Getting (Back) In Shape is Hard Work

I am on a fitness challenge. I've always had a love-hate relationship with exercise so I am trying to take a look at this whole fitness thing from a new perspective.

I was the HS student who walked a mile when she was told to run it, splashed a little water on my face and neck and had her socks knocked off when her gym teacher had her to hold out her wrist to check her pulse. She then ran - if you could call it that - under her watchful eye.

I was the sophmore who joined ROTC in college after rapelling off the Zurn Science Center who was then heckled from the bleachers but what turned out to be a very cool First Sergeant, "my grandmother runs faster than you cadet - and she's dead!" Oh the joy.

I was the cadet in Airborne School who ran, trained, lifted and carried parachutes under the watchful eye of the cadre until she could swing, drop and land on her four points of contact no more. After a few weeks I was passing people when I ran. I would run, look back, and simply not believe my eyes. I was f..l..y..i..n..g...

By end of summer, my wings were gone.

Welcome to my peaks and valleys of fitness.

My most recent peak of fitness - training for a half-marathon - came crashing down on me last year with a knee injury and then shin splints. Hanging out in the valley got to be very . . . unsatisfying.

So knowing my longest peaks of fitness were when I was being held accountable by someone else - I hired a personal trainer. I am making a sincere effort to incorporate healthy lifestyle changes into my days.

I have a lot to learn. But, here's what I've learned so far:

  • The metabolism of my youth is gone. It's never coming back. *sigh*
  • Everything looks like a calorie when you are counting calories. Everything.
  • I don't ever work out this hard on my own. Explains so much.
  • A medium mocha from Caribou Coffee is over 460 calories, not counting the chocolate covered coffee beans. Explains so much more.

I am six weeks into this. My strength is going up, my weight is inching downward, and my next step is to incorporate cardio back into the plan. 

I am encouraged by my progress but not so much that I would be motivated enough to continue at this pace on my own. And that's ok. I have 4 1/2 more months to figure this out. The view is so much nicer from the peak.

So help a girl out here. Healthy life style, regular exercise . . . what motivates you?

Photo credit istockphoto

Call to Action: End Childhood Hunger

My husband and I have a 9 year old daughter. When she was born, I worried a lot. I worried about everything from deciphering her cries and keeping her healthy to tracking her development and keeping her safe. 

I worried about a lot of things then and I still worry now.

One thing I never worry about is keeping her fed.

When she was hungry, my daughter has food to eat.

Not all children are as fortunate.

Amanda Hite, force extraordinare, has put out a call to action to end childhood hunger in America as part of Share Our Strength’s “Great American Dine Out”, September 19-25.

Nearly 17 million children in this country struggle with hunger. Share Our Strength’s “No Kid Hungry” campaign is ending childhood hunger in America by connecting at-risk children with the nutritious foods they need to live healthy, active lives.

The “Great American Dine Out,” September 19-25, will bring together thousands of restaurants and millions of consumers to help raise money for this important cause.

There are so many ways to help. 

Blog. Tweet. Donate. Eat

You decide.

It's easy and every action will take us one step closer to ending childhood hunger.