Tag: exercise

  • Habit: February & March

    Habit: February & March

    At the start of the year I wrote that my word for 2021 was habit. In January, I challenged myself to do something creative every day, a habit that I’ve continued (although not quite as diligently).

    In February, I challenged myself to do two things every day. The first was read a book, the second was exercise. I continued challenging myself to exercise in March, but replaced books with email.

    Reading Books

    Reading was prioritized because “typical” for me is finishing a book a week but I was barely picking up my kindle. Not reading is never a good sign for me, but some of it seemed like life changes – I used to read in cafes (lol), on planes (lmao), on a lazy morning in a hotel waiting to head to wherever I was going next (rofl). And then, cohabitation means that typically at mealtimes I eat with my partner and make conversation, rather than losing myself in a book.

    Forcing myself to set an intention and make it a habit helped a lot. Sometimes I just read a chapter, but some days it was more. I’m not back to reading a book a week, but around two a month, and I’m consistently making progress so that’s something.

    Email

    I am so so bad at email, and March let me test a theory that I’m bad at it because it backs up and becomes overwhelming. So in March I tried to chip away at it, or at least get through that day’s mail. I didn’t manage it every day – but I did manage it most days, and for the first time in… I don’t even know, I’m ending the month less behind on email than I started it. This momentum helped me make inroads on other things, and the random things for my taxes that were buried somewhere in my inbox have been dug out and dealt with.

    The challenge proved to me that chipping away at it helps, and the mindset of trying to stay on top of things stopped me from avoiding things until I forgot them, and pushed me to delete the things that might be interesting if I hadn’t read them within a couple of days. We’ll see if I can keep this up or if I am immediately buried again.

    Exercise

    The hardest one – I am truly tired of continually rebuilding this habit throughout this pandemic. I made it 26/28 days in February, and somewhat less in March. There were a couple of phases to this one.

    Phase 1: Redefine what “counts”.

    Pre-pandemic, I had a definition of “worked out” that was contingent on the gym and the pool. A year ago, I would focus on meeting my step goal. But everything being shut, and being constrained to a 5km radius and very limited hours of daylight, that wasn’t really working for me. It was really annoying to go for a 1 hour walk, but only have ~8K steps and be feeling like it “didn’t count”. Now we have a spin bike, so I refined it around “zone minutes” which worked better. Two months in, I’m less worried about metrics, I know when I exercised (and when I didn’t).

    Phase 2: Rediscover enjoyment.

    At the end of February I was consistently checking the box but… it felt like a chore. This felt even worse than not exercising at all in some ways – I’m someone who loves physical activity, but I wasn’t feeling that love. I would either begrudgingly walk the same circuit I’ve walked for the past year, or get on the spin bike with some TV show I felt ambivalent about, and try and clock the zone minutes as fast as I could so that I could do something else instead.

    Finally, I got the peloton app. I had been contemplating it but not doing it for weeks, mainly on the basis that 1) I hadn’t been taking spin classes before, so would I like it and 2) that was the only idea I had, so if that didn’t work… I had no more ideas.

    My first peloton class I ugly cried for… a lot of it. Turns out, it felt so good to really get my heart rate up and enjoy exercise that all the grief I have for the gym came pouring out of me. Now I’m trying to do a peloton class every other day, working up to longer ones, and on other days I either go for a walk or… chill. It took two months, but I feel much better about this habit.

    What’s Next?

    In April I’m focused on two things.

    Skincare. After having a bunch of issues that resulted in a trip to the dermatologist, I’m finally doing better, less strung out by the regime she has me on, and trying to rediscover my love of beauty products. In April I’m trying to do something every day that makes me feel good, whether it’s a mask, a scrub, or actually wearing makeup.

    Human contact. This timeline has been pretty isolating, and at times I feel like life is so boring I have nothing to say. My challenge this month is to have a meaningful human interaction with someone who isn’t my partner or a colleague every day. This already pushed me to make up a bunch of packages I’ve been meaning to send out for months, but y’know, more phone calls, more longer text message conversations, more making an effort to check in.

  • Living Priorities

    Living Priorities

    Time Management
    Credit: xkcd

    A few weeks ago, I got frustrated with a pattern I’d observed. I would, in non “crazy” week work out 5-6 times. Then the following week something would happen – I’d have to take a trip, be out every night, get sick… something. And work out maybe once.

