fitness · Guest Post · martial arts

What I thought my body was for

By Chloë FitzGerald

Sport was not my category. I filed myself under something else early on — books, ideas, arguments, the life of the mind — and closed the door on the rest without many qualms.

My parents had been sporty in their youth but didn’t particularly push me in that direction. The biggest influence on me was my grandmother (Nana). She taught English literature, loved Henry James, and instilled in me a passion for fiction and is who I credit with my choice to study philosophy and specialise in ethics. She was brought up Quaker — the British kind — and had long since stopped believing in God, but she believed firmly in seeing the good in people. Despite loving watching all sport on the telly, she also had no interest whatsoever in physical activity herself for its own sake. She would only consent to walks with a clear destination — preferably a pub — and plenty of conversation along the way. Even the word ‘body’ made her shudder.

Nobody in my family saw sport as particularly important. There was an unspoken hierarchy: physical activity was fine as a hobby, but the mind was what mattered. Academic success, being clever and well-read was the real currency.

I was actually a fast sprinter, and I loved swimming. But I couldn’t catch a ball reliably, and at secondary school my tennis game suddenly plummeted (probably because I needed glasses) and I simply gave up. I only enjoyed things I was good at. If I couldn’t excel, I wasn’t interested in trying.

So I chatted through PE lessons, got shouted at by teachers, and felt collectively humiliated alongside most of my classmates when we were bussed to a state school to play field hockey in the cold and mud in our terrible PE kits. When sport was no longer compulsory, I stopped doing it.

In my twenties, I took up half-hearted running to keep in shape — thirty minutes maximum. I swam when I could because I loved the feel of my body in the water, but I still lived principally in my head.

In my thirties, pregnancy made it impossible to keep ignoring my body entirely. I realised I was a mammal in a way only breastfeeding can teach you. And I took up yoga, which was the first physical practice that made me connect my mind and body. Having moved to rural Catalonia, I also started running for pleasure in our beautiful surroundings, and running for longer than half an hour because I wanted to.

Then, just after turning forty, almost by accident — watching my son do judo one afternoon and feeling something I can only describe as envy — I started jiu-jitsu.

I was terrible at it. I’m still not good in any conventional sense. I feel slow, awkward, and uncoordinated in ways that have nothing to do with catching a ball and everything to do with a body that spent four decades being treated primarily as a vehicle for a brain. There was also something about being brought up to be a ‘nice girl’ (hello again, Nana!): I had no siblings, had never experienced rough-housing, and rolling around on the floor trying to get someone in a submission hold – particularly a massive man – was new territory in more ways than one. There were sessions where I drove home feeling defeated not just physically but psychologically. My teacher recognised from the beginning that my mind was my biggest enemy and he still says to me ‘Don’t think! Just do!’

But something else happened. I discovered I build muscle quickly. I found that I liked feeling strong — something distinct from feeling thin or healthy or any of the other things women are mostly encouraged to aspire to. My body, which I had spent four decades ignoring and underestimating, turned out to have things to offer that I had never bothered to look for.

Nobody told me this was possible. Or if the capacity was always there, it had been buried under forty years of a story that turned out to be old data. Collected young, never updated, mistaken for fact.

The stories we tell about what we’re not tend to start early and stick, because we stop questioning them. A verdict reached in childhood, on thin evidence, shaped by forces we couldn’t see at the time, starts to feel like a fixed feature of the self.

I work in implicit bias research, which makes it particularly uncomfortable to admit how long I carried an unchecked assumption about my own physical capabilities without noticing it was an assumption at all. The hardest biases to spot are the ones we hold about ourselves. They don’t feel like biases. They feel like self-knowledge.

I’m still not good with a ball. But I’m more careful now about what I let that mean, and about which doors I decide to close without enough evidence.

And I love that my four-year-old daughter wants to be strong when she grows up, does judo, and regularly asks if she can feel my biceps.


Chloë FitzGerald is an academic turned coach and facilitator. She helps people and organizations navigate uncertainty — whether it’s a career transition, cultural adaptation, or learning to work sustainably with new technologies like AI.

https://www.chloefitzgerald.com/

http://www.linkedin.com/in/chloë-fitzgerald-phd

Photos: Miriam Gironès

fitness · habits

The bloggers and our best habits

What’s one habit that has improved your life the most?

