Friday, February 21, 2014

Lessons From The Gym

A stock photo is the only place anyone ever smiles on a cardio machine.
Greetings from Gym Land!

I'm not a native here, but lately it kind of feels like it. I'm getting used to the sweaty-human-cleaning-fluid aroma, and I've been racking up the cardio machine miles like nobody's business. Which reminds me of a brilliant idea I came up with on the spin bike the other day (because what else are you doing while you're on the spin bike?): cardio machines should totally give you rewards points for your miles. I feel certain I could have earned at least a decent set of steak knives by now.

It hasn't been all moaning & whining (though there has been a goodly amount). While I wouldn't have chosen to get my weekly mileage for the last two months by parking myself on the spin bike / elliptical once or twice a day, I can't deny that I have learned some important lessons from my time as a gym rat.

1. I am capable of running in the morning. For the most part, this is not something I have done just to get the miles in since there stopped being someone telling me I had to run in the morning. (Races don't count as the abject misery of morning running is overshadowed by excitement/adrenaline. Planned runs with friends are also a totally different thing.) Over the years I have had short-lived flirtations with morning runs, which have tended to peter out once I've done enough of them to remember why I don't do them.

But, it turns out that maybe I just don't like running outside in the morning, at least by myself. Outside there is cold and wind and darkness and other unpleasantness that, all else being equal, I'd rather just avoid. Sure, the treadmill has its own unique brand of suckage and one does have to adjust to that special parfum d'sweat et Windex, but for some reason I can bear that much more easily than I can the thought of running outside by myself before 6 am. (You can keep your pine-scented single track & fancy pants foothill sunrise. Judge me if you will. I can take it.)


Meh.

2. I can handle doubles. At least mentally & emotionally, & let's be real, what you can handle mentally & emotionally is *at least* as relevant in terms of endurance training as what you can handle physically. Lately "doubles" for me have meant 45 minutes of elliptical before work & 45 minutes of spin bike after work or vice versa, which is obviously physically easier on the body than two running workouts because of the lack of impact, but finding that it's something I've been able to make time for & work out logistically & tolerate well mentally makes me optimistic about eventually working up to running doubles if/when I need/want to.

3. Bitches be chatty in the locker room. OMG. What is it about a bunch of women naked in close quarters that inspires them to interrogate strangers? TOO EARLY. I'm not here to make friends. Especially not naked ones. If you really want to know how my day is going, you must put pants on first. Corollary: Never start a casual conversation with a pantsless stranger. I think Emily Post said that.

Basically, yes.
4. Doing cardio you don't enjoy is a special kind of hell. Oh, those poor, poor souls who haven't yet found a physically demanding activity they love but dutifully slog through the minutes anyway for the sake of their health. Oh, my heart aches for you, because I have been that person lately. I've tolerated the elliptical & spin bike fairly well, but only because I know that it's temporary, & putting up with it now will make it much easier to eventually go back to doing what I love. Do you have any idea how many games I've made up for counting backward from 45 or 60 minutes? How many mental tricks I've developed for keeping my goddamn feet glued to the goddamn pedals when my brain is absolutely liquifying with boredom? How much my already exceptional math skills have improved from staring at the minutes & miles display & desperately counting significant progress any way I can? Minutes left, miles left, percentage done or left, fraction done or left, miles per hour, minutes per mile, you name it; I don't even have to try to consciously calculate them anymore. It's just automatic.

Cardio machine queens & kings, I feel for you. I beg you, try a sport. Any sport. Your life will be so much richer. Also, I'm pretty sure those LED numbers are sucking your soul away. (Unless that's just your thing? Which I guess is technically possible?)

5. Shorts are out. I think I mentioned this already. Ladies wear tights at the gym, apparently. I hope no one is offended by my leg hair because #thingsthatarenotchanging.

6. Routine is everything. Oh man. It's so true, all those things people say about making & breaking habits. You just have to do it, over and over and over, and eventually you just lose the power not to do it. One day last week when my alarm went off, I thought to myself, "Bed is warm. Maybe I'll just stay here." And no sooner had I had the thought than I suddenly found myself kind of repulsed by it. Not go fight the cardio demons? Of course I was going to go fight the cardio demons! It's just what I do now; I don't even think about it.

***IN REAL ACTUAL RUNNING NEWS***, I ran three-minute intervals yesterday for the first time -- 5 x 3:00 w/ 2:00 walk breaks for a total of 2.25 miles. It was super easy, felt great, and I was able to keep good form for the entire run. Ohhhh I could have stayed on that treadmill forever. Not really.

