In previous attempts at exercising, I’ve never lost weight; never gained in strength or dexterity; never even gotten a second wind. I’ve never met any significant exercise goals. But in the long-term, exercise is still worthwhile. So I’m trying something new: Changing my self-conception to Someone Who Exercises Daily. No expectations of any gains, rewards, or second winds. Just someone who slogs through the painful routine each day, every day.
I’ve picked a routine that can be done anywhere, with no equipment: Burpees, in descending sets (ie, for 15, do 5, 4, 3, 2, 1; for non-triangular numbers, add at the start, ie for 17, do 7, 6, 3, 2, 1), adding 1 per day. (Supposedly, burpees work all the major parts of the body, etc, etc.) If-and-when I make it to 30-descending, I’ll consider changing it up.
Hm… I expect that I’m going to mess up my scheduling, or some family thing will crop up unexpectedly, and I won’t wake up in time to run through the exercise routine before having to go out on some errand, on a day with so much going on that it’s well past sunset before I have another chance to do some jumping up and down.
sounds similar to my experience. You might want to set up a review process once a week (Sunday night is usually convenient) so that you can check if you are still on track with the goal.
Minor failures or small setbacks will happen, finding a way to ensure they don’t become drawn out failures will likely keep you on track.
Oddly enough, part of what set my thoughts in this particular direction was watching the Gene Wilder movie, “The Frisco Kid”, about an observant Jew travelling across the Wild West; which made me start thinking about people who perform regular religious observances. For many people, failing to perform a regular ritual on one day doesn’t mean they give it up entirely—they may do something corrective about the lapse, but simply resume the regular ritual on its next scheduled time. I’m hoping I can leverage a secular version of that mindset for my own purposes, at such time as it becomes necessary.
For many people, failing to perform a regular ritual on one day doesn’t mean they give it up entirely
I suspect this is one of those critical things that separate losers from winners. Statistically, sooner or later something unexpected is going to mess up your schedule. People who decide in advance “if I fail once, it means I have failed forever, so there is no point in trying anymore” are just giving themselves an excuse to stop.
It makes sense to worry about failing today or tomorrow, but it doesn’t make sense to worry about having failed yesterday. If you failed to perform the ritual yesterday, maybe do some penance, and maybe reflect and improve your planning, but don’t use it as a cheap excuse for not doing the ritual today. (Not even in the way “I am not doing the ritual anymore until I improve my plans”. Nope; do the ritual at the predetermined time, and use some other time to reflect plan.)
I did burpees for a while. Now I’m not sure what’s the point. Sure, you get tired quickly, but you don’t feel strong or fast while doing it. Lifting average-heavy stuff for 10-15 reps, or running 100m dashes with short breaks, is much more fun for me because I can go all out and push against my limit of power, not just my fatigue.
I am, close to literally, starting from scratch, exercise-wise. I’ve started a thread in the bodyweight subreddit about a better exercise regimen, and am entirely literally in a mall right now looking for some exercise bands to let me do more types of movements in the area I have to exercise in. You could think of the burpees as a placeholder while I work out something better.
Consider couch to 5k. It’s a good basic place to start.
Expect at least 2 months before you are feeling fit. You get to feel progress in the sense of “could run a bit further today” each new run. the two most important things:
You will get hurt. You will injure yourself. If you think you won’t you definitely will, and you will have to take rest because of it. It might set you back days or weeks. But it’s better to rest.
You actually make gains to muscle and strength on your days off. When the muscles repair and grow back. Because of this—most of the pages on the fitness subreddits will have a 3-4 days a week routine with rest days in between. Rest days are important.
FYI, my current plan is 3 days a week of bodyweight exercises (working up to /r/bodyweight’s recommended routine), and 3 days a week of jogging starting with a pre-C25k program. How well that plan succeeds, well, we’ll just have to see. :)
I appreciate the suggestion, and have added a few bookmarks on C25k to my to-read pile.
Given my experience today, attempting to add some of the warm-up routines from /r/bodyweight’s Recommended Routine, I’m afraid that it seems that I have a bit of a ways to go before I’m even at the level of ‘couch’. Ah well; I knew what I was getting into when I started this, and am picking up as much theory as I can to adapt pre-existing routines to my circumstances.
Exercise
In previous attempts at exercising, I’ve never lost weight; never gained in strength or dexterity; never even gotten a second wind. I’ve never met any significant exercise goals. But in the long-term, exercise is still worthwhile. So I’m trying something new: Changing my self-conception to Someone Who Exercises Daily. No expectations of any gains, rewards, or second winds. Just someone who slogs through the painful routine each day, every day.
