How to NOT hate exercise?
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byrdsng2012 wrote: »I'm with you on this. I HATE exercising. Hate it. Would rather clean the toilet at the 7 11.
I just go to the gym when there is something I like to watch on tv and walk on the treadmill until the show is over.
Bought a zoo membership so I go and walk for a few hours there...see the animals, watch the tourists.
I clean the house; up and down the stairs etc. Decided to paint the house. I park the car super far away from the grocery store if I need to go shop. Every step counts.
Just (re) started trying to drop the weight and I'm down two pounds. Patience.
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I do not enjoy exercise, nor do I really have the free time. My compromise is to do stairs at work. I happen to work in a 12 story building and work on the top floor. So I walk all the way down to the lobby and I'm slowly building up the amount of floors I climb. I'm currently at 9. I try for 3 times a day. mostly do it twice. I don't power climb. I just climb at a steady pace.
While climbing the stairs I play Candy Crush. It keeps my mind off the "this sucks" part and I'm motivated because I'm now hundreds of levels ahead of my husband, which bothers him and that brings me joy. LOL
Is there a way you can do something "active" that involves something you like?
As an example - I love video games. When we still had a treadmill I had it set up that I only allowed myself to play the game while walking on the treadmill. I could easily get in 3 miles while playing a game I enjoy vs hating every second of it if I went for a walk in my neighborhood.
An idea I saw above which I like is don't just walk to walk - go to a local shelter and walk the dogs. It's good for both you and them. I think you'll be much more successful if you find a way to move while doing something you already enjoy vs planned exercise.2 -
I can relate to this. I second the idea to volunteer somewhere where a lot of movement is required...it feels purposeful, not like exercise. A few years back I started volunteering at a farmed animal sanctuary/rescue. They're all over the country and you can find one close to you just by doing an internet search, though sometimes it's an hour or so drive which means it's a weekend activity. You have to be okay with getting dirty, but mucking stalls, lifting hay bales, cleaning, and lugging buckets and wheelbarrows of water or food back and forth is cardio and strength training all in one. It really doesn't feel like it at all because you're so focused on the task. The bonus is getting to hang out with and being loved on by cute rescued animals during and after and especially watching them enjoy their clean bedding when you're done.1
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I love exercise, all of it, especially with other people. Not all of us are alike, I wish I was the intellectual type that like to go to school and study, etc but I am not. Do what is best for you.1
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NorthCascades wrote: »How does anyone hate hiking? Did somebody bring you on a steep and nasty trail for your first time? Maybe try an easier trail with a big payoff?
I love hiking. I would never call it fun, and the enjoyable part isn't sweating up a hill being bit by flies and mosquitoes, that's stuff I put up with for the views and the time with nature.
I loathe hiking because it involves the two things I find most uncomfortable and exhausting: walking and being outside.
I only go for walks because the alternative is leg pain and swollen feet and that sucks more. Often when we go for a walk, we go to the mall and walk there because it's air conditioned and I won't get bit, stung or sunburned. I'm terrified of sunburn.
More to the point, OP, have you tried video games? I know some people who love Wii Fit still, or DDR. I play virtual reality games. Burns lots of calories dodging bullets or punching things. But it's not exercise, I don't do it to exercise, I play because I like games and getting high scores and I don't have to be around people.
Thanks for sharing. This doesn't compute for me because my cabin fever is so strong and being outside is what makes me feel better. Anyway, it goes to show how different we can be. Sounds like you have things under control though.0 -
Hi - I just wanted to say thanks SO much for all the replies. I really appreciate it!
There were questions about what I dislike about exercise, and what my goals are - what I dislike is mostly the physical pain and discomfort. For cardio, it’s being out of breath (lungs burning/heart pounding), too hot and muscles burning; and for strength stuff it’s the muscle pain, that painful feeling like your muscles might snap or cramp or something. Then there’s the aftereffects - feeling tired and groggy for ages afterwards, and your body aching. As far as I can tell, that’s just what any exercise feels like; I walk to work and back every day, and I get those same unpleasant sensations from that walk (although of course far less than from other exercise).
As for what my goals are - I’d love to say they are primarily to be physically fit and healthy in order to have a long life without health problems, and of course I do want that too - but if I’m honest, what really drives me is the idea of not being overweight and being able to look the way I want to in clothes I want to wear. It sounds shallow, but that’s the way it is.
It’s a great idea to push through the painful, horrible part of exercise by doing it repeatedly until it gets less awful - it’s just proved really hard for me to dig up the motivation to do something regularly for months that I’m REALLY not enjoying. A few years ago I tried to do that with swimming, which I kind of hate the least; I made it through several months of swimming 2-3 times a week, but it never seemed to get any less unpleasant or hard and eventually I (possibly unwisely) gave up. Hence why I was wondering if there was a trick to learning to hate it less, which might get me through the difficult months.
In short - slow down. I wonder if it might be worth taking a beginners class at some activity. Preferably one that involves allowing you to go at your own pace.0 -
NorthCascades wrote: »How does anyone hate hiking? Did somebody bring you on a steep and nasty trail for your first time? Maybe try an easier trail with a big payoff?
I love hiking. I would never call it fun, and the enjoyable part isn't sweating up a hill being bit by flies and mosquitoes, that's stuff I put up with for the views and the time with nature.
I loathe hiking because it involves the two things I find most uncomfortable and exhausting: walking and being outside.
I only go for walks because the alternative is leg pain and swollen feet and that sucks more. Often when we go for a walk, we go to the mall and walk there because it's air conditioned and I won't get bit, stung or sunburned. I'm terrified of sunburn.
More to the point, OP, have you tried video games? I know some people who love Wii Fit still, or DDR. I play virtual reality games. Burns lots of calories dodging bullets or punching things. But it's not exercise, I don't do it to exercise, I play because I like games and getting high scores and I don't have to be around people.
There is a reason they make sunblock and UPF clothing.
There's always something left uncovered. Coated myself in sunscreen once only to discover my ears weren't covered properly, and they burned so bad the skin melted off.
I've burnt the top of my head so bad I couldn't lay down, and once I burned the whites of my eyes. I've also burned through sunscreen.
The sun is the enemy, and who wants to spend three hours layering on multiple sets of clothing and chemicals just to go outside and be sweaty and chased by bees? Not me. No thanks.3 -
If you live in Seattle, you know the sun as "that yellow thing in the sky that we see 2 or 3 times a year." ☹️2
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Do you know anyone who likes exercise? That would maybe be willing to drag you and help ease you in without the pain?
I love exercise, I love seeing what my body is capable of and how much more I can do. 2 extra reps on last week's weight, run for an extra 5 min before I have to stop.
My husband.... Hates it! All of it, he gives me the sourest looks especially when I add in a new exercise that he has never done before. He feels awkward and judged for not being strong. He hates running and has once or twice (lovingly) cussed me out for what I ask him do. But occasionally (and more often here lately) he says "thank you for making me do this" he has lost 100lbs and kept it off for a few years now. When people ask him "how did/do you do it" his response is always. "I just do what she tells me to" lol
You might be able to get a similar sort of help from a trainer I don't know because I've never used one. But they could definitely help so that you aren't overworking anything.1
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