eating · fitness

No Meat May

I know May is over but I thought it was worth talking about this anyway.

Why do this challenge? It can be a fun way to increase your use of meat alternatives. If done right, vegetarian or vegan eating can help you increase your intake of fibre and essential nutrients, and help reduce the production of greenhouse gases.

I am not a vegetarian, let alone a vegan, but I am increasingly a less-meat person. I have often been inspired to eat meat-free dishes because I have found a a few great vegan websites to help me use vegetables from my CSA basket. But this year, I owe particular thanks to my friend Sandra.

Sandra loves to cook. It’s one of the shared interests that brought us together as friends. She did No Meat May and posted about it almost every day. Sometimes I was inspired to try her recipes. Sometimes I shared vegetarian recipes I thought she might enjoy. Sometimes, there was no recipe. Just vibes. (Sandra’s description of one of her soups)

I have focused on home cooking because that’s important activity to me. However, Sandra has a full-time job, volunteers with a cat rescue, and has a social life. She sometimes buys take-out and uses frozen or pre-made dishes/ingredients. Those meals also looked great. There are many reasons to do that, from time constraints to disability or simply dislike of cooking.

We’re now solidly into June and I’m still happily eating mostly beans and cheese for my protein (but I have two tofu recipes planned for later in the week). Thanks for the inspiration Sandra!

A selection of Sandra’s no-meat May meals: soups, salads, vegetarian Sloppy Joes, and Welsh rarebit.
fitness

Happy World Bicycle Day 2026!

Here at Fit Is a Feminist Issue many (but not all) of us are big fans of bikes, and we’ve blogged lots about our love of bicycles and about the connections between bicycles and feminism.

“Let me tell you what I think of bicycling. I think it has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world. It gives women a feeling of freedom and self-reliance. I stand and rejoice every time I see a woman ride by on a wheel, the picture of free, untrammeled womanhood.”—Susan B. Anthony, 1896

In that spirit, here are some of our favourite bicycle posts from the archives:

bicycles with roses in baskets
Photo by Zeynep M. on Pexels.com
aging · femalestrength · injury · mindfulness · running

Flying & Falling into a New Decade

The morning after I turned 60, I headed out on a run with my youngest brother who was in town. What a treat! And he pushes my pace. For the first bit, I felt fleet and strong. Flying. The kind of run where your feet barely seem to touch the ground, tiny levitation rockets in my shoes. And that was just a feeling, since my feet were clearly on the ground when I tripped over a tree root.

I went down hard, catching myself on my shoulder. The result: a badly wrenched shoulder and a pivot from a brisk 9-mile run to a nauseous crawl toward CityMD, arm cradled against my body.

Everything in me wanted to scream until my lungs gave out, why me? Beneath that was a darker feeling, too: that the universe had smacked me down, put me in my place. I had wanted too much. I had been too pleased with myself about still being strong, still being fast, still being the person who runs the morning after her 60th birthday. So, the universe decided to show me who was boss.

I was already prickly about 60. About a month ago, a young man I passed in the final kilometers of a 21k (he could not have been older than his early 30s) said, with dismissiveness: well, maybe when I’m 60. I didn’t hear past that snippet. I kept running. I hear versions of these casual dismissals of people based on their ages often. The unquestioned assumption that age is a one-way street, that it diminishes us.

Even with a hurt and hurting shoulder, I questioned. With difficulty.

The list of things I could barely do at first was graceless in its mundanity. Open a bottle. Get dressed (oh yes, including pulling up my pants after going to the bathroom). Brush my teeth. Grab a glass in the cupboard. Never mind trail running or mountain biking. Did I mention I was three days from leaving for two weeks in the Canadian Rockies? I had planned solitude and mountain time to contemplate my new decade.

I had to borrow rolling luggage, because I could not haul a pack on a wrenched shoulder, and I always travel with a pack on my back. My mountain bike stayed in my middle brother’s garage in Calgary. Still, the first full day there, I wrestled myself into a sports bra, shirt and hiking pants and ventured out. Cautiously. Arm in a sling. A few days later I packed the sling in my little backpack (which didn’t hurt to wear, it was getting the straps on that was the trick). Gradually, I transitioned to trail running shoes and worked myself up to a slow trot. Always aware of my arm.

For the past three weeks, I’ve been managing the background noise of persistent pain.

This is not how I pictured opening this new decade.

And yet. And yet.

Curbed in my go-go mountain enthusiasm, I moved at a pace that allowed me to bask more in all the signs of coming spring. The runoff streams that got deeper with every warming day, so that I had to find new ways to get across that particular bit of trail each time. I had space to think about what it means to cross this threshold.

