fitness · swimming · vacation

Happy manatee appreciation day!

Yes, it’s that time of year again. You may be thinking, but I feel like I just cleaned up from the last manatee-appreciation blowout I hosted. Well, time does pass quickly when you’re a manatee fan (like I am).

The most fun I had in 2025 was with manatees. My friend Gal and I went swimming with them at Crystal River, Florida. During the winter, the manatees head in from the Gulf of Mexico (no one there uses any other name for it) looking for the many warm springs, all comfy-cozy at 72F/22C year round.

You have a bunch of options for communing with the manatees:

  • viewing them from numerous bridges and platforms in state parks
  • paddling in a see-through plastic kayak and viewing them from above
  • snorkeling in the water, seeing them swim by, below and around you

Gal and I took the third option, and boy was it amazing. That day happened to be warm, so there were fewer creatures to see, but the ones we saw were massive and cool-looking.

I’m definitely going back, hopefully to see a large aggregation of manatees (that’s what google says we should call them). I highly recommend this for you, your families, your friends, your coworkers, your neighbors, your creditors, your old flames, everyone.

If you’re interested in some of the posts in which I sing the praises of manatees, here you go:

Catherine’s manatee-intensive vacation: the director’s cut

Six things I’ve learned about manatees

Succinct Sunday: things to do with manatees

Not-very-wordy Wednesday: manatees are here to save your day

I’ll leave you with this selfie of Gal and me at daybreak in our wetsuits, ready to see manatees. I admit that I inserted the baby manatee myself– it didn’t actually pose with us. But it’s awfully cute.

Happy Manatee Appreciation Day!

Catherine, Gal and imaginary (but cute) baby manatee.
Catherine, Gal and imaginary (but cute) baby manatee.
Dancing · injury

The Ankle Bone’s Connected to the Knee Bone, and the Knee Bone’s Connected to the Hip Bone…

I have written here and here about my persistent ankle injury. I finally got to see a doctor specializing in sports medicine, and she says my issue isn’t just a tight Achilles tendon. It’s that my whole leg is weak.

She sent me to a new physiotherapist for shock wave therapy to address the thickened tendon and recommended more exercises to strengthen my leg and glute muscle. The physiotherapist added more.

I am also trying a sleep sock for plantar fasciitis and have gel heel lifts for my shoes.

It has all been a reminder that as the old children’s song goes, all my body parts are connected, from the soles of my feet through my ankle, Achilles tendon, calf, hamstring and up into my glute and lower back.

The exercises are not fun, but I’m doing them faithfully because they are working. This week I managed two swim practices without taping my ankle. I even had a successful ballet class; I’m starting to get back my range of motion and I am getting strong enough to crank out a few pirouettes.

Not me doing pirouettes obviously. I would be thrilled even to do even one double pirouette.
ADHD · fitness · goals · planning · self care · trackers

Index Card Fitness Planning

I think I have found a workaround for one of my most annoying fitness challenges and, oddly enough, it involves one of my favourite offices supplies – INDEX CARDS!

If you have been reading my posts for a while then you know that I find it difficult to set big picture fitness goals because I’m not sure what I want my endpoint to be.

I mean, I want to be stronger or have more ease in my movements (especially after the challenges of the last few years) but I don’t really have a way to measure that except for ‘feeling stronger’ or ‘feeling more ease.’

Both of those things sound good in principle but I know that my ADHD brain will send me into endless loops of ‘Was that enough?’ ‘Do I feel better or worse than yesterday?’ ‘Am I putting in the right effort here?’ and I won’t find much fun or much satisfaction in that whole process.

Meanwhile, though, I also don’t have a lot invested in more measurable things like being able to reach a particular speed when walking or lift a certain weight or do a specific number of reps. Those things don’t really resonate for me and I know that I will just get kind of meh about them over time.

And even though I understand intellectually that additional consistent exercise will be helpful, some part of my brain is not really buying into the idea and keeps insisting that effort today is not really going to add up to anything and I will just be wasting time that I could spend reading or writing or doing something fun.

But, at the same time, I know that I am wrong about that and I keep trying different ways to jumpstart a fitness plan.

Last week, I did some thinking about how I could encourage myself to take on a longer term exercise project that would let me see my efforts all along without having to choose some sort of specific result to work towards.

I want the process of exercising to be so routine that any results will just be a sort of by-product of the activity rather than being the point.

Eventually, I figured out that I could choose to commit to 100 workouts.

I wouldn’t have to pick a specific type of workout or a specific length of workout and I wouldn’t have to accomplish anything specific, I would just have to pick something and do it.

