Former couch potatoes... how long did it take you to make your lifestyle permanently active?
toxikon
Posts: 2,383 Member
Just a question I'm curious about. I'm a total couch-potato, I love watching movies, drawing, reading, crafting, playing games... not really physically active hobbies. The only active thing I actually seem to enjoy is going on walks with my audiobook.
Over the years I've started and stopped many different programs (lifting, running, biking...), never really getting into a good groove for more than a few months. I've started so many beginner strength programs at the gym I've lost count.
My brain says "Hey, you need to put on some muscle mass if you want to look good and feel great later in life! You'll feel good after your workouts! Endorphins! Just go do it!" then the other side of my brain says "Meh... but Netflix."
So what was the turning point for you, ex-couch potatoes? I know in my brain that I just need to MAKE IT a habit and go to the gym regardless of how ambivalent I feel about it... but I always just seem to slip back into old patterns.
Over the years I've started and stopped many different programs (lifting, running, biking...), never really getting into a good groove for more than a few months. I've started so many beginner strength programs at the gym I've lost count.
My brain says "Hey, you need to put on some muscle mass if you want to look good and feel great later in life! You'll feel good after your workouts! Endorphins! Just go do it!" then the other side of my brain says "Meh... but Netflix."
So what was the turning point for you, ex-couch potatoes? I know in my brain that I just need to MAKE IT a habit and go to the gym regardless of how ambivalent I feel about it... but I always just seem to slip back into old patterns.
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I'm still a couch potato, just for one less hour every day. Also, I got a puppy who doesn't let me be very lazy these days, but I still manage.10
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I've become more of a couch potato as I've gotten older. In general, I just feel more tired and more broken down than I used to... which makes me more apt to "take today off and recover" on a more regular/consistent basis.0
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I'm still a couch potato, I just have a standing appointment with the gym. There are still days where I get to the gym, walk inside, then turn around and leave.6
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For me it was food tracking that did it. I made the correlation that when I tracked I lost weight. (Largely because it was easier to not eat something if I had to get on the computer and track it.) Once I started loosing weight, bicycling to loose more, then running to loose more, then weights...
I still watch some tv, but find it easier to get up and lift the weights, knowing that they won't lift themselves and if I don't get up & do it then, I'll loose sleep because I waited to lift them later in the evening.2 -
Still sedentary, except for the few hours I'm not.
Desk job, TV/Computer/Reading for recreation.. but I get 12-20 miles per week thanks to C25K, Pokémon Go, and my step tracker.1 -
I've had a Fitbit for more than 2 years now. It motivates me to hit my step goal. It vibrates at 10 to the hour if I haven't taken at least 250 steps in that hour.
It has been a slow and steady progression from 5000 steps to 8000 steps and I'm hoping to get closer to 10,000 by the end of the year. Part of that is getting out and taking a brisk walk every morning, but there's lots of short bursts throughout the day as well.
I would love to think it's become a way of life and if I chucked the Fitbit I'd keep it up, but I'm honestly not sure!
This is separate from my workouts though. For that I get a wall calendar, write in my schedule, and cross them off when I do them. I go through periods where it's easy - I know I will feel awesome after I workout so I just get up and do it. But I'll have other months where I skip a bunch and it's shame at all those uncrossed-off workouts that gets me going for the few I actually do . So I guess I'm still a work in progress!2 -
I gotta say once I started lifting weights it became something I knew I would stick with. Even if I stopped for a couple of months for whatever reason, I knew I'd come back. I don't really enjoy any of my workouts while I'm actually doing them, but I really love the surge of power I get when I lift, even if the motion itself isn't fun. The high is. And after a lifetime of being dead last in everything physical, getting called a "star pupil" by my trainer, and being able to actually start to hold correct form with my moves...it's a whole new world. I can't see me ever not doing it for long.2
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stanmann571 wrote: »Still sedentary, except for the few hours I'm not.
Desk job, TV/Computer/Reading for recreation.. but I get 12-20 miles per week thanks to C25K, Pokémon Go, and my step tracker.
PokemonGo rules!!!1 -
I do go to the gym a couple times per week to lift but I figured out a long time ago that the gym was not going to work for me in regards to being an every day destination for exercise.
Most of what I do is as much hobby and recreation as it is exercise. Primarily I cycle...at the moment I'm not training for anything in particular, so I just go ride...sometimes it's 30 minutes because that's all I have time for...sometimes is 45...rarely over an hour if I'm not training because I have to balance that stuff out with other life obligations.