Because it is a threshold, even if I am, rationally, the same person the day after my birthday as the day before. I have sat with my complicated feelings about being a person in my sixties now for three weeks and something is shifting or emerging from underneath all the accumulated detritus of the years and the immediate distress of the physical setback. It’s a feeling, a sensation, a way of being that is harder to name than fleet or strong or flying.

Out on the mountain trails each morning, even moving with more caution than usual, a feeling spread in me, as the sun moves quietly into the world each day. Grounded, yet light. Buoyant, yet stable. It feels like I have the right to be here without further justification or proof of worth.

This whatever-it-is-ness feels like an arrival. Or a coming home. Belonging. Did I arrive at this feeling because of the fall?  Maybe. If I choose that version of the story, then I can silver line the fall and injury. Forced to slow down, woman discovers inner strength. Another part of me resists the patness of that explanation.  Maybe I just fell. Because I run on trails and other uneven surfaces. A lot. Life happens.  

My shoulder is healing. Not as quickly as I’d like. And when has any injury healed as quickly as we’d like? The pain is still there. Background noise every day. Wearing. And it is retreating. I can increase my effort. Mindfully. The mountains will still be there for next time. My bike will still be there.

I am still here.

Landed in a new decade. Not as elegantly as I might have liked. Penguin-style, which is to say, with awkward grace.

ADHD · advice · self care · stretching · traveling

Christine hopes to follow her own advice

By the time this post goes live, I’ll be on a plane on my way to BC for the Storytellers of Canada- Conteurs du Canada conference.

I’m looking forward to the conference and to seeing my friends and telling/talking about stories for DAYS but I always feel apprehensive before I travel.

I’m not afraid to fly or anything like that. It’s the disrupted schedule, the lack of control over my day, the eating at weird times, the crowds of people, the change in time zones…that’s what gets me.

And all of that is fairly unavoidable.

BUT

Then I remembered that the last time the conference was in BC my travel schedule was waaaaaaaay worse and I was miserable on the way up but I actually did ok on the way home.

And, sure, part of it was the fact that I was on my way home but, after the frustrating trip on the way there, I had decided to take really good care of myself on the return trip and it made a huge difference.

So, what did ‘taking really good care of myself’ mean in that context?

  1. I brought some really filling snacks so I had a bit more control over when I ate.
  2. I made sure to keep my water bottle full.
  3. I did stretches and yoga frequently and did some walking in each airport.*
  4. I meditated a fair bit on the plane (and listened to my favourite cello music)
  5. I planned something to do for each hour of the trip (I didn’t have to do it but having a plan made me less fidgety and irritated.)

And that plan seems really appealing to me right now.

In fact, once I thought about it, I immediately started feeling better about the long trip and I could focus more on the fun that awaits me on the other end.

So, let’s see how my plan works out, hey?

I’ll update you later tomorrow.

*Yes, I always *could* stretch or walk at any point but this was me being proactively deliberate about it.

fitness

Snacks, Science, and Spring: May 2026 on the Blog

How many posts? May ends as one of the blog’s biggest months so far in 2026 — 35+ posts across five weeks.

Who blogged? Sam, Catherine, Christine, Nat, Diane, Nicole, Elan, Martha, Mina, and our newest blogger, and long-time commentator, Winnie.


Some of the May themes:

Diane’s recovery arc continued. April ended with Diane writing from the hospital. May picked up right there. Walking Walking Walking documented her cardiac rehab journey — routes mapped around the neighbourhood, a trip to the tulip festival with Florence, and the grumpy energy of walking because it’s what’s permitted. By mid-month she’d turned a corner: Go Sports Ball! found her on her way to an Ottawa-Montreal PWHL playoff game, writing about women’s professional hockey having a moment.

Nat enters retirement. Nat is now a month into retirement and still figuring out where the time goes. Little and Often, the SAG post for the Flèche, and the Victoria Day gardening blitz (13,000 steps without meaning to) all tracked the early weeks. Then this week, Nat ponders the unpaid time economy — a reflection on how retirement reveals all the invisible labour women do: logistics of longevity, care for family, community fundraising, and the simple question of where “free” time actually goes.

Elan from the Azores. Scouts and Sweeps in Group Fun told the story of an e-bike adventure on the volcanic island of Faial — fog, battery anxiety, 330 metres of elevation — and became a meditation on the invisible labour of the people who hold a group together.

Christine on momentum and hips. Moving more makes Christine want to move more and the hip mobility experiment — trying six different YouTube videos to see which ones her hips actually like — practical, honest, and non-prescriptive. That’s Christine’s way.

Feminist pushback on fitness culture. Sam unpacked the viral “fits in a bandeau” meme in What “Fits Into a Bandeau” Actually Means. Nicole took aim at boutique gyms requiring membership applications as a new form of fitness gatekeeping in A Gym as Private Club? No Thank You. Sam’s Two Things That Made Me Go Grrr at the Gym This Morning (gendered equipment labeling and motivational signage) and Who Are You Working Out For? continued that thread.