23 comments:

  1. This post totally rings true during the many times I've been doing PT the past 3 years (twice for long periods it seems like?). I began to simply dread going to the gym, because I could only do boring stuff. Can you do spin class? I still find that is one of the best workouts out there, and you are literally gassed at the end of it.

    Regarding your last post about blogs that have gone by the wayside - mine sometimes approaches that camp lol. I honestly don't have much to say anymore, though recently since I've been running more maybe I'm excited to post more. I am doing the 408K in a week, so that will be something to talk about. I've started to simply like my favorite blogs and friend people on facebook directly, so maybe that's another reason that I don't post as much.

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    1. I don't do the classes because I prefer to just do whatever running workout is on my schedule translated into minutes & effort level. I feel like the classes would also be way too peppy & social for me!

      Blogs like yours are the ones I keep in my feed even if they're not posting often, because I don't want to miss it when you do. :)

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  2. 1,2 and 6 are vital lessons. 4 is especially insightful; I really do feel for all those people who haven't found their preferred form/s of cardio, or whose preferred cardio isn't available (heaven help the poor soul who really just wants to cross-country ski but lives in a tropical country).

    But 3, 3 ! Oh, how glad I am that people are not naturally chatty here! Especially not naked people in the locker room. My introvert self generally wants to get to the gym, do whatever it is I need to do, and then run away.

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    1. Oh, poor cross country skiier!

      Yes....I am definitely queen of the locker room introverts. I do sometimes secretly worry that everyone things I'm a grouchy moody bitch because I don't interact with anyone & just try to get in & out as quickly as possible. But seriously - ain't nobody got time for that!

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  3. The elliptical trainer became my enemy afer a calf injury that kept me off running for a month. I did the elliptical 5x a week during that month and learnt to hate it with all my heart. Haven't been on it since.
    Add to number 3 "old" bitches because when I go to the gym at 6 in the morning the median age is 70 years old. Pretty sight.

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    1. Heh....mine isn't quite that extreme, but I would say that the a.m. average age is around 50, as compared to maybe around 30 in the p.m. I'm doing my best to keep the peace with the old elliptical, but I definitely will not be sad to see her go!

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  4. Oh yeah, you definitely should get reward points for miles logged. And maybe the reward points can go towards gym gear - a sweat towel, heart rate monitor, new runners, a bondi band to keep all that sweaty hair off your face. The possibilities are limitless.

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  5. Number four. I have said a thousand times that I'm not sure I would stay fit if my only option were those stupid machines. And the whole shorts thing perplexes me. I took a spin class recently where I was the only one in shorts--everyone else was in capris. Aren't they dying of heat? Cause I sure would be.

    Here's to continued progress forward for you!

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    1. Thanks!!

      Totally. I am definitely already leaving a gross little puddle of sweat under every machine I use in my little shorts & tank top. Cannot imagine tights / capris.

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  6. #5!! I don't understand it! WHY don't women wear shorts anymore? I for one could NOT wear pants inside those saunas. It makes me sweat just thinking about it.

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  7. #3: I'm with you on this one. I'm also very much against eating in the locker room. I just want to do my business (change/shower/whatever) and get on with life. Why some people *choose* to spend more time in the locker room than necessary is beyond me.

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    1. Eating??? Now that is just gross. I am definitely all about trying to minimize my time in there.

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  8. The other day I was in the locker room and was about to tell this girl I liked her boots until I realized she was pantsless and I kept my mouth shut because yeah, what you said. I also cringe when I see people using their phones in there.

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    1. This is hilarious! Yeah, we have a couple ladies who I think are always getting calls from their kids. I get it but it still kind of weirds me out.

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  9. EVERYONE at the gym be chatty. It's ridiculous.

    And, I was watching someone shuffle down a busy road one day and thought 'man, no wonder people hate exercise.'

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  10. Reading this reminded me why I hated exercise from ages 18-25. I honestly thought the gym was my only option because I wasn't "fit enough" or coordinated enough for sports. Gah.

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    1. SERIOUSLY. If the gym was my only option long-term for physical activity, WOW. I'd be a couch potato in no time.

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  11. Ha-ha can I say yessssssssss to pretty much all this. I hear you about running in the morning, I can not get myself to go outside, running alone, in the dark, and in the cold. Yuckkkkkkk. Although I am 100% guilty of the tights. :)

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    1. Lol....I don't think tights are something you need to feel "guilty" about necessarily; I'm just often surprised that it's like 90% of the women at my gym. :)

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