My activity level also varies seasonally. I'm just out and about more doing stuff in the nicer months...trips to the zoo, playing with the kids in the park, rock climbing, camping trips with lots of hiking, etc.
In the winter, it's cold and dark...I'm more likely to be sitting on the couch watching football on a Sunday than I am at the zoo walking around for a few hours. As exercise goes I'm pretty much relegated to my indoor bike trainer because it's dark in the morning and dark in the evening which is when I can ride...I do it, but I'm not nearly as dedicated to it as I am road riding and it's really easy for me to just be like "nah...going to pop a beer instead." I'd wager that from Thanksgiving to the end of January I was on my bike maybe 5-10 times. I'm definitely way less active all around in the winter...both in regards to exercise as well as general moving around
I typically get things going again about this time of year...New Mexico winters are short, so we're already seeing some nice Spring like 60* days and it's staying light out longer so I can often get in a quicky road ride after work now and it'll be even better when the time changes. I also just purchased an indoor rower for those Spring days where the wind will keep me off the bike so that at least I have an option of rowing or getting on my trainer.
As far as how long it took...that's a tough question. I was pretty sedentary for 8 years while I was gaining weight. I took to exercise pretty much right away...but maybe that's because prior to those 8 years I was always a very active guy. I was a competitive athlete in multiple sports growing up from about 3rd grade on up through my senior year and in my 20s I was just always out and about doing something or another and didn't own a car most of the time so I biked and walked everywhere...so I guess getting active again was more of a return to my former self than a re-invention of myself.
I still have plenty of couch potatoness going on, just a lot less of it. This past Sunday at noon I had like all of 1,300 steps taken...
I also don't recover as easily as I used to, so there's definitely days that I planned to do something or want to do something, but I can't and just need to lay low and chill.
I'd also say that regular exercise and moving a lot in general has a pretty profound effect on some hereditary health issues...so that gives me a good reason to move as well.2 -
I got a pedometer a couple of years ago and discovered that I was getting 2,000 steps or less a day. I did a lot of sitting. Like you a lot of my hobbies were sedentary.
I gradually increased my steps and often get 8,000 or more a day.
I walk while I read, listen to podcasts or music. I use the computer or tv less. I get outside more.
I set a timer and walk briskly around my house for 30 minutes.
I do workout videos off of you tube.
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I'm still a couch potato, I just have a standing appointment with the gym. There are still days where I get to the gym, walk inside, then turn around and leave.
Lol...I did that last Sunday...actually, I didn't even walk inside...I parked the car and sat there for a minute and just said, "*kitten* it" and went home and spent the rest of the day lounging on the couch and helping my 2nd grader with a school project.
For whatever reason I was just pretty spent and it was just a no go...2 -
I think it was a combo of being lucky enough to find things that I liked doing, setting really achievable goals, and getting positive results quickly enough to keep me coming back for more. I like walking, so I set a daily step goal that was only slightly higher than my current numbers, and started walking more frequently and often, usually in ten minute chunks. I'd already started getting up earlier in the AM because I liked having that time alone, so I eventually added another 10-15 minute walk then. Eventually I stopped breaking a sweat on my short walks but liked the feel of doing something physical for even just 10-15 minutes first thing in the morning, so I started running, discovered pretty quickly that I loved how I felt after even a short run, and it kind of snowballed from there.
But honestly, if I felt like I was suffering the whole time or didn't see any results, I don't think I'd have stuck with anything. And having goals that are really easy to meet helped me a lot, too. Even when I didn't want to get up in the AM, I found it easy enough to convince myself to jog for 15 minutes, especially knowing I'd feel better after and I was going to take a shower either way. I've quit a couple of things as I've gone along (blech at the stationary bike), and changed my routine around, but hopefully I'll always be up for those 10-15 minutes.0 -
Growing up I was always super active. Then I got the desk job, and started spending a lot more time on my butt. I've ALWAYS enjoyed reading, art, playing video games, watching TV/movies, but historically was active enough to more than compensate. Desk job axed that.
I didn't adjust for a number of years, becoming pretty close to a couch potato. I still rode my horses and occasionally did chores at the barn, and riding motorcycles, but I didn't make extra time for more activity to make up for the desk job....
Enter 2015 when, by the end of the race season, my lack of fitness was an obvious factor holding me back. That's when I got dedicated to changing back to being more active and making the gym a priority.