The research thread. Both Catherine and Sam brought fit, feminist takes on current research — engaging with the evidence critically rather than just amplifying headlines.

Catherine, a public health ethicist by training, put that expertise to work in Bad News/Good News About the Hantavirus Outbreak — an explainer on the Andes virus outbreak that traced through what the science actually showed, who was genuinely at risk, and where the media coverage was getting ahead of itself. Sam dove into two new meta-analyses in Exercise Snacks: What the Latest Research Actually Shows — following up after the studies kept floating across her fitness-heavy social media feed. The post broke down what the evidence actually supports (improved cardiorespiratory fitness for inactive adults; real short-term blood flow benefits from breaking up sitting time) versus what it doesn’t, and closed with the line “I trust research that tells me what it doesn’t know, not just what it does.”


metal arc
An arc.Photo by Vitalii Kwink on Pexels.com

Month-in-review posts are assembled by Claude with prompts from Sam and edited by Sam. If you spot any errors, let us know.

226 in 2026 · cycling · fitness

200!

Sunday marked my 200th workout in the 226 Workouts in 2026 Facebook group.I’d set my own goal as 400, and I can’t quite believe I’m halfway there just five months into the year.

Now, that’s largely because I count long dog walks and now that my knees are better, Cheddar and I have been doing more of those. See, for example, Sam and Cheddar’s Big day at the beach.

I don’t count every dog walk. Purely utilitarian trips around the block don’t count. My personal rule is that they have to be long enough to trigger my Garmin activity tracker–that’s 15 minutes. But what I like best about the number of workouts in a year group is that you get to decide what counts.

For me, if counting a thing is motivational, I count it. I counted all of my physio sessions before and after knee surgery too for the same reason.

Workout 200 was a morning ride around Lunenburg in which Sarah and I seemed to be recreating our last year’s trip to New Zealand by riding up and down very steep streets,  followed by sketchy single track overlooking the ocean! We walked our bikes both on some hills in the town of Lunenburg and on a rocky stretch on the path on top of the hill beside the sea. Old times!

fitness

Under the Desk and On the Move

I bought a thing this past weekend, an under-the-desk walking pad.

I’m a long-time fan of standing desks but in recent years, through knee surgery, I haven’t used the standing option as much I used to.  Lately though I’m back at it

And ever since Emma Donoghue guest-blogged here about her treadmill desk back in 2014, I’ve been wanting to try one out.

Lately, I’ve been reading more and more about the benefits of breaking up your day with short walks.  Read here for example. But with my big busy job I can’t always get away from my office.

What’s the difference between a walking pad and a treadmill?

A walking pad is for staying gently active during a workday without breaking a sweat. It’s not that sturdy and can only go at walking pace.  Mine has an adjustable incline but you need to adjust it manually.

A treadmill is for actual cardio exercise. If you want to run or get your heart rate up significantly, you need a treadmill not a walking pad.

But if like me,  you just want to avoid sitting for 8 hours straight, a walking pad does the job nicely — and fits easily under a standing desk.

Also,  there’s the not-so-small matter of price.  My little walking pad was under $200, and treadmills are more like $1000 and up.

Oh, and noise. Walking pads are also much quieter than full-on treadmills— a real office consideration.

How am I using it so far? Yesterday I did a mix of standing, sitting and walking. I liked the variety.  It’s easy to walk during meetings or when reviewing documents.  More serious reading,  and definitely writing, require, for me,  staying still.

My 2026 word of the year is Expand, and it turns out that includes expanding what counts as movement during a desk-heavy day

How about you? Have you tried one of these things? At home or at the office? What do you make of it?

Sam’s office
Closer view
fitness · sleep

10 Things to do in lieu of jumping 50 times in the morning

It is a well-known fact among everyone who’s ever met me knows that I’m not a morning person. I approach the morning with reluctance, suspicion and movement aversion. Coffee is my morning cardio.

So imagine my reaction to this article from Outside magazine proposing the activity of (I can barely bring myself to type this, much less contemplate doing it) jumping 50 times in the morning. For health.

Oh no indeed. Thanks Heather W from Unsplash.
Oh no indeed. Thanks Heather W from Unsplash.

The folks from Outside do cite studies from actual respectable sports fitness journals promoting the benefits of what they can “jump training”, which, while unpleasant-sounding to me, is quite preferable to “jumping 50 times first thing in the morning”.

