you
manage to work out regularly for six months, you're likely to have created a
longlasting habit.
* Try to get a friend
involved. Exercising with someone else
is the supreme motivator. Sportsmen and
women have coaches, most super‑fit actresses and models have their own personal
trainers and if you've got the funds, a personal trainer will undoubtedly get
you moving. However a good mate will
often do as well. It is much easier to stick to a regular exercise schedule if
you know that someone else is waiting for you in the park, the gym or the pool.
Adapted from my book The Natural Year – a seasonal guideto holistic health and beauty, in which I talk about my belief that we can all
live more balanced lives if we work with the forces of nature, rather than
pitting ourselves against them. Now
updated and available for Kindle at Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk
3 comments:
Jane, when I saw the question you've posed here, I immediately thought, "Well, humans were not designed to be sitters."
Sometimes I even wonder if all the human sitting that goes on around many (but not all) parts of the world nowadays might be part of the next phase of evolution.
It's encouraging to be able to get up every day and know that I can and will be moving around for many of the coming hours. Long may that mobility remain possible!
xo
A must these days. My rituals at present are a little pathetic but nevertheless work. One is stretching my feet on the kitchen counter each time I wait for the kettle to boil (I've 3 to 4 cups of coffee a day) two, not doing anything about the annoying spam calls because it tears me away from my screen and gets my blood boiling - it's called re-framing :)
Oh, and I just re-posted something on my blog that might relate.
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