Focus: A weight loss strategy
By: The Icon Diet Reader
I just finished working my quads on a weight machine. My head
races and my body hums all in an attempt to lose weight. Only
moments ago, my legs worked so hard that they began to fail.
They worked so hard that my muscle tissue cried out in pain and
began to tear. Now having just finished, my body sweating with
the effort, I can rest for a couple of minutes before doing it
again.
Each day this week I will have targeted a different group of
muscles. Each day I will work them, stretch them, and tear them.
Each day, I will work so hard that my heart beats a new rhythm
into my metabolism. Each day, my body will set to repair the
damage I have done in such manner that it does not happen again.
Each day doggedly break my body down and force it to improve
itself. This is working out, this is getting fit, this is what
it takes.
As I sit and stretch between sets, my quads still reeling, I
scan around the gym. I take in those around me. At this hour,
there are few people willing to brave the cold mornings to make
the run to the gym. There are two people working with some free
weights near by. They are within earshot and while I am resting
I listen to them complain about, work, relationships, their
bosses, clothes, their bodies and their friends. The
conversation flows from one topic to the next seamlessly and it
is clear by their candor that they know each other well; that
they have been friends and work out buddies for a while. What
grabs my attention however, is not the meandering topics of
their conversation, but the fact that conversation is occurring
at all.
I ponder this until I start on my second set. As my second set
starts, all I can focus on is exercise; flexing my muscles
against the weight. During the relatively short time it takes
for me to run through my set and completely exhaust my quads,
every action, every breath becomes an exercise in methodical
control and economy. Every action I make is geared to the
exercise at hand.
When I finish and I reengage with the world, I come back to the
two people and their on-going conversation. As they chat, they
work through a routine of exercises that look habitual and
ritualized. When they work their muscles, they go through the
motions; intent more on the conversation and company then their
bodies.
There is a point to this. There is a myth, an urban legend if
you will, that says going to the gym will make you lose weight.
It is a logical extension of the same myth that says I need to
go to the gym, I am out of shape. These two ideas have become
synonymous with healthy lifestyles and fitness. For the two
people I observed, simply being at the gym was enough to assuage
their concerns for their physical health. The bottom line is
that this is an illusion. To make yourself fit, you need to
break your body down and force it to rebuild. The idea being
that after the rebuild, you will be stronger and fit. This
cannot occur by merely being in a gym, or as in the case with
the talking pair, this cannot occur by going through the motions
of working out.
Before I get accused of being a fanatical meat head just
understand that I carry an extra few pounds around my waist. All
I know is that to really make progress, to have physical and
visible results, you must have an impact on your body. The
kicker is that they almost have it made. These people are at
they gym early on a cold morning. They are committed to their
weight loss goals. They go through the motions of their
exercises like a well rehearsed dance routine. Clearly they want
to achieve something with their bodies. If they just focused,
and worked their bodies just a little more; enough, say, to deny
them the ease of conversation, then the results would be
tremendous.
The whole point is that you have to be clear about what it is
you want to accomplish. I know with every fiber in my being,
that I will burn off the extra weight around my waist and that I
will firm up my desk loving muscles. But I won't do it by
talking.