I just had to "embrace the suck" through the first few months as my body rebelled, I felt like crap, and I was so out of shape that working out didn't help me feel better. After about 3, consistent, months, however, I found that I was starting to enjoy it. I was enjoying the results, just moving in general, and would miss it on days I skipped. After my (bad) leg break I got out of the routine for the better part of a year, but even so, it was MUCH easier to get back into it (and my fitness returned much faster than I though it would - strength not so much). There are days it still can suck, but racing is my motivation on those days. Being okay with an "easier" workout can help sometimes too.1 -
It is hard to remember the point where I stopped dreading workouts and started looking forward to them - you can definitely feel it if you haven't exercised in a few days. You will get there, but be sure to do exercise that you really enjoy, otherwise you will probably always hate it. (Although, I hated running at first and grew to love it.)0
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A day, honestly.
I saw a picture of myself, January 2008, and I looked nothing like I felt inside.
By the end of the week I was counting calories and had a year pass to the rec centre, and have had one ever since.
I started by doing aqua fit 3 evenings a week, and walking.
Since then I have done loads of different classes, learnt to swim, participated in 10 Km races, and had some wonderful active holidays. ( the holidays really do inspire me to try different things. Who wants to sit in a coach and watch people rappelling down waterfall cliffs instead of doing it?)
I tell myself it is 1 hour out of 24, I can be a couch potato the other 23 if I choose.
It is wanting to be independent, fit, and healthy as I age that gives me a long term goal. That is hard to keep in the present though.
Short term, it is all about vanity and being able to do wild and crazy things.
Believe me, I am Mrs Sloth personified. My muscles were likened to mashed potatoes.
This, like weight loss, wasn't an easy change, I've gone from loath to dislike with regards to exercise, but it was simple.
An hour a day.
Because of my attachment to the couch, I do find I do better exercising outside the house.
I can also get ready and procrastinate on the couch for a couple of hours before actually going.
Oh, I was doing that (procrastinating) last Wednesday and it started snowing. I couldn't get out of the cut de sac. A good shovelling of the drive way, and 3 sets of Nerdfitness, was exercise that day.
I try not to think of exercise in isolation, but how it can, and does, improve my quality of life overall.
Cheers, h.3 -
I read once that a person should adopt hobbies that require physical activity.
It was broken down like this:
Have one hobby that demands creativity.
Have one hobby that demands intellect.
Have one hobby that demands physical movement.
When I saw that article I realized all of my hobbies require only creativity and nothing else. So I am taking up walking as a hobby and trying to think of other physical type activities I enjoy doing so I can pick those up too. Not quite sure what that'll be but I'll get there.
It's okay to be a couch potato... for a few hours a day. Just don't let the couch be your job.10 -
I was an on and off "lifter" from age like...18 to 25. By that I mean I'd get motivated once or twice a year, lift some bags of food cans, and reward myself with a whole box of little debbies. Then I got a hold of some weights (this was actually around age 24) and spent a year toying around with them but not really knowing what I was doing. Then one day in late 2016 I went to YouTube to try to find a video on proper deadlift form. I was gonna try the scary stuff. That day I found out that as opposed to just reading how to do all this stuff, I could hear it come from another person's mouth. That's always been the easiest way for me to learn. So I picked up that weight and haven't put it down since. And don't even get me started once I learned how to make healthier versions of my favorite garbage food. Just two days ago I joined a gym for the first time in almost a decade and unlike all those years ago, I didn't just walk on a treadmill.
Life is awesome.6 -
I'm still pretty much a couch potato, but I made a rule with myself, that if I'm able to got to work, then I'm able to get up an hour earlier and go to the gym, I consider it my 2nd job. So far, it's been working, I've only missed a few unplanned days off.1
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About 18 months, I'd say, of actually trying to get into it.
I'd pick up running a couple of times a week in high school when I felt like I needed to moderate my weight or deal with stress but it was never more than like 30 minutes at a time.
In college I tried to do C25K.... like three or four times. Never actually finished it. Lifted regularly for maybe three or four months my senior year of college. Then moved for a job and didn't do anything for well over a year. Gained 60 lbs.
About 18 months ago (Oct 2016) I signed up for the YMCA and went to Zumba like once a week. That lasted for maybe 4 months? In March of 2017 I started counting calories seriously. June/July ish 2017 I did C25k again, got to week 7, fell and tore my meniscus. That was August 2017. Cancelled YMCA. Didn't do anything until October 2017. Signed up for an expensive Lifetime Fitness membership. Turns out that putting my money where my mouth is really motivates me. I'm now up to 5 times/week at the gym. It started with just Monday night Zumba, then added Wednesday night Zumba. Then I started swimming every once in a while. Then I added yoga and weight lifting. Now I go to spin classes three times a week. I like classes a lot for the loud music, the group mentality, and because I don't have to come up with my own routines.
