Friends who don't exercise?
Replies
-
I'm hoping you consider exercise - instead of ruling it out entirely.
I'm 48 years young and in the best shape of my life.
I work out an hour a day - every day.
It's really pretty easy - trade in one of those hours that you're watching TV - to an hour of being active.
Your body will thank you.0 -
I don't exercise either. I HATE it. Do I know its good for me? Yes, but I still can't bring myself to do it. Hopefully, the eating right will be enough to lose weight anyway. I've done it before without exercising, I just know it is harder to maintain the loss. Maybe this time will be different.0
-
malavika413 wrote: »malavika413 wrote: »LiveLaughLoveEat1 wrote: »malavika413 wrote: »SonicDeathMonkey80 wrote: »LiveLaughLoveEat1 wrote: »Therealobi1 wrote: »The person who resulted to name calling, well forget them, but i think i can understand what @50sfit is saying but for me it could have been worded better.
Can i ask why you dont exercise? you may regret it later. check out the posts of people who lost the weight and still unhappy with their bods afterwards.
Who name called?
Worry not; we all have opinions. I welcome them agree or disagree.
Actually someone did and the post is now faded out. They called the OP an idiot. Now, I wouldn't call her an "idiot"...she just needs to get her priorities straight if she wants a healthy lifestyle. She's still young so there's hope yet (doubtful but I'm optomistic)
I'm not so doubtful. At 19 years old I didn't care about fitness, either. It didn't really hit me until my late 20s. People think they are invincible at 19. Part of growing up.
Ditto. Totally regret not getting onboard in my 20s. Live and learn
I don't think fitness is something I'm going to grow into. My family doesn't exercise at all. I've been brought up to prioritize other things. Kudos to all of you for making the choice to exercise, but it's not for me.
one word...LAZY!
Sure, maybe I'm lazy. I've chosen to challenge myself in different areas, exercise isn't one of them. It's just a different lifestyle.
Just throwing it out there, because you continue to say you challenge yourself in other areas...
So do I. I have a full-time demanding career, I just finished my MBA, I have friends I love and family that live nearby. I have a house to maintain all by myself. I'm dating. I have pets. The list goes on and on. You aren't any busier than anyone else. Trust me.
I'm not saying I'm any busier than anyone else. I know lots of y'all have full time jobs, a brood of kids, etc. I am just not interested in exercise. I find it unpleasant and a drain on my self esteem.
I was 250+ pound 5'9 white boy who couldn't shoot, dribble, or pass trying to play against kids who grew up with a basketball in their hand. You think it was pleasant? I did it because I enjoyed watching basketball and I wanted to push myself outside of my comfort zone. I went into the weight room full of guys doing NFL combine reps of 225 and I couldn't even push 115 pounds off my chest without help from my roommate. You think it was pleasant? I did it because I wanted to push myself out of my comfort zone.
Very few people in the world start off great at something. It takes hard work and dedication. It takes moments of real challenges. Lift isn't about doing what you are comfortable with.0 -
So yeah, do what you want, but don't avoid something because you are scared.0
-
The best way to study is to get up every 20 minutes and do something else. Go do your laundry. Walk up and down some stairs. Do some push ups. Jump up and down for a minute. Anything adds up in the end. Plus you will fell better and be more attentive in your studies.0
-
Is your schedule really that busy as a student that you cant find half an hour a day to do some exercise? As people want to live longer these days then id almost say you cant afford not to exercise due to the health benefits and especially those later in life. Your choice, but you should be aware of them.
It's not about finding time for her. She just hates it and she is using her "other pursuits" as an excuse to justify it.
Im being polite, but it is ultimately the OPs choice. I prefer to do some because although it can be hard work and boring, there are several benefits and it gets me to target faster or more easily. I find many of the people on the success boards inspirational and admire them becayse I cna only imagine what hard work it must have been exercising with hundreds of lbs to lose, but they did it.
Good luck OP, makre sure you do everything to eat sensibly, sustain and log accurately.0 -
I don't see why it's that big of a deal. Some people exercise, some people don't -- that's their choice. I, personally, don't "exercise' (as in, put on workout clothes and go to the gym). Though I do walk quite a lot to get around campus/the city, so maybe that counts.
I detest every form of 'hard' exercise. I've tried every sport under the sun, and I can't get into it. I've never, ever experienced that exercise high that everyone seems to talk about. I didn't even feel satisfaction when I broke fitness goals (back when I made myself exercise); I was always just focused on getting out of the gym as soon as possible, and I dreaded the days of the week when I'd have to exercise.