And even my somewhat-belligerent-on-this-topic brain has to admit that I will definitely see and feel some differences after 100 workouts.

Once I had decided on that number, I wanted to find a way to track it and maybe make some notes about the various workouts I tried.

And that’s when I came up with the index card solution.

I love index cards for notetaking, for planning, and for art so they are a very friendly material for me – which is a good start.

One of the reasons I enjoy using index cards for those things is the fact that they are relatively small so I can’t take on too much. That seems like a good approach for these workouts too.

Friendly and will prevent me from taking on too much? So far, so good!

The other benefit of index cards in this context is that if I write one index card per workout, I will be able to see those workouts adding up over time as I move toward my 100 card target.

So, here’s the plan I started late last week:

  • Open a brand new package of index cards and put them in a container that will hold the blank cards and the completed ones side-by-side.
  • Workout 100 times in the next six months.
  • Write about each individual workout on a separate card and keep it in the same case.
  • Watch my progress and feel good about the whole thing.

And it truly has been ‘so far so good’ – I have done four workouts* and filled out four cards and it feels manageable and useful.

In fact, I feel exactly like I hoped I would – that the index cards are the point of the whole thing and any results are just a bonus – and I think that’s a good sort of feeling for me to have about this project because it keeps my brain from looping about the specifics.

Let’s see how this goes, shall we?

*Next week’s post will be about how I chose what will count as a workout. 🙂

226 in 2026 · fitness

Happy 100!

So as most of you know,  many of us here on the blog are members of a group that tracks workouts.  The goal is to aim for 226 workouts in 2026.

I’m seeing my sights a bit higher, partly to encourage more dog walking these days. I don’t count all dog walks. The trips around the block don’t get tracked. But for both his health and mind,  I’m aiming for more 20 min + walks that are long enough to activate my Garmin tracker as an activity. 

I’m aiming for 400 workouts in 2026.

There are 283 days left in 2026. And I’m at workout number 104.

In addition to the Facebook groups, I’m keeping my own log here.

But the reason I’m posting is to celebrate my 100th workout of the year. Of course it was a walk with Cheddar.

Saturday morning dog walk
fitness · spring

Happy Spring!

It’s spring! Or Fool’s Spring. Or possibly Second Winter, depending on where you live and what the forecast says today. I saw a meme the other day that made me laugh declaring this “wrong coat” season because whatever coat you choose, it’s inevitably wrong. I think I have some coats that are only good for two or three days a year. Blink and you miss them.

I spent my childhood in Newfoundland and Nova Scotia, and while mostly I’m happy here in Ontario, there are two things I do miss—oceans and spring/fall. Here in Ontario, it seems to go from winter to summer, from freezing to 20 degrees, in a week. The next thing you know, after months of it being too cold, it’s that it’s too hot.

So I try to enjoy the heck out of spring while it’s, all too briefly, here.

So in the spirit of spring I’m choosing optimism — and I’m rounding up some of our posts from the archive to celebrate the season of longer days, outdoor rides, and cautious joy.

Some Past Spring Posts from Fit Is a Feminist Issue

🌸Signs of Spring (Christine, March 2026) — Christine reflects on how March finally lifts the brain fog of February, and finds her favourite sign of spring: noticing it’s become easier to get up and move.

🌸Bring on the Sun! It’s Spring! (Sam, March 2021) — Sam celebrates the return of longer days and the warmth of the sun, and shares her outdoor plans for the season, from cycling trips to sailing.

🌸Checking in for April: It’s Spring! Really Spring! (Sam, April 2022) — Sam’s April check-in, buzzing about finally riding outside again and training for the Friends for Life Bike Rally.

🌸Can Good Christians Be Cyclists? (Sam, March 2016) — A fun look at the age-old spring dilemma: Sunday morning church or Sunday morning bike ride?

🌸Spring!!! (Guest Post) (Jeanne-Marie, May 2014) — The moment the first patch of grass appears, Jeanne-Marie wants to play every sport — but reflects honestly on the frustrations of gender dynamics in co-ed pick-up soccer.

🌸Welcome to Fool’s Spring! (March 2022) — A love letter to that deceptive warm spell in southern Ontario that hints at spring while snow still lurks. Includes the itch to get back on the bike and outside again after a long pandemic winter.