Jumping a lot in rapid succession apparently:

  • increases bone density
  • builds muscle
  • promotes lymphatic drainage
  • improves circulation
  • wakes you up (like that’s a health benefit– hmphf)

Okay, I get that “science” says morning jumping is a good idea. However, I propose some alternative morning regimens that carry their own benefits. Here’s a preliminary list that I worked up, but feel free to add your own ideas. And, as always, sharing is caring.

10. Wonder what day it is.

9. Hit the snooze button. Repeat.

8. Try to make sense of the snatches of dream that are still in your awareness.

7. Listen to the morning sounds of your house and neighborhood.

6. See how long you can stay in bed while pretending you don’t have to pee.

5. Ponder what you might like for breakfast, eventually.

4. Listen to a morning meditation, sort of trying to meditate, but not really.

3. Snuggle in bed with a pet, a loved one, or (in my case) one of several Squishmallows.

2. Accept a cup of coffee brought to you by someone who knows how to make coffee the way you like it.

1. Roll over and go back to sleep, for god’s sake!

fitness

Top Ten Posts May 2026

Christine

cosplayer in a jedi costume with a blue lightsaber
Photo by Vika Glitter on Pexels.com

Nat enjoys the gifts of a long goodbye (Nat)

What “Fits Into a Bandeau” Actually Means (Sam)

Go Sports Ball! (Diane)

Two things that made me go grrr at the gym this morning (Sam)

Are We There Yet? Fit Feminists on Retirement and What Comes Next (Group post)

Bad news/good news about the hantavirus outbreak (Catherine)

Nat’s new motto “little and often.” (Nat)

Who Are You Working Out For? (Sam)

All the people running with me (Nicole)

Time management in a post menopausal world (Martha)

family · feminism · Sat with Nat

Nat ponders the unpaid time economy

Having stopped spending time being paid to do things has me thinking a lot about my “free” time and how I’m investing it in my fitness goals as well as helping others.

Working out

Gym memberships and classes are times when we pay others so we can protect our unpaid time to invest in our well-being and fitness. It’s something many of the bloggers and readers can identify with, ensuring we dedicate time to our fitness and well-being.

In relationships with partners, parents, children and friends the uneven burden of care still exists with women and femme folks shouldering most of the work.

Logistics of Longevity

From booking of medical and dental appointments to tracking how much extended benefit coverage is left for a massage or physiotherapy for the family, it’s often women doing that work in our unpaid time.

Sometimes my support of our family’s fitness goals looks like running to the bike shop each week getting tire irons, tubes, and yet another pair of gloves. Where are the gloves going?

Other times it is meal planning, groceries, sharing garden bounty with friends and preserving food.

It is also sorting through piles of mismatched socks. Sam introduced me to The Annual Mating of the Socks one year and I continue to do it each fall. It’s the time of year when I reach for socks and can’t find them.

In spring, I can never find my cycling gloves. Just one, lonely white light weight cycling glove sitting among the pile of larger, black, heavy duty ones Michel favours.

Health and Philanthropy

Twenty years ago I remember organizing the Canadian Cancer Society door to door campaign. This fundraising was built on the availability of women in rural communities organizing their neighbourhoods into teams. A team captain, often a woman who also ran the women’s auxiliary at the legion, the church fundraisers as well as Heart and Stroke, Diabetes Canada and our daffodil days fundraisers.

These women organized and collected millions of dollars, often $5 at a time. They would dutifully write out each paper receipt, balance books, and provide reporting. It was a lot. As more women needed to work off the farm or outside of the home they no longer had the unpaid time to organize door to door campaigns. Besides, no one was home to answer the door anymore. So these vital fundraising campaigns gave way to other means of gathering funds.

Where my “free” time goes

In the fourth week of my retirement I’ve helped a friend in her garden, driven another to a medical appointment, and had a doctor’s appointment for myself. I provided support to both of my adult childeren who are going through all the things people in their mid to late 20s go through.

My road bike, Ethyl, tucked in a toilet stall on Sunday.

I did find time for cycling Sunday, Friday and this morning. My daily dog walks with Michel continue to ensure I get lots of movement in my day.

My commuter bike, Myrna, showing off our haul of wild garlic from a trip on Friday.

I hosted my writing friends and we are ensuring we stay focused on getting more writing done. I’m pretty sure blog posts count.

Family Matters

Tomorrow I’m packing my bag to head to New Brunswick for my grandmother’s interment and visit with my parents. My kids are joining me. While down east I am going to ask that someone have a marriage or a baby so I can have a happy excuse to travel rather than another sad one.

I am only able to go see my family because I am retired. Otherwise, I would have already used up most of my vacation. It is the point of having more unpaid time, to be there for my family.

I’m still working on finding the balance between my needs and everyone else’s. My friend Net reassured me that after a few months I will find a more sustainable pace in retirement. I hope she’s right!