I had to work really hard to find what I like to do in terms of fitness. I had to work really hard to find the atmosphere I liked. My apartment complex has an awesome gym but without a class schedule to drive my work outs, I would just wait until too late in the day and then not go. The YMCA didn't stay open late enough and the classes were RIGHT after work and I like to go home, make dinner, unwind, then go work out.
These days, I get antsy if I miss a work out for two days in a row. Which was NEVER the case. EVER.2 -
I read once that a person should adopt hobbies that require physical activity.
It was broken down like this:
Have one hobby that demands creativity.
Have one hobby that demands intellect.
Have one hobby that demands physical movement.
When I saw that article I realized all of my hobbies require only creativity and nothing else. So I am taking up walking as a hobby and trying to think of other physical type activities I enjoy doing so I can pick those up too. Not quite sure what that'll be but I'll get there.
It's okay to be a couch potato... for a few hours a day. Just don't let the couch be your job.
I really like this idea! Although I’m one of those people who can’t take up a creative or physical hobby without also building an extensive set of spreadsheets/database and reading tons of history and theory and such, so I’ll never have to worry about the intellectual aspect because I turn any hobby into an intellectual one. My spouse is like this as well - he knits, but also collects and catalogues patterns and past and future projects, not to mention forums like this and books and blogs and so on - he easily spends more time with the computer than actually knitting! I’ve definitely becoming that way with fitness.0 -
First time posting. I only started logging just about a month ago, and frankly since New Years for more activity (no resolution, just worked out that way). Here's my story:
I am 23 years old right now. I became a vegetarian during the summer of 2017 (unwilling at first out of solidarity, then ended up being the only one to stick to it). But I ended up realizing around the holidays that no meat doesn't translate to health. Thus I started to incorporate more greens and less chips into my diet. Soon after, I decided that I wanted to lose the extra pounds AND, more importantly, be healthy (a death in the family plus sudden diagnoses in my family made up my mind), so I started to force myself on the family's largely unused stationary bike. I was afraid I wouldn't stick to it since I have tried all sorts of videos and routines for years.
Here is my "saying no to Netflix" hack: Say yes to Netflix, or youtube, or any other tantalizing screen. This is probably not the best for actually concentrating on my workout, but while half paying attention to whatever I am watching, I can also work on hitting my distance and speed goals while being distracted by something I like. I am restricting myself to watching a particular show (currently New Girl) only during my workouts, so if I want to watch, I just need to work out more. Just make sure your main focus stays with your routine!
Also, it takes about 15-21 days to develop a habit. Do it daily for 3 weeks and you'll feel weird not doing it, provided you find something you enjoy. I just experienced that while on vacation last week (I gained back what I lost ) and even though I walked so much, I felt wrong not doing my usual workout. I was surprised at how amazing it felt when I started again!
Best of luck!1 -
Like many, I too have been on and off with the gym many times. 6 years ago I lost 40 lbs in one Summer by going to the gym every single day and eating semi healthy. Then I completely stopped. I gained about 10 lbs a year and every pound was put back on, plus about 15. Throughout these 6 years I’ve gotten “serious” about the gym at least 5 times. But I also have anxiety and am getting my degree in IT so I absolutely love just sitting in bed, coding, and watching Netflix. This time around, it’s still been a challenge for me but the one thing that has changed is that I realized that the gym is NOT a chore. I don’t HAVE to go, and no one really cares if I do or don’t. That to me made me feel more in control of the situation, and that much more motivated to actually go because I WANT to be healthier. And like others said, if I don’t go for a few days or weeks or months, I can just try again. Good luck with your journey!1
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I'm retired and, unless I'm exercising, I'm still a couch potato too - either driving, sitting in front of the computer or TV or sitting in a chair while listening to music and/or reading. That's why I set my activity kevel to sedentary and log all exercise separately.
When I started my current weight loss effort, I just incorporated lifting and then cardio as a regular part of my day. Over the padt 19 months, it has just become a habit (and more like a hobby) for me to lift for an hr every other day and to do cardio (mainly rowing) for at least an hr almost every day.
