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What exercise/program defines BORING for you?
Replies
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Running outdoors. At least indoors on a treadmill I can watch TV or YouTube.5
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Everything that is so boring that it's only bearable with a tv/music/podcast/etc. Thus if I want to do cardio I go outside, enjoy being outside, look around myself. Oh, and any workout programme that has music in the background.0
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Running indoors - Even with speed work, I'd much rather take it to the local high school track vs. the treadmill.
Elliptical - I never feel like I get a good workout on it no matter how hard I push.
Swimming laps - I'd rather jab my eyes out.
Zumba - Used to like it, but not anymore. Not a good enough burn for me and I am uncoordinated.0 -
natalijennifer25 wrote: »Triceps extensions or dumbbell kickbacks are useless
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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exercises with weights. tried it years ago, found it way too boring.
running on the treadmill. A necessary evil when the weather sucks, and even with music on, it is a constant mental struggle. My brain keeps telling me that i can't do it and i should stop. I tried watching Tv while doing it. Turns out i lose my balance and can't run on the treadmill while looking straight ahead.
On the other hand, running outside is fun.1 -
I enjoy most exercises but I hate warm ups. I literally get headaches while warming up but once I am in the swing of things I love it and yoga is boring most of the time,for me, but it depends on the instructor.2
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Anything that involves counting repetitions. I’m bored by rep 3! I’d rather just do whatever it is until I’m finding it too much. It’s the counting, not the movement per se!
Far rather mindlessly do it while thinking about something else than keep count.1 -
Nearly all exercise machines: stair stepper, rower, bike, etc. I think stationary bikes are the worst. I can't imagine doing a spin class.
I tolerate the treadmill because it's useful to have in the house and makes it easy for me to use every day. But I much prefer to walk outside when the weather allows for it. I enjoy lifting weights but hate doing crunches or other ab exercises. They feel like torture.1 -
What bores me is doing the same thing daily. Now I change it up, bike outside, yoga, pilates reformer, dance videos, elliptical. When it's different from the day before I am more inclined to exercise.1
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Anything in a gym that doesn't involve equipment I don't already have. I like machines and weights just fine, but overall I'm way more into 'play' for my cardio. Walk, run, canicross, dog agility, horseback riding, hiking, swimming, paddle-boarding. Things that, again, feel like PLAY to me.1
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Back in my school days I used to think I disliked running, but then I moved from the track to cross country and loved it.
Fast forward a couple decades, and my chief fitness love has become lifting. For a while I thought I disliked cardio (my knees wouldn't allow me to run much anymore), but then I realized I disliked STEADY cardio. Treadmill, bike, whatever... if you simply set a tempo or intensity and a timer, forget it. But if I'm constantly changing things up... jog a minute, walk a minute, raise the incline for a minute, go back to flat... then I'm ok with it. Not a true HIIT level of intensity change, but changing SOMETHING.
Which all told is very odd, as I'm the kind of person who prefers routine, doing the same things the same way day after day... it just makes me feel comfortable. (And drives my wife crazy, as she thrives on constant change of routine and environment.) But during my workout, change is the name of the game. Maybe that's why I love lifting so much... from minute to minute (even second to second) something is constantly changing, whether lifting to rest, going from BB bench press to DB press, chest one day and back another...3 -
It isn’t so much “boring” that makes me avoid an exercise. Even when I wasn’t anywhere near as disabled as I am now. It has always been the company I was with.
Example: Hiking. If all someone wants to do is get to the top of the mountain as fast as possible, take a picture, and hike down? Count me out. (yes. I acknowledge this is what some people like, and that’s OK for them)
But if someone wants to enjoy the rocks and trees? Maybe sit 3/4 of the way up for half an hour and listen to the birds? Maybe draw and write some haiku? I’ll happily accompany that person if they wish.
I can workout on my NuStep in my living room, and talk to my partner. To me that’s not boring. Or, if my partner or my husband isn’t around, I will push myself as hard as I can, making a game out of how fast I can pedal, and for how long.
Other people definitely would consider that boring. But, like golf, the real challenge is against yourself. And I do like that.3 -
i hate doing exercise just for the sake of exercise. i like to be productive in my cardio, gardening or walking with my kids. i absolutely hate running or doing aerobic type of videos.4
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Anything that isn't weight lifting or hiking is a thing I don't enjoy.
I can run and cycle long distances but I'd really rather not, so I don't. Swimming is only good if there is a swim up bar. Gym classes don't do it for me because I'm not in control of the music. Yoga makes me fall asleep.4 -
The gym bores me to tears.
I'd rather exercise outside - or even at home.
I just don't like being around people I don't know sweating on machinery 🤮1 -
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So true!
I could do the negative drops for an Achilles repair protocol multi-times daily without too much issue, but trying to do desired stretches for HHT is so boring.
