Guest guest Posted April 18, 2008 Report Share Posted April 18, 2008 As I embrace IE each and everyday (VERY new to this), I'm trying to find where exercise has it's place. I come from a very different aspect regarding exercise. When I first started (13+ years ago) it was for fun. Did Jazzercise 2-3 times per week. But over the years, exercise, they gym, and physical movement in general has been used as a modern day torture device. If I exercise I can eat. If I move, I can eat. If I don't exercise, I'm a fat, lazy slob that is gaining weight by the minute. Exercise no longer became about fun, stress relief, my health, or anything good and positive. For me exercise has become about torturing my existance. I'm so burned out. So beat up. I've pretty much had it with exercise and my whole thought process surrounding it. It's almost like my body/mind/soul are revolting against being tortured any longer. Somehow, I need to learn to change my thought pattern to a more positive way of thinking and I don't know how to. Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2008 Report Share Posted April 19, 2008 I’m what I consider a “regular” exerciser. When I first started IE, I had a few months of rebel behavior where I just didn’t work out because I was associating it mostly with weight loss. The next few months, I went semi-regularly and didn’t do much that was high intensity, with yoga classes thrown in. Lately, I’ve gotten back to what I consider to be my “normal” type of exercise - doing things that give me pride and a sense of accomplishment, elevate my mood, and make me feel more confident. For me, exercise combats mild depression that comes and goes. During these 5 or so months of rebelling, taking it easy, and getting back into it, I’ve tried to distance the goal of weight loss from exercise, though this is a difficult thing. As I get stronger and have more endurance, I think less about weight loss and more about performance and enjoying the workout, getting into the zone of it. I can say with the utmost certainty that the “plans” that are touted in magazines, at the gyms, and on tv are much like diets. It is not necessary to do x days of cardio or x days of weight lifting. The point of exercise should simply be to get our bodies moving and provoke some enjoyment in doing that, just as eating simply fills a biological need and also addresses our desire pleasure (when we listen and eat what we want). What works for one person may not work for another and what one person enjoys, another doesn’t. It is very important to find enjoyment in the exercise, whatever it is. There are parts of the world where plain old daily living provides exercise-hauling water, pounding grain, harvesting, planting. I think we’ve come to think of exercise as drudgery because it is so often equated with a weight loss plan. I do think exercise/movement is an important aspect of our lives, but perhaps for us IE’ers, it should be totally separate from the idea of weight loss (and that is something I struggle with). I do not believe that doctors should give us the once over and tell us to go exercise because we are overweight. Some type of movement should be prescribed for everyone. I have been what those goofball health insurance companies consider “overweight” for all of my adult life after having children. But I was very healthy-low cholesterol, excellent blood pressure, strong, with great cardiovascular endurance – and I felt great. So that is where exercise fits for me. I’m not perfect, I don’t make it to the gym the same number of days every week, and when I am tired, now thanks to IE, I skip that day and let my body rest. I can honestly say that in the last 3 weeks, I have never regretted a rest day. And I’ve also not regretted a workout day. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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