Just second nature to me now but it helps that I have a full lifting setup in my garage and a rower in the house so that I can do tbem 24/7 anytime I want w/o the need to go to a gym.0 -
I’ve wanted to get into running for YEARS! I’ve tried multiple times and always failed. In January of this I started C25K, and I have been running since. I finally stuck to it and now running is becoming me. I started running three days a week and then at about 5 weeks in. I started running daily. It’s only been 7 weeks but I know this is who I am now. I have my first 5k in April (part of the reason I finally started running, it’s a charity 5k with my church) and just this past weekend I went above and beyond....and registered for my first Spartan race which is in December of this year! I’m also getting a gym membership so I can start training properly for the Spartan race. Running isn’t for everyone, but whatever has been interesting you, have a go at it and try to stick with it for a while. You may find you love whatever you do! It took 3-4 weeks for running to stop becoming a chore and to start becoming a passion. Up until then, I forced myself to do it.3
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The turning point for me was finding something I enjoyed so much that I'd do it even if it weren't good for me, just for the enjoyment. I was so terrible at it that I then started doing other things I didn't like nearly so much, just so I'd be get better able to do the thing I did like. I was pretty consistent from the start of doing this, which was around 15 years ago, when I was still obese.
But to find it, I had to kiss a lot of frogs, metaphorically speaking. The initial motivation for trying things was trying to feel minimally decent again after back to back cancer treatment (surgery, chemo, radiation, Rx drugs) and hypothyroid diagnosis.
I'm not sure how anyone could learn anything from that. I could say: Just try a bunch of different stuff, and stick with each at least long enough to get past the inevitable "awkward newbie" feeling . . . but you'd need a motivation to do that.
Sorry.
These days, I enjoy quite a lot of active stuff, as it blurred together a bit over time . . . and as I got fitter, more things felt doable, too, I guess.
P.S. "It" was rowing, long skinny boats like the ones in the Olympics, only mine is slower. But that part doesn't really matter, because everyone's "it" will be different.4 -
About 2 years, slow and steady1
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It took me about 4 months after I started being consistent.
I started off walking down the street and back. That's all I could do at the time. The more I did it I was able to go a little faster and a little longer which motivated me.
Then I discovered Youtube aerobic workouts that I liked doing. I still kept up with my walking, but I graduated to walking on trails and tracks at this time.
A couple months later I joined a fitness class which introduced me to weights, resistance bands, bodyweight work, circuits etc. and that changed everything. I actually looked forward to going to class. My body and lifestyle transformed too which made me want to keep going. I eventually went from size 18 to size 10/12.
I took that class for one year and I completely outgrew it. I decided to leave and invest in equipment for a home gym which was a great decision because I found my happy place.
I didn't have the fastest progression, but I went at my own pace and I wasn't hard on myself.
Finding things I enjoyed, seeing small improvements and being consistent got me to my goal. Even 6 years in I still try new activities and exercises to do and I'm always making new fitness goals.8 -
born, raised and going to die as a couch potato. i'm just a cp who lifts weights and travels mostly by bike.
with that said, my turning point was not habit, but 'love'. for baffling reasons i really like lifting weights. and for different reasons idk, the bike thing just works better for me than all the hassle and glaggh of a car.0 -
Wow, thanks everyone for sharing your stories! I really enjoyed reading everyone's experiences with being active.
It's nice to know that most of you are couch-potatoes who have managed to commit a daily hour to being active.
And I'm totally jealous of those of you who actually enjoy going to the gym!
I think my main issue is just being in the slump of a long winter. I'm sick of snow and feeling cold and I have little motivation to go outside - even if it's just to drive to the gym.
In the spring, summer and fall I love to walk. I desperately miss my outdoor walks in the warmth!
I think finding a sustainable plan for me, that I will actually enjoy, will be good. I have been doing a bit of yoga for the past few weeks and actually looking forward to it after a day in the office, so I think I will continue to do that every day and try to find longer routines on Youtube to get a better workout from it.
Then in the warm weather, I will return to my walking and maybe add a few weekly hikes too. And perhaps start C25k again (I've done it twice and had even done a few 10ks!).
I think I just get hung up on the idea that I HAVE to go to the gym, I HAVE to lift weights... but if I know I don't enjoy it and can't stick to it, what's the point? In the long run, it's better to find activities you enjoy, right?
Anyway. Thanks again y'all!3 -
Turning point? You're on a fools errand. It is an on going process, a day to day decision, if you're looking for that point in time where it will be an easy, reflex decision you're out of luck. Every day you have to draw on the dedication to get up and do it again.3
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