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by conistonwater 1865 days ago
There was a very good book, Being Mortal, where one of the points is that from the point of view of a doctor working with old people our bodies slowly but surely degrade until we are no longer to get on with our lives. So one aspect of life expectancy that gets missed very often is that my life expectancy is not the only thing that's important. During those extra years of life I also want to not be stuck in my bed, I would like to be able to go do stuff that I consider to make up my life. Exercise especially, among the other good things, doesn't just raise the life expectancy, it also makes sure you can do things yourself independently during those extra years. You don't even need to be forty for being sedentary to affect your life, it just comes to the fore as you age. It was a very motivating, slightly scary, interesting book, by Atul Gawande.

The total amount of time recommended as the minimum is something like 90min cardio + 90min strength training per week, that's like 30min/day. I spend more time watching Youtube than that.

2 comments

There is an old Greek myth that made the same observation about age and mobility. It's not exactly a new idea. :)

A nymph asked for immortality for her lover, but forgot to also ask that he remain young. So he just got older and older, until he shrank so far that he transformed into a cricket.

My problem with exercise is just that I hate it. In my youth I went to the gym to build muscle and was fairly successful, but I hated it.

Now I am older, married, and don't see much point in wasting time building muscle anymore. So I bought a treadmill for my own home. I use it ever 2-3 days for only 20-30 minute and I hate it. It's painful, it's unbelievably boring, after using it I'm exhausted and have to take a shower. I cannot listen to podcasts or watch TV shows to fight the boredom because the experience is too intense to fully focus on something else. I cannot even really think about things.

When I got the usual vaccine side effects the other day, I thought "at least I have an excuse not to exercise".

I know exercise is important, but I wish it wouldn't be so terrible.

Painful, exhausting, and boring is a combination that usually means you are running too fast for your fitness level. It's usually recommended people run at a pace that allows them to have a conversation relatively easily, and it's rare for people to find that pace painful and exhausting. Especially (!) if you can't focus enough to watch something on TV. When I run hard I can't listen to podcasts either, that's pretty normal and just part of how things work, but it's nothing to do with running per se. Obviously I don't know what your fitness level is, but running can be a humbling experience sometimes, so one shouldn't give up just like that.

I know people like to play up individual preferences and personalities, genetic variability and all that, but the basic physiology of running is (scientifically) basically the same for all people barring some health conditions. So if you hate it there's still a good chance that some experimenting will get you running quite fine even if you hate it now. We're all just humans anyway, you know, you're not that special.

Hmm, thank you, that's actually really good advice. Next time, I will just keep the speed so low that I can listen to my podcast without problem, and see what happens.

I will probably still wish I would do dishes while listening to that podcast instead of running, but hey, it's necessary.

If you find that your slowest running pace is still not conversational (which happens a lot), try the run-walk method, and accumulate as much total running time as you can with enough walking breaks that keep you listening to podcasts. That's pretty much where I started myself.
Cool, I will try that. I will likely be a bit disappointed how slow my pace is, but I guess it will improve over time...
From what I have learned from running with various people, most people don't know how to properly breathe during running. At normal jogging pace, that's good for exercise, you can breathe at a very normal and steady pace. Once you have learned to do that, which is not necessarily easy, a lot of the difficulty of running disappears.

Except the boringness of it. There is no solution to it, except running in a large park or nature.

> Except the boringness of it. There is no solution to it, except running in a large park or nature.

I like podcasts and audio books. Since I started running I got through a lot of books, way more than I could possibly read physically. But yeah, if you have things under control, then sometimes it's like doing nothing for an hour straight: pretty dull, so you have to have something else going on.

Try something like Mysore Ashtanga yoga. It can be difficult but it's never boring if you are doing it right. It hits everything, strength, flexibility, balance, breathing, concentration, every muscle group. And you learn and do the routine on your own rather than a group, except once a week. All you need is a mat and you feel brilliant afterward. Might be hard to get started with covid but check it out once the studios start up again.
Genuine question, not trying to be sardonic: Why is that not boring?
It's a specific sequence of dozens of poses, each different, each with countless aspects you learn and work on. There's so much going on, if you are actually trying to do it right, that there's no cycles left for your mind to wander.

Examples are the angle which you hold your arms and legs; the location of your center of gravity; keeping your knee behind your toes; direction of your gaze, engagement of stomach and perenium muscles; reaching as far as you can in extended poses; balance; remembering the name of the pose; synchronizing the breath with the movement; keeping the breath smooth and slow; learning your body's limits; working with pain; how to hold your hands; the list goes on. And it all works together in an integrated fashion to leave no stone unturned in your body.

I got into bodybuilding about six years ago, and at the time felt much the same way.

Going to the gym was an ordeal, it was painful, made me feel sick, and I didn't see much (if any) benefit from all the effort.

For me, the key was calisthenics. When I first saw Emily Blunt in Edge of Tomorrow holding herself on her fists, I was entranced.

I learned what a double arm elbow lever was, a planche, handstand progressions and all sorts of other cool things.