Martha

Planning our meals for the week: before the pandemic, we had a vague idea of what we would eat but once we were limited to a shop once a week, we planned everything. We saved money, had fun trying new recipes, and most importantly reduced our collective stress as a family. We did order in on occasion to give everyone a break. Not having to think every day what would be for dinner was a game changer. We also got better at balancing options, and having more variety. It’s a habit we’ve kept ever since.

Nat

Practicing sleep hygiene. Having a steady wind down routine that is simply charging my phone away from my bed.
I then go brush my teeth and put my night guard in.
I hope into bed and slap my CPAP on. I usually fall asleep within a couple minutes.
I don’t use my bed for anything other than sleep and sex.
I have a do not disturb mode on my phone at night. All of this has helped me sleep better and feel more focused and calm in my waking day.

Elan

I have next to no regular habits, which means I cannot compare their relative value to my life. But once a year, on New Years Day, I write in a journal. It used to be annual goals but now it’s just lists of memories and things I am grateful for. I limit myself to one page per entry per year. I cannot say how it has improved my life: perhaps that it is a living record I look forward to adding to each year is enough.

Diane

When my kid started his food snob stage as a teen, I promised him I would make a new dish from an actual recipe once a week. He moved out for university in 2012 but I kept it up. I have discovered so many interesting recipes: historical, vintage and modern, and gotten really good at using everything in my CSA basket. I think my meals are healthier (certainly higher in fibre), and there is almost no food waste.

The image is a Russian mushroom and potato soup with carrots, leeks and lots of dill.

Soup

Tracy

Daily meditation every morning before I interact with the world.

Nicole

My decades-long morning exercise practice. Whether it’s a run, going to the gym or a walk, it’s my most precious time of day.

Sam

Sleep! It’s boring but true that everything is better when you’re well rested.  I’ve been an early to bed,  early to rise person since I had babies and small children in my life.  There’s a lot of hard things in my life and a lot of joy and fun too and I feel like sleep helps make it all better.

cycling · fitness · meditation · vacation

Catherine’s plans for July and August involve both sitting and pedaling

It’s almost mid-July, but there’s plenty of summer left (I keep telling myself). And in fact, my two biggest getaway plans are ahead of me.

This week I’m going to Boone, North Carolina for a 4-day meditation retreat with my favorite meditation teacher Jeff Warren. It will be held at the Art of Living retreat center, which I’m looking forward to exploring. But I’ll be sitting a lot, which is kind of the point of being there.

I’m really looking forward to a dedicated time and space for stillness and quiet, and also walking and experiencing the Blue Ridge Mountains.

I doubt we'll be meditating here, but I'm hoping for coffee or ice tea on this terrace. Picture from the retreat center website.
I doubt we’ll be meditating here, but I’m hoping for coffee or ice tea on this terrace. Picture from the retreat center website.

Naturally, I’ll report next Sunday on how things went.

In early-mid August, I’ve planned another getaway– this one to Quebec with my friend Felicity for cycling Le Petit Train du Nord cycling route. We are driving up together with our bikes and parking at the southern terminus of the trail, where bus service takes us and bikes and luggage to the northern terminus. We’ll ride at a leisurely pace down the 234-km trail, staying three nights and ending our trip with an overnight celebration in Montreal. I’m so looking forward to this trip! It’s easy cycling along with opportunities for swimming, strolling around little towns, experiencing nature, and breaking out my creaky French. In case you weren’t already envious, here’s a little Youtube video to help you along.

This trip will be more active and interactive and engaged, which is also just what the doctor ordered.

Dear readers, what getaways or dedicated staycations do you have planned for the rest of the summer? I’m always looking for ideas and inspiration.

cycling · Sat with Nat · strength training · swimming · walking

Nat’s trying to “live like Doug”

It started as a joke a few years ago. My colleague Net would regale me with her retired husband’s adventures.

Each morning Net would wake up early to walk Rodney, her hilarious Rottweiler. Doug would jump on his bike. Net would log in to work before 7am. Doug would go for a swim. Net took her lunch at 11 and walk while Doug played hockey. Yes. This is all the same day.