Basically, I just gave up on it a few months ago and I've been feeling a lot happier and more cheerful since.
Maybe one day I'll take it up again when I physically have to, but until then, I'll just stick to eating healthy.0 -
malavika413 wrote: »I just have other priorities other than [...] feeling terrible about my inabilities.
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: CONSEQUENCE OF "EVERYBODY GETS A TROPHY" CULTURE!!!!
you do realize that college is a place to push yourself out of your comfort zone and to turn "inabilities" into "abilities"?
but striving to reach mediocrity is a lofty goal if you don't ever wanna "feel terrible about inabilities". claiming you have "different goals" is a neat little mask to try and hide the above, but it's there, QFT.
LOLz.-3 -
forkofpower wrote: »I don't see why it's that big of a deal. Some people exercise, some people don't -- that's their choice. I, personally, don't "exercise' (as in, put on workout clothes and go to the gym). Though I do walk quite a lot to get around campus/the city, so maybe that counts.
I detest every form of 'hard' exercise. I've tried every sport under the sun, and I can't get into it. I've never, ever experienced that exercise high that everyone seems to talk about. I didn't even feel satisfaction when I broke fitness goals (back when I made myself exercise); I was always just focused on getting out of the gym as soon as possible, and I dreaded the days of the week when I'd have to exercise.
Basically, I just gave up on it a few months ago and I've been feeling a lot happier and more cheerful since.
Maybe one day I'll take it up again when I physically have to, but until then, I'll just stick to eating healthy.
I think what a few of us are noticing is the OP's hiding behind a facade of being too busy and having her time invested into something else. She mentioned a few times that exercise hurts her self-esteem which probably means she did, at some point, try working out and something bad happened.
I just want her to know that she can do things that she isn't comfortable with or good at with a bit of practice and hard work. She needs to learn how to push herself. Exercising will help her improve her fitness goals, which is why she is on this site anyway.0 -
uconnwinsnc1 wrote: »forkofpower wrote: »I don't see why it's that big of a deal. Some people exercise, some people don't -- that's their choice. I, personally, don't "exercise' (as in, put on workout clothes and go to the gym). Though I do walk quite a lot to get around campus/the city, so maybe that counts.
I detest every form of 'hard' exercise. I've tried every sport under the sun, and I can't get into it. I've never, ever experienced that exercise high that everyone seems to talk about. I didn't even feel satisfaction when I broke fitness goals (back when I made myself exercise); I was always just focused on getting out of the gym as soon as possible, and I dreaded the days of the week when I'd have to exercise.
Basically, I just gave up on it a few months ago and I've been feeling a lot happier and more cheerful since.
Maybe one day I'll take it up again when I physically have to, but until then, I'll just stick to eating healthy.
I think what a few of us are noticing is the OP's hiding behind a facade of being too busy and having her time invested into something else. She mentioned a few times that exercise hurts her self-esteem which probably means she did, at some point, try working out and something bad happened.
I just want her to know that she can do things that she isn't comfortable with or good at with a bit of practice and hard work. She needs to learn how to push herself. Exercising will help her improve her fitness goals, which is why she is on this site anyway.
^This0 -
Sorry to see you are taking a battering on this thread. I've sent you a friend request.0
-
forkofpower wrote: »I don't see why it's that big of a deal. Some people exercise, some people don't -- that's their choice. I, personally, don't "exercise' (as in, put on workout clothes and go to the gym). Though I do walk quite a lot to get around campus/the city, so maybe that counts.
I detest every form of 'hard' exercise. I've tried every sport under the sun, and I can't get into it. I've never, ever experienced that exercise high that everyone seems to talk about. I didn't even feel satisfaction when I broke fitness goals (back when I made myself exercise); I was always just focused on getting out of the gym as soon as possible, and I dreaded the days of the week when I'd have to exercise.
Basically, I just gave up on it a few months ago and I've been feeling a lot happier and more cheerful since.
Maybe one day I'll take it up again when I physically have to, but until then, I'll just stick to eating healthy.
Its not a big deal if thats the way that the OP wants to do it. It is an importnat thing to look into though because of the benefits it offers and the one thing most of us have in common is we want to lose weight as quickly as is sfaely possible. Using exercise to supplement the calorie deficit makes a difference and can make the original yask of maintaining a deficit easier. If you walk around a lot then that does count as will the calories you burn.
