Being able to put what you know together into successful practice is more important.
This is especially important when it comes to staying or recovering your physical fitness.
It is not only what you do, but also how to get yourself to do it and do it ell, that is important. That is, not too much and not too little. And having it be enjoyable.
I used to be fit. I have known how to be fit at various times in my life. I have a lot of knowledge. Every 10 years or so, I have re-evaluated my needs and give myself a different system? different exercises and different diet. My life style changes. My body changes. There really is body wisdom. But how do I organize what I know and how do I stay motivated? It is really the same problem I have always had. Not much different. I need to listen to my body. I need to learn from others. I need to put it all together.
There are many diets and much to be said for many of them. And there are certainly many exercise systems that make total sense. Once I have done the research, the issue is to stay on target and do what I have said I would do.
At various times in my life, I have followed different programs. Most of the time, I have actually been quite fit. Periodically, I have needed to reevaluate.
That is the issue I have needed to deal with at every life change. So, for example when I stopped working in a school where I was physically very active, my calorie burning decreased sharply. At first, I was not even aware. I never thought of that job as exercise. But being constantly on my feat and climbing stairs several times a day was good for me, even when I and other staff complained about it. At the end of each workday, I was physically exhausted.
When I took on the next job, which was mostly at a desk and with little stair climbing, I hardly noticed the difference. It still took my attention and at the end of the day, I still felt I had put in a full day's work. It was equally demanding and fulfilling, but I used my body less and burnt less calories. Slowly, my body adjusted by getting out of shape.
So after doing your research, how do you use what you have learned? How do you organize it? When I recently started to take on my fitness again, finding current information was not the problem. With a little research, my questions were answered.
When it came to putting it all together, a friend gave me some important advice. It made all the difference. At first, it seemed too obvious to be of any use.
He said, knowing WHY I wanted to be fit provides the crucial motivation I would need. It sounded silly because it was so obvious. But after a conversation in which he skillfully and gently helped me rediscover this, I found this was indeed crucial. Like so many truths, it was obvious when I finally saw it. I thought I knew what motivated me, but did not realize it was something else. I was saying all the right things that should have been important to me, but really were not. I had to get underneath those surface thoughts, to where what really motivated lived. And that is more personal than I wish to share in this particular article. But I mention it because you too may need to find your REAL motivating energy.
I invite you to discover this for yourself or with the help of someone else. It takes some discipline to get past the first surface answers to where you really are motivated. But it is well worth it.
Senior Fitness Test Manual
Whether exercising or anything else, the company you keep encourages or discourages you. When encouraged, fitness comes easily.
When you exercise by yourself, you keep company with yourself. You have all kinds of conversations with yourself. If you are hard on yourself re: fitness, you become your own worst enemy. You might even get yourself to quit doing something you know is good for you, like exercising. We all know people who are their own worst enemies. When it comes to fitness activities, let us not be one of them. As a senior, you know better.
We judge our fitness and compare our fitness and are pleased with our progress, or not. We have long (or short) conversations and persuade ourselves to try harder or to stop. Usually, we do not even hear ourselves because we are so used to the sound of that voice in our head and we do not question that voice of authority. Like most people, we tend to agree with what WE say. Again, as a senior, we should know better.
The most significant reason people stop or do badly is because they judge themselves negatively.
However, if you have a knowledgeable trainer or an agreeable companion, all that changes. Having a pleasant, encouraging partner can be the single most important element in a successful fitness program. Take control of this key element by finding the right companion to exercise with.
How do you know the right companion or trainer?
First, you are winning. That is always a good sign and most important.
If you are not winning, check whether your relationship with your partners works for you or not.
Second, you enjoy the process. By enjoy, I do not mean you are always happy. More important is that you are motivated. Being enthusiastic is always good. It is the energy that gives you power.
Third. Does your partner demand too much? Then you will get discouraged, injure yourself, eventually give up. Do they demand too little? Not any better. You will get bored, make very slow progress, and perhaps quit anyway. You want to be somewhere between too little and too much. You will know because you will make progress without injury.
This will be worth the effort, worth almost any cost. It will keep you motivated. Whether it is a friend to walk with in your neighborhood or a personal trainer in a gym, that person calls you into action, gets you enthusiastic and set to do what you need to. There is no more powerful motivator than a team of people going enthusiastically in the same direction.
This makes it likely you'll do the workout. It is worth any cost to do this right. It is your health, and poor health is the highest expense you can have.
Peter_raven14 has sinced written about articles on various topics from Fitness, Fitness and Dating and Romance. Peter Woronoff is a psychotherapist and a recovering fitness enthusiast. Get your questions answered personally! at http://www.RecoverYourFitness. Peter_raven14's top article generates over 9900 views. Bookmark Peter_raven14 to your Favourites.
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