I'd be kicked out of a yoga class likely for snoring.1 -
I had a treadmill, walking on it bored me to no end.2
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Treading water warm ups - can't use an electric device as a distraction and watching the clock hands slowly wind around makes it all the worse.0
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i hate the treadmill (really its running i hate). and i have a sneaking suspicion that's what my doctor is going to relegate me to doing once he clears me for the gym again. because if it were anything other than walking, he'd let me do the elliptical- which i DO love (as long as i have music).
i couldnt get into yoga, either. that was MIND NUMBINGLY boring. i almost think i would rather try to.... run.0 -
Treadmill. I do eight 5-minute stationary cycle rides per week during and after my workouts — 5 min is as much as I want to do. Pain wise, anything on my knees (broken kneecap several years ago).0
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callsitlikeiseeit wrote: »i hate the treadmill (really its running i hate). and i have a sneaking suspicion that's what my doctor is going to relegate me to doing once he clears me for the gym again. because if it were anything other than walking, he'd let me do the elliptical- which i DO love (as long as i have music).
i couldnt get into yoga, either. that was MIND NUMBINGLY boring. i almost think i would rather try to.... run.
You're not going to like to read this, but yoga can evolve into much more than mind-numbing. You just have to actually focus MORE. You have to focus more on letting go of your thoughts. It's actually pretty freak'n cool.
I used to think swimming laps was the most boring thing in this quadrant of the known Universe. I would think, "OH! Look! A black line! .... OH! Look! A black line!" Awful. But I did it anyway because it's a good activity. I have no idea when, how or why, but one day that black line became my friend. Always there. Always welcoming. Never judging. Just steady while I went back and forth and back and forth. I kind of got into the same state of mind I used to get when I practiced yoga more. Yes, it was always a challenge to use yoga to help let go of thoughts, but practicing made huge differences in many aspects of my life. It probably helps because of the way I swim. I use a dive mask and snorkel. Once I put my head in the water, I don't take it out of the water for a half hour or an hour or however many laps I'm thinking I'll swim. The outside world is kept out, and I can just geek out on feeling the water. Yoga was like that.3 -
callsitlikeiseeit wrote: »i hate the treadmill (really its running i hate). and i have a sneaking suspicion that's what my doctor is going to relegate me to doing once he clears me for the gym again. because if it were anything other than walking, he'd let me do the elliptical- which i DO love (as long as i have music).
i couldnt get into yoga, either. that was MIND NUMBINGLY boring. i almost think i would rather try to.... run.
You're not going to like to read this, but yoga can evolve into much more than mind-numbing. You just have to actually focus MORE. You have to focus more on letting go of your thoughts. It's actually pretty freak'n cool.
I used to think swimming laps was the most boring thing in this quadrant of the known Universe. I would think, "OH! Look! A black line! .... OH! Look! A black line!" Awful. But I did it anyway because it's a good activity. I have no idea when, how or why, but one day that black line became my friend. Always there. Always welcoming. Never judging. Just steady while I went back and forth and back and forth. I kind of got into the same state of mind I used to get when I practiced yoga more. Yes, it was always a challenge to use yoga to help let go of thoughts, but practicing made huge differences in many aspects of my life. It probably helps because of the way I swim. I use a dive mask and snorkel. Once I put my head in the water, I don't take it out of the water for a half hour or an hour or however many laps I'm thinking I'll swim. The outside world is kept out, and I can just geek out on feeling the water. Yoga was like that.
yeah..... im not so good at turning my brain..... off. lol2 -
callsitlikeiseeit wrote: »callsitlikeiseeit wrote: »i hate the treadmill (really its running i hate). and i have a sneaking suspicion that's what my doctor is going to relegate me to doing once he clears me for the gym again. because if it were anything other than walking, he'd let me do the elliptical- which i DO love (as long as i have music).
i couldnt get into yoga, either. that was MIND NUMBINGLY boring. i almost think i would rather try to.... run.
You're not going to like to read this, but yoga can evolve into much more than mind-numbing. You just have to actually focus MORE. You have to focus more on letting go of your thoughts. It's actually pretty freak'n cool.
I used to think swimming laps was the most boring thing in this quadrant of the known Universe. I would think, "OH! Look! A black line! .... OH! Look! A black line!" Awful. But I did it anyway because it's a good activity. I have no idea when, how or why, but one day that black line became my friend. Always there. Always welcoming. Never judging. Just steady while I went back and forth and back and forth. I kind of got into the same state of mind I used to get when I practiced yoga more. Yes, it was always a challenge to use yoga to help let go of thoughts, but practicing made huge differences in many aspects of my life. It probably helps because of the way I swim. I use a dive mask and snorkel. Once I put my head in the water, I don't take it out of the water for a half hour or an hour or however many laps I'm thinking I'll swim. The outside world is kept out, and I can just geek out on feeling the water. Yoga was like that.
yeah..... im not so good at turning my brain..... off. lol
That's the weird part about yoga. It's not turning the mind off, it's just adjusting focus. Totally interesting. In a way it's like running serious whitewater. Anything that's far away is irrelevant. For whitewater, it's maybe 100 feet or 500. For yoga it's your cranium.2 -
Lifting weights1
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Indoor cardio machines in a gym with strangers. Ugh.1
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I find all "exercise" boring. But I like "activity" including intense activity. After I retired, I set out to get back in shape, but no "exercise" kept me engaged. I thought back to the time in my life I was in the best shape and it was in my 30's doing martial arts. So at 68, I got into Muay Thai kickboxing and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. I take seven classes a week. What I think it is for me is that it is always different, there is always a coach or a training partner pushing me and it requires the use of my brain as well as my body.
I am sore every day, but I am stoked about it. I have looked at estimates online and at my weight, it looks like I am burning about 6,500 calories a week. I still have to watch what I eat, of course.2
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