Everyone finds their own way, but all things being equal then the one who exercises on a regular basis will be healthier and reach target faster.0 -
Alot of people dont exercise on this site , some barely move. Do what u want , its your journey. There are just alot of die hard exerciser on here that love it. Me, I dont like exercise either, but I do walk,occassionally. You dont even have to have friends on site, alot of people do it without and succeed.0
-
When I started here nearly four years ago I pretty much lost weight through deficit alone. I then realised that I wanted to eat more and then started to exercise, I then realised I actually really loved exercise. For me, my activity at being 5'3" and 110lb is the difference to maintaining on 1470 or 2000+
Everyone's journey is different. Just never say never.0 -
Guys, the OP wasn't really asking for your opinions on whether or not she should exercise or how she should force herself to exercise when she doesn't want to. She was asking for friend requests from other people who also don't exercise. She already said earlier in the thread that she does walk around campus a lot, so it's not like she sits on her butt all day every day. Yes, exercise is good for you. But she's also perfectly entitled to hate it and avoid it if she wants to. Maybe one day she will start exercising but today is clearly not that day, so there's not much point in criticising her.0
-
MarziPanda95 wrote: »Guys, the OP wasn't really asking for your opinions on whether or not she should exercise or how she should force herself to exercise when she doesn't want to. She was asking for friend requests from other people who also don't exercise. She already said earlier in the thread that she does walk around campus a lot, so it's not like she sits on her butt all day every day. Yes, exercise is good for you. But she's also perfectly entitled to hate it and avoid it if she wants to. Maybe one day she will start exercising but today is clearly not that day, so there's not much point in criticising her.
Not criticizing her. I am only calling on her to put herself out there and try something scary and new.0 -
uconnwinsnc1 wrote: »MarziPanda95 wrote: »Guys, the OP wasn't really asking for your opinions on whether or not she should exercise or how she should force herself to exercise when she doesn't want to. She was asking for friend requests from other people who also don't exercise. She already said earlier in the thread that she does walk around campus a lot, so it's not like she sits on her butt all day every day. Yes, exercise is good for you. But she's also perfectly entitled to hate it and avoid it if she wants to. Maybe one day she will start exercising but today is clearly not that day, so there's not much point in criticising her.
Not criticizing her. I am only calling on her to put herself out there and try something scary and new.
Only one person attack her and there comment has been deleted. I am just trying to get her to see that training can help her get the body she wants and she does have a goal body she wants.
0 -
MarziPanda95 wrote: »Guys, the OP wasn't really asking for your opinions on whether or not she should exercise or how she should force herself to exercise when she doesn't want to. She was asking for friend requests from other people who also don't exercise. She already said earlier in the thread that she does walk around campus a lot, so it's not like she sits on her butt all day every day. Yes, exercise is good for you. But she's also perfectly entitled to hate it and avoid it if she wants to. Maybe one day she will start exercising but today is clearly not that day, so there's not much point in criticising her.
I'm not trying to criticize the OP - she can do whatever she wants to do. As I said, there are a lot of people on this site who do not exercise. She will find friends.
But, we also have people that read these forums that don't comment. For those people, I think it's important to point out common excuses and say, "hey - you don't have to choose between exercise and having a busy life." They are not mutually exclusive events! If OP takes that as an attack, then that's her choice. I'm just saying, there's a bigger picture here.0 -
Of course you don't have to exercise to lose weight, but even something small goes a long way. Most of the exercise I do is just walking. Is there a way you can fit 30 minutes walking around campus into a study break? Think of it as not for your weight loss, but for your overall health.
This. Right here. You don't have to go to the gym and sweat through a power lifting class to exercise! Find something physical that you like and enjoy and do that. Dance, walk around campus, swim, hike, walk the dog, anything that incorporates movement. Can you lose weight without exercise? Absolutely!!! However, will you have the body that you want? Skinny with no muscle tone looks a whoooooole lot different that think with nice muscles. Clothes fit differently, your body looks different and you just feel better - mentally as well as physically. Exercise does so much more than help you lose weight. It improves your overall health and well-being - easily as much mentally as physically.
I am far from a gym rat. Yes, I do spend some time at the gym, but usually on a machine, by myself, and only when I can't get outside because of the weather or some other obstacle. I much prefer hiking in the mountains near my house, walking at lunch with some co-workers, working in my garden and yard or playing ball with my son. Exercise can be so much more than sweating in the gym!
0 -
im in maintenance and the most excersize I do is yoga and walking. I just dont like crazy hard workouts. add me if ya like.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 392.9K Introduce Yourself
- 43.7K Getting Started
- 260.1K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.8K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 415 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 152.9K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.6K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.5K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions