I started out just doing what I knew. Working out during my lunch hour, Monday-Wednesday upper body, Tues-Thurs lower. This left me with a flex day in the week if I needed to miss/skip or whatever. Getting a little bored with that routine, I switched to a program published on the Men’s Health website called the “Year-Long Workout”. There were supposed to be four phases but I only managed to get through one and a half. I usually have an idea of how well i should perform a particular workout and since I didn’t think I was done with phase one I kept doing it for longer than I really was supposed to. Then I came across this workout called P90X. Google it and you’ll see all kinds of a following for this. It get a ton done without relying on various exercise machines. A pair of dumbbells that you can adjust to different weights and a place to do chin ups is pretty much all you need. I am going on week 2 of this.
All that is just a quick summary of where I am. I thought I would say all this so that I can list some things I have learned from this experience so far.
- Doing my workout gives me a feeling of accomplishment that I don’t get from anything else. A combination of avoiding guilt and muscle fatigue lead me to sit in my chair at work thinking “man, I am glad I did that.”
- Getting the blood pumping in combination with my positive feelings from #1 lifts my spirits. I feel happier, more positive, and ready to take on the world, play with my kids, and give my wife a really good hug.
- No workout can reduce your weight unless you change what and how much you eat. In fact, my theory is that if you must choose, choose to eat right rather than exercise if health and weight loss are your goals. I watch what I eat now much more than before because when I have a hard workout, I am REALLY motivated not to put those calories right back in me by eating the wrong things. I will say this though. I still will have the occasional pizza or Krispy Kreme doughnut and not feel to bad about it. My reasoning is that part of why I workout is so that I can eat high calorie stuff and not gain weight. It a balancing act that requires something I need in all areas of my life, moderation.
- After that initial period of not really seeing any results, there comes a time (maybe 6 weeks in) where I looked in the mirror and noticed a difference! And there is no arguing with pants that now are too big. This definitely makes me feel good. But I decided a while ago to stop measuring my weight. I don’t really care what I weigh. I care about how I look and feel.
- Going in again the next day is the most important part of the workout. Not how much you do or how long you are there. Technique and spreadsheets and all that tech stuff is not nearly as important as simply making time in your day to go exercise. All I really focus on is getting there and then, when I do an exercise, making sure I get tired. I usually just ballpark the weight and the repetitions. This works for me since all the administration that comes from tracking too much stuff takes some of the “fun” of exercising away.
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