Turn Down the Suck in Fitness
Exercise is good for you - there's simply no doubt about it!
However, I still meet clients on a daily basis who've vowed to
dedicate themselves to an exercise program, only to quit after a
month. Let's face it, North Americans start and stop their
fitness programs more frequently than they change their
underwear.
I understand that buying gym memberships and large pieces of
fitness equipment is downright unaffordable to much of the
population - especially when that membership looses itself in
the back of your wallet or that high-tech treadmill is being
used as the most expensive clothes rack your basement has ever
seen.
When I became a certified personal trainer I soon learned after
talking to clients, and seeing them come to the gym for a while
only to suddenly disappear, that the key to a successful fitness
program is fun! That's right exercise should be fun. I mean who
ever said it should be a boring, tedious vacuum of your valuable
time?
For some reason fitness has negative connotations for many new
clients that I've met recently. I hear "exercise is just too
boring" and "if I exercise I'll have no social life" all the
time when I meet new clients. The fact is that we all lead very
busy lives and exercise is often figured into it as an
afterthought behind work, family, social outings and even poker
night. So let's face it if exercise is just another leisure
activity on your weekly schedule it has to be something you'll
look forward to or you simply won't stick to it. That's why I
encourage everyone who visits my website, fitnessgear101.com, to
switch up the word 'exercise' for 'leisure activity'. After all,
you would be certain to pen a social outing with your
girlfriends into your daily planner, so why not get the girls
together and go to a spin class or on a power walk?
In this day and age, fitness takes up on average an hour, 4-days
a week of the average person's time. So basically it has to be
fun or people simply won't put in that extra hour. The good news
is that entertaining workouts have hit the fitness scene in a
big way this year. Many are largely dance-inspired - including
belly dancing, cardio strip, pole dancing and salsa dance
workouts.
I tried a pole dancing-strip cardio workout with a few of my
girlfriends a couple weeks ago, and trust me it had me laughing
so hard, that alone gave my abdominal muscles a workout. We
started with pole dancing - which is far more challenging than
it looks. Believe me, it takes a large amount of upper body
strength to keep yourself suspended from a pole, and swinging
yourself around it is reasonably cardiovascular. The cardio
strip was more like the sweaty high-intensity cardio workouts
that I'm used to. The workout mimicked exotic dance movements,
so the hip thrusts, kicks and abdominal twisting works parts of
your body you didn't know existed.
See, there's absolutely no reason why fitness can't be fun.
Start by searching your local community centers and gyms for an
activity that you really enjoy. Try tango lessons with your
significant other, a bonding session of mother/baby yoga, a
high-octane cardio kickboxing session with your best friend -
all followed by a healthy lunch. By turning simple daily
activities into something more rewarding, you get your fun
social gathering and your workout in too!