Net and I would often meet at the end of her work day and I would always ask what Doug was up to.

Net would brief me on his myriad of activities and exclaim “I wish I lived the life of Doug!”

A few years later, Net retired and she joyfully does activities all morning then “whatever I want” in the afternoon.

I recently got a sweaty hug from Net on my morning walk with Michel & Lucy. She was biking to an aerobics class. We laughed and agreed she was “living like Doug”.

It’s a schedule I aspire to. And I’m giving it an honest go. On Tuesday and Thursday this week I walked Lucy & Michel. I then biked to the pool. I swam for an hour. Biked home. Then had a lunch walk with Lucy and Michel.

My bike, Myrna, at the pool

But then, then I had a GIANT NAP. It turns out I’m not in good enough shape to “live like Doug” yet. I’m trying. It’s going to take some time.

Me making a goofy face while having fun walking.

My summer plans include swimming, cycling and strength training but I also need recovery days. Yesterday (Friday) I decided I needed a recovery day instead of my planned bike ride. I was bone tired.

So it was an active recovery day of walking with Michel & Lucy, a short utility bike ride and a decent stretching session.

Me, continuing to be a goofy goober, on my bike.

Michel could care less what I accomplish in a day. His only concern is my wellbeing. He’s delighted I am finding a new daily routine that includes lots of activities.

An example of an active day. 183 minutes of exercise including walking, biking and swimming.

I did have sore abs on Wednesday that responded to gentle movement. I’m really looking to avoid injury as it feels like I have been in physio for one injury or another for YEARS.

So yes, Doug, I’m working up to being as active as you are every day. I bet by the end of the summer I’ll be able to fully “live like Doug”.

fitness

Incompetent, blighted, senile: How medicine talks about women’s bodies and why we need to change it stat

I was 38 and a half when I was pregnant with my child. My ultrasound referral slip gave the reason for the scan as “late maternal age.” It could have been worse; I could have been described as having a geriatric pregnancy or being an elderly primigravida (first pregnancy after 35). Perhaps I should count myself fortunate that I did not have a lazy uterus after the birth, although my stalled labour could have also been defined as a “failure to progress.”

Later, after I had my child, I met women who were told they had an incompetent cervix, an incarcerated uterus, or an inhospitable womb. I also learned that some people were told they had a blighted ovum or that their recurrent miscarriages meant they were habitual aborters. Now that I am post-menopause, it appears I am at risk of hosting a senile vagina, although I’ve read they like to call it vaginal atrophy these days.

Image description shows hands on a laptop on the left and a tipped-over plant next to a red and white crocheted uterus and ovaries. Photo by Gwen Mamanoleas on Unsplash

Back in June, I came across a post by the Female Quotient on Instagram that identified several negative terms used to describe reproductive issues affecting people with uteruses, vaginas, and ovaries. The account wrote:
When it comes to women’s health, words aren’t just words. Language shapes perception, influences decision-making, and can impact how women experience healthcare. Some of this terminology reflects assumptions about women’s bodies that have persisted for decades, even as medicine has evolved.

I never felt elderly at 38 (even now approaching my mid-60s, I find it hard to imagine I am—gasp—a senior!), and I resented the implication that my age implied greater fragility, increased risk or diminished agency with my pregnancy. I can’t imagine what it would be like to hear I had an incompetent cervix, for example, as if infertility were a personal failure instead of a structural malfunction.

We see similar things with fitness language. Women shouldn’t lift weights because they will look masculine, develop big muscles, or become less feminine. As none of those possible outcomes pose any threat to the world turning on its axis, I have always wondered why these would be bad things.

Certainly, I desire bigger muscles so I can do all things like drag soil around my garden, or pull stubborn tree roots, or shift bricks for an ornamental wall. I also enjoyed slinging sacks of oats, beans, raisins, and lentils for my bulk food club without needing extra help when we were active, or carrying all the groceries in one go from the car. Who wouldn’t want to be able to do those things?

Using language that embeds assumptions about social expectations for acceptable behaviour or appropriate appearance perpetuates those stereotypes. Instead, what if we used positive language to describe interventions? We might not achieve success, but we could feel better about the effort to make something work the way it should instead of blaming the individual for the problem.