🌸First Time Riding the Millennium Trail (Sam, March 2021) — Sam and Sarah celebrate the first real day of spring with a gravel ride in Prince Edward County — sunshine, mud, smiles, and a very happy dog.\

🌸Sam and Sarah Are Springing Into Cycling Fitness (April 2018) — Spring riding is complicated — the hills seem steeper, the winds stronger, and the gear never quite where you left it — but the excitement of getting back outside makes it all worthwhile.

🌸#30DaysOfBiking: Kicking Spring Riding Off in Style (March 2016) — Sam takes the pledge to ride every day in April, any distance, any destination. A fun low-barrier challenge to kickstart the outdoor season.

🌸I’m a Fairweather Cyclist and I’m Okay with That (Tracy, April 2014) — A warm, honest post about skipping rainy commutes without guilt — and why being selective about conditions doesn’t make you any less of a cyclist.

🌸I Had a Plan — Where Did It Go? (May 2022) — A relatable reflection on losing momentum and having to rebuild it from scratch, starting with one small thing: a daily dog walk.

🌸The Two-Minute Rule: Start Really, Really Small (Tracy, January 2023) — A gentle push to experiment with starting small, especially for anyone with a history of jumping in with both feet and then hitting a wall before the month is out. Applies just as well to spring restarts as to January resolutions.

cherry blossom closeup in springtime barcelona
Photo by Sofia Akemi on Pexels.com

Hello spring and bye bye snow. I’ll miss the bright snowy days of winter. But not the ice.  The ice can just be gone please.

A snow-covered street lined with houses and trees under a partly cloudy blue sky, featuring a parked Mercedes van.
fitness

Fit is a Feminist Issue,  our week in review, March 22, 2026

Who blogged? Sam, Christine, Catherine, Diane and Natalie

How many times did we blog? 7. It was a light blogging week. We posted just once a day. That’s rare around here.

And what did we blog about, anyway?

As an experiment I asked the AI assistant Claude to summarize our blog’s themes for the week.  Here’s what Claude has to say,  “It’s a week that holds both the celebratory (Paralympians, art, spring) and the frustrating (sick day guilt, swimsuit anxiety, sleep struggles) — which feels very true to the blog’s general sensibility. No easy wellness wins, but a lot of honest reckoning with what it actually means to live in a body.”

Here’s our posts:

On Monday, Sam wrote about art as the fifth pillar of health.

Christine wrote about signs of spring on Tuesday.

Wednesday Catherine whined about why it’s so hard to take a sick day.

Thursday Diane blogged about swimming and  worrying about how you look in swimsuits.

And on Friday Diane blogged about older women paralympians.

Natalie on Saturday was about the seventh anniversary of using a CPAP machine.

Catherine reviewed lots of research on Sunday.

springtime blooms white cherry blossoms in sunlight
Photo by Hanifi Sarıkaya on Pexels.com

fitness · research

Research Roundup: more vacations, not fewer sweets, and early to bed are all good for us?

Wondering what science has been up to while you’ve been working, working out, sleeping, cooking, streaming? Here are a few science news bits and bobs for your reading pleasure.

First up, great news that we already knew, but science is in our corner: people need 7 vacations a year to reduce stress. Well, duh. But hey, if science says so, maybe work and life will follow? One can always hope… You can find some studies here and here.

Nothing says vacation to me like flamingo floatie. BY Vicko Mozara for Unsplash.
Nothing says vacation to me like flamingo floatie. By Vicko Mozara for Unsplash.

New research suggests that cutting sweets doesn’t actually reduce cravings. Here are some details:

A new clinical trial found that adjusting how sweet a person’s diet is does not affect how much they enjoy sweet foods. Whether people ate more or less sweet-tasting items, their preference for sweetness stayed the same.

The study also found no meaningful differences in markers linked to heart disease or diabetes. Over six months, participants who increased or reduced their intake of sweet foods showed similar results across all health measures.

Interesting… Very interesting.

Here’s one that’s not particularly good news for me: a FB post cited a study saying that earlier bedtimes translate into greater longevity.

A recent study reveals a fascinating connection between sleep habits and longevity: people who go to bed before 10 PM live, on average, 6 years longer than late sleepers. Prioritizing early, consistent sleep supports the body’s natural circadian rhythm, improves hormone regulation, and strengthens the immune system.

Early bedtimes help the body repair tissues, consolidate memory, and detoxify the brain. Sleeping late disrupts these processes, leading to higher risks of chronic diseases, cognitive decline, and overall lower life expectancy. Studies also show that people who sleep early often maintain better heart health, stable metabolism, and reduced stress levels.