    This oscillation and unpredictability – sometimes working out a lot, sometimes hardly at all – was not working for me. It was messing with my energy levels, my eating habits, my sleep cycle, and my happiness.

    Eventually, I hit a wall. And I realized that I either had to start living in such a way that I made the things that I think are my priorities a priority, or I had to admit that my priorities were different. And I realized that that meant sometimes ignoring, sometimes just not doing as good a job at the things people try and make my priority (typically via my inbox, one of the many reasons I loathe and avoid it). I also realized that it would be easier if I were to return more to my preferred schedule of early mornings and early nights, rather than the later schedule that my boyfriend and teammates (and, really, most nerdy guys) seem to live on. But, I also realized that with a clear space of time free from travel, this was an opportunity to make this change.

    I didn’t write about this, and I didn’t really tell anyone until I’d successfully done this for a month. I just set myself a simple goal, reminiscent of my “one positive thing” approach.

    The goal: work out five times a week.

    I set no restrictions on length, time, or diet. It was pretty much what you can fit in, when you can fit it in, and eat whatever will enable you to do this.

    One week I had Girl Geek Dinner, Awesome Foundation, and a trip to the border to do my visa. I got up early and did 30 minutes on the cross trainer at the gym in the office before work, and I went to spin class after a day in the car even though I had a splitting headache. Total workouts that week? Six. After about six weeks of this, it’s still a conscious setting of priorities, but the big change has been that exercise is no longer a chore, it’s something I want to do.

    I’m happier. I have more energy. I’m sleeping better. It’s been nearly two years since I dislocated my kneecap, nearly 18 months since I messed up my shoulder, and I finally have a workout that I enjoy, that is not causing me “bad” pain. I am loving spinning. Last week I actually did “the double” – 6am, and 5:30pm. I felt amazing – although the next day hurt!

    Yes – some things have slipped – not as many as I thought, though. The truth is, none of them are as important to me as this. For me, it’s been a question of accepting that there are some things I will not do, because they are not as important. And if it is important, I will arrange my life so that I can get up early for spin class, or just some time on the cross trainer. Next week will be challenging, because I’m travelling – but my priorities don’t really change, even if my location is temporarily different.

    I think that actions are so much more important than words. My question: the priorities that you would like to think you have, are they reflected in how you live? What – simple – goal or rule could you set yourself to align your actions with your thoughts?

    Spinning colors in the sky.
    Credit: flickr / .Andi

  • Duck Typing Applied to People

    The other day, my boyfriend and I have a conversation along the lines of the following:

    Boyf: Why does X keep talking about how she’s a cricketer*?

    Me: I know, she’s never even thrown a cricket ball.

    Boyf: Seriously? Then she’s not a cricketer.

    Me: She self-identifies as a cricketer, I guess she is.

    Boyf: I self-identify as a lolcat, does that mean I am one?

    * Changed to protect anonymity.

    Credit: flikr / Kevin Steele
    Credit: flikr / Kevin Steele

    How does this lead to Duck Typing, though?

    Duck typing means that if it walks like a duck, and talks like a duck, it’s a duck. It’s used in both Ruby and Python – see the Wikipedia article.

    If we’re a little bit like compilers, my boyfriend is smart in that he uses duck typing to decide what they’re like. I know I’m more inclined to take people as they say they are, which causes ClassCastExceptions further down the line.

    A while ago, I read an article by Penelope Trunk in which she says, “People who workout regularly think of themselves as people who workout even when they are ditching the gym and eating ice cream.” I’ve been thinking of this lately as I try and get back into the habit of training post injury. I think of myself as someone who works out, so even though I’m busy, and tired, I drag myself out and go. I’m actually finally starting to enjoy it again, too. However if I didn’t go, no matter how hard I thought about being someone who worked out, I wouldn’t be. I have to walk the duck walk, not just talk the duck talk.

    Credit: flikr / anomalous4
    Credit: flikr / anomalous4

    Here’s my suggestion for the day – let’s duck type ourselves more. This means:

    • If you want to be someone who works out, go work out today.
    • If you want to be someone who’s reliable, do your best not to let people down.
    • If you want to be someone who’s pro-active, stop complaining about your boss (yes this definitely applies to me lately)
    • If you want to be effective, stop procrastinating.
    • If you want to be valued, create value.
    • If you want to change the world, go out and be the change you want to see.
    • If you want to be a cricketer, start by going out and throwing the damn cricket ball.