I’ve picked a routine that can be done anywhere, with no equipment: Burpees, in descending sets (ie, for 15, do 5, 4, 3, 2, 1; for non-triangular numbers, add at the start, ie for 17, do 7, 6, 3, 2, 1), adding 1 per day. (Supposedly, burpees work all the major parts of the body, etc, etc.) If-and-when I make it to 30-descending, I’ll consider changing it up.
Today: Did 5 burpees.
Also today: Set up https://twitter.com/DPR_exercise to semi-publicly keep track. (Or, as an RSS feed, http://twitrss.me/twitter_user_to_rss/?user=dpr_exercise .)
how do you think your first failure at this will come about? before retrying?
Hm… I expect that I’m going to mess up my scheduling, or some family thing will crop up unexpectedly, and I won’t wake up in time to run through the exercise routine before having to go out on some errand, on a day with so much going on that it’s well past sunset before I have another chance to do some jumping up and down.
sounds similar to my experience. You might want to set up a review process once a week (Sunday night is usually convenient) so that you can check if you are still on track with the goal.
Minor failures or small setbacks will happen, finding a way to ensure they don’t become drawn out failures will likely keep you on track.
Oddly enough, part of what set my thoughts in this particular direction was watching the Gene Wilder movie, “The Frisco Kid”, about an observant Jew travelling across the Wild West; which made me start thinking about people who perform regular religious observances. For many people, failing to perform a regular ritual on one day doesn’t mean they give it up entirely—they may do something corrective about the lapse, but simply resume the regular ritual on its next scheduled time. I’m hoping I can leverage a secular version of that mindset for my own purposes, at such time as it becomes necessary.
I suspect this is one of those critical things that separate losers from winners. Statistically, sooner or later something unexpected is going to mess up your schedule. People who decide in advance “if I fail once, it means I have failed forever, so there is no point in trying anymore” are just giving themselves an excuse to stop.
It makes sense to worry about failing today or tomorrow, but it doesn’t make sense to worry about having failed yesterday. If you failed to perform the ritual yesterday, maybe do some penance, and maybe reflect and improve your planning, but don’t use it as a cheap excuse for not doing the ritual today. (Not even in the way “I am not doing the ritual anymore until I improve my plans”. Nope; do the ritual at the predetermined time, and use some other time to reflect plan.)
I did burpees for a while. Now I’m not sure what’s the point. Sure, you get tired quickly, but you don’t feel strong or fast while doing it. Lifting average-heavy stuff for 10-15 reps, or running 100m dashes with short breaks, is much more fun for me because I can go all out and push against my limit of power, not just my fatigue.
I am, close to literally, starting from scratch, exercise-wise. I’ve started a thread in the bodyweight subreddit about a better exercise regimen, and am entirely literally in a mall right now looking for some exercise bands to let me do more types of movements in the area I have to exercise in. You could think of the burpees as a placeholder while I work out something better.
Consider couch to 5k. It’s a good basic place to start.
Expect at least 2 months before you are feeling fit. You get to feel progress in the sense of “could run a bit further today” each new run. the two most important things:
You will get hurt. You will injure yourself. If you think you won’t you definitely will, and you will have to take rest because of it. It might set you back days or weeks. But it’s better to rest.
You actually make gains to muscle and strength on your days off. When the muscles repair and grow back. Because of this—most of the pages on the fitness subreddits will have a 3-4 days a week routine with rest days in between. Rest days are important.
FYI, my current plan is 3 days a week of bodyweight exercises (working up to /r/bodyweight’s recommended routine), and 3 days a week of jogging starting with a pre-C25k program. How well that plan succeeds, well, we’ll just have to see. :)
I appreciate the suggestion, and have added a few bookmarks on C25k to my to-read pile.
Given my experience today, attempting to add some of the warm-up routines from /r/bodyweight’s Recommended Routine, I’m afraid that it seems that I have a bit of a ways to go before I’m even at the level of ‘couch’. Ah well; I knew what I was getting into when I started this, and am picking up as much theory as I can to adapt pre-existing routines to my circumstances.
That rounds up to 19, not 17.
So it does. Obviously, for 17, I should have wrote 6, 5, 3, 2, 1. (And for 19, it would be 6, 5, 4, 3, 1.)