I started from not being able to do a pull up, to being able to do six decent muscle-ups in a row, as well as other cool bar work (pull overs, archer pull-ups, etc...)

It took years, but the process was actually enjoyable.

Now I mostly do weightlifting. I'm approaching 50, and in the best shape of my life. Hoping to compete in a masters competition next year.

The key is to find something that you enjoy that also builds strength.

Bodyweight exercises are great for this, there are a ton of tutorials online.

Treadmills are not a good experience, having only ever run outside for years, I was stuck in a hotel for a week and wanted to run, so treadmill it was. Comparing the two things I can’t understand why anyone uses a treadmill (maybe if outside weather is too extreme?), it’s all the bad things about running and none of the good.

For me running it is about a basic simple thing (legs, feet, shoes one in front of the other.. not much gear) that you can scale up (speed, elevation etc) or scale down (speed, intervals/rests etc) to suit your mood. You are outside experiencing the world for better or worse (sometimes it’s cold/rains outside).

I wouldn’t run on a treadmill either it’s a terrible experience, bad for your running form too.

I have a basement, and use that to work out. (Canuck here, this is more reliable for me, than convincing myself to work out at -40C or +40C.)

I have a bike machine, which works well in front of a TV for some of my workout. Yet I found walking in large laps in my basement, to be preferable to a treadmill. Just the fact that my scenery changes, my view changes, even if I've seen it all a million times, seems to make a massive difference. I often end up thinking of work, or life in general, and my walking time is up before I know it.

I agree 100% outside is better, but even just circles in the basement seems better than a treadmill...

Haven’t tried it, but expect it would work, just a smaller version of doing laps Aron s a 400m track. There was also something about the movement of air too, treadmill is so stagnant (can get fan I suppose, not quite the same?)
Yes, I actually notice the air movement cooling me, as my basement is nice and cool in the summer.

I also reverse direction from time to time, so I get an even workout of "turn" during the oval parts of the loop. As I age, I've found I've had to increase my walking a bit, to maintain health. Maybe a 20% increase in walking time. :/

> It's painful, it's unbelievably boring, after using it I'm exhausted and have to take a shower. I cannot listen to podcasts or watch TV shows to fight the boredom because the experience is too intense to fully focus on something else.

This is basically me for all repetitive maintenance activities including exercise. I could not imagine having a job where I needed an ironed shirt every day. I don't think I could ever bring myself to exercise all that seriously either for similar reasons.

I actually love menial tasks like doing dishes, laundry, cleaning etc., because I can just listen to podcasts or audiobooks that I really find entertaining. With exercise, that's not possible, I cannot focus on it.

It's actively boring.

I've grown into the same mentality: used to be happy just going to the gym and seeing my numbers improve, but over the years it's become too boring to continue.

So I've switched my focus to sports! I now play tennis, surf and dance on a regular basis and I love it! It's a powerful change for anyone who thinks of exercise as a drag - find activities/people you enjoy who happen to involve moving vigorously.

Are there no hikes are available to you? No mountain peaks you could crest and see spectacular views? Camp under the stars? No nearby lakes you could go for a swim in? Take a kayak on? No ocean where you could learn to surf? No rocks nearby you could climb on? No forests into which you could disappear for an hour or two to lose yourself? Heck, no possibility to live close enough to work to commute by bike?

I really, REALLY do not understand people whose idea of staying fit begins and ends with gyms/treadmills. Hell, treadmills would make me want to shoot myself, so you have my sympathies there. But I've been outside running in sub zero temperatures, and walked on exposed peaks under the hottest sun, biked in absolutely torrential downpours. All of what you're saying sounds like excusitis to me, sorry.

I was never interested in a single thing you listed in your first paragraph... it's incredibly boring for me. I understand it's fun for a lot of people, for me it's the opposite. I'd literally rather do mildly annoying chores. But hey, I can lose myself for days on end building circuits or reverse engineering things.

During my university days, I sometimes would do stuff you suggested with friends (a little bit), but for me it was just to hang out with them. Ultimately, I was always happy when the "main activity" ended and we found ourselves in a café or bar talking afterwards.

I love nature and want to preserve it, but I choose to enjoy it by sitting in it with friends, or reading a book.

I'm curious what is the net tradeoff between all those activities you listed in which you're in the sun and not being in the sun. IIRC the sun actively ages you AFAIK and this topic is about trying to not age.
I also hate the treadmill and gym. But I absolutely love playing squash with my buddies. Get a sport with friends and make weekly exercise fun that way. (I play 2 - 3 one hour sessions of squash a week) (squash can be hard on the back and knees)
I don't, I'm sorry. 2-3 sessions that last one hour a week are effectively 2-3 evenings a week that are entirely dedicated to that. I have to get ready, go out, get there, get back, shower.

I love my buddies, but mostly because I actually want to talk to them.

Pick a different activity just do it longer. Golf, bird watching, gardening...it doesn't have to be mindless. Mindless routines are for mindless people :)
Running hills solves, if you have hills nearby: short (steep), variety, views
Have you tried walking around outside?