But I’m a bit skeptical about this. Digging a little deeper, we see that getting even a little more sleep (25 minutes, for example), can confer health benefits both short-term and long-term. We sort of knew that. And, lots of people work on earlier schedules, which means that early to bed and early to rise is a good plan.

BUT BUT– being a night owl when you don’t have to rise early doesn’t seem to be as harmful IF it’s not a symptom of sleep disorder, alcohol or substance use disorder, or depression. (I say this as a completely impartial night owl myself).

I don’t have a scientific study to back me me, but I think sleeping in this condition is to be avoided generally, mainly because it looks very uncomfortable.

This person should seriously consider changing into pajamas.  They are trying to sleep in a hoopskirt.
This person should seriously consider changing into pajamas.

Happy week, dear readers!

fitness · Sat with Nat

Nat’s reflection on 7 years of CPAP

I regularly go through my Facebook memories to whittle them down to 1 post per day per year. Whenever I can I choose to remember joyful moments.

This week in 2019 my beloved bought me a red velvet cake to celebrate my CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure) machine’s arrival.

Those early days were TOUGH. I did not easily adapt to this device.

Nat gets cozy…CPAP

Nat confused

5 years of CPAP

But now? Now I feel nervous if I don’t have my CPAP when falling asleep. This happens when the power is out or if there is a mechanical issue. Those nights are fitful sleeps with lots of tossing and turning.

I’ve started to love the lack of snoring. I really hate spontaneous naps that are stopped by me gagging on my own throat. Scary. Gross. I’m over it.

Nat smiles at the camera with just a normal amount of dark circles under her eyes. It’s a win!

I do feel more rested more often. And you know I’m Desperately seeking slumber

Even better in the past 7 years I find more people are open about using a CPAP and sharing strategies to adapt to using it regularly. I think this is the positive peer support we need to persevere and overcome our individual barriers to donning the mask each night.

These are the upsides of social media we need!

fitness · Olympics

Salute to Older Women Winter Paralympians

The Winter Paralympics is a smaller event than the Olympics, but like its counterpart, it had some impressive older women participating. I’m sure I missed a few so please let me know who I should be adding.

Clockwise from top left: Ina Forrest (paralympic.ca), Collinda Joseph (Reuters/Louisa Gouliamaki), Andrea Eskau (Paralympic.org), Cécile Hernandez (France Paralympique),

Wheelchair Curler Ina Forrest, 63, is making her fifth consecutive appearance at the Paralympics. She’s the oldest member of the Canadian Paralympic team. Forrest has won a medal at every Games she’s competed in (starting in 2010) including three golds and two bronze. If you didn’t watch any of this year’s curling, go find some highlight reels. It was very exciting.

Collinda Joseph 60, is a two-time Paralympian and Team Canada’s gold-medal-winning wheelchair curling lead. Joseph played wheelchair basketball for many years but first tried curling in 2006 and fell in love with the sport .

Cécile Hernandez is a 51-year-old French para-snowboarder and four-time Paralympic medallist, with gold medals from Beijing 2022 and Milano Cortina 2026, a silver medal from Sochi 2014, and both a silver and a bronze from PyeongChang 2018.

Andrea Eskau, who will turn 55 tomorrow, has competed at every Summer and Winter Games since making her debut at Beijing 2008, except for the 2022 Winter Games. In the winter, she competes in Para biathlon and Para cross-country skiing, and in the summer, she races in Para cycling. She has won four golds and a bronze at three different summer games, four silvers and a bronze in cross-country skiing, and three golds and a bronze in biathlon. She competed in five events at Milano-Cortina and her best result was 4th in cross-country skiing.

swimming

If you’ve ever held back from swimming because of how you look in a swimsuit you should know…


Nobody is looking at you. Everyone is too busy figuring out their own stroke.
And the water genuinely does not care.
The people who have said something about your body are not in the pool doing the work. You are.

That automatically makes you the athlete in the room. Not them.
Get in the water. You belong there.

These words of wisdom come from Aishwarya Jagdish, an Indian triathlete on Threads.

I came across her post shortly after a particularly busy shift at work. All three pools were packed because it’s March Break in Ontario.

I was scanning for safety but couldn’t help but notice how relaxed people were about wearing what made them happy, instead of what media tells you is “right”. I admired the huge variety of people wearing everything from tiny bikinis to swim dresses, T-shirts and leggings on all different bodies.

I love this image of four women in a variety of swimsuits, which I found in Catherine’s post from five years ago about what women over 50 should wear for swimming.

Most were there to play with their kids rather than swimming in the lap pool, but the principle holds whether you are training for a race or building sandcastles at the beach.