MarthaFitat55 has a lot of thoughts and feelings about language, inside and outside the gym.

fitness

My FIFA Protest Has Turned into Something Pretty Great

When the Men’s World Cup started, I had complicated feelings. I fell in love with soccer while living in Brazil. I was there for the 1992 event, which Brazil won. Brazilians go all out in their love of the game. We had to shut down my workplace every time the home team played because even public transit was pulled off the roads, leaving employees with no way to get home.

By the time of the Qatar event four years ago, I was pretty much over FIFA’s management of the tournament but I had grown to love the women’s game, which I discovered via the Olympics.

This year’s Cup was shaping up very badly, at least in the USA, what with the treatment of that Somali referee and the entire Iranian team, and I just couldn’t bring myself to give the organizers even a penny of advertising dollars by watching games.

So when I saw repeated slights* to the women in reporting on the men’s game, I bought a ticket to an Ottawa Rapids game. The Ottawa Rapid is part of the Northern Super League of Canadian women’s soccer.

What started out as a bit of a protest instantly became my new favourite summer sports thing to watch. The game was fast and skilled and it was fun to see so many past and future Olympians and Women’s World Cup players up close. I’m not quite ready to commit to season’s tickets because scheduling in the summer is complicated, but I have gone to a second game and have plans to take a friend for a third.

I have previously written about the joys of watching the PWHL, and Sam has written about the queer joy of the WNBA. I’m happy to have another professional league to support.

I have a lot to learn – names of players and teams (I was even confused about what team was playing at my second game – turns out it was Calgary). And how can they run around in the heat, especially with all that long hair touching their backs? I was uncomfortably hot just watching!

Ottawa (in black) makes a corner kick against Calgary (in red) near the Calgary goal. You can just see the ball highlighted against the dark staircase beside the first section of the stands in the background.

*Slights included:

  • claims that the USA could win their first World Cup (the women have won four);
  • Canadian men had scored the first ever Canadian World Cup goal and gotten past the group stage (Canadian women did both, years ago, and this image never gets old);
Janine Beckie, Canadian gold medallist in soccer at the 2020 Olympics, reacts to one of the other panelists saying that Alfonso Davies’ goal against Croatia at the 2022 Men’s World Cup (the first by a Canadian man) was the best moment in Canadian soccer history. This is supposed to be where I describe what’s happening in the image, but I have no words for the expression on her face.
  • Lionel Messi had scored the most World Cup goals (that was Marta, though he since tied her record), and been in the most World Cups at six (that’s actually Formiga, who played in seven, though Marta has also been in six, and is likely to play in next year’s Cup so may also be able to recoup that scoring record);
  • and overlooking Christine Sinclair when talking about greatest players (she scored more international goals than any person and and was at the game when it happened);
  • and all the men getting angry when any of this gets pointed out (patriarchy should not be the default, my dudes).
fitness

Sam’s three good things, the coccoon edition

#threegoodthings

1. You know how yoga instructors always say,  if at any time the pose we are doing doesn’t feel good for your body today, you can take up a restful pose? In antigravity yoga with hammocks, that’s coccoon, which is just like it sounds,  hammock napping basically.  As I’ve said before, “Coccoon shivasna is the best shivasna.” Last night, a woman walked into class dressed in work clothes,  in a skirt,  hopped into the hammock, assumed the cocoon pose and stayed there the entire class. Bad day at the office? Late for class and didn’t have time to change? Our gym has a penalty for registering and not showing, and maybe she wanted to avoid that.  Who knows.   Full points.  Wow.

2. Oh, Montreal.  I was there for a sad reason, a funeral,  but I still love you.  Bike infrastructure, parks,  food,  street life, tree-lined boulevards,  music. We will be back more often now, and I’m sad about why but happy to spend time in Montreal. Also, there are some pretty nice universities…

3. My Duolingo streak!

fitness

Volunteering As Fitness

FIFI bloggers often write about their adventures fundraising for various causes: Sam’s pedaling for Parkinson’s springs immediately to mind, but she has a whole list of upcoming rides. I often swim at Bring on the Bay, sometimes raising funds for Easter Seals and sometimes supporting other swimmers. As a swim angel, I can’t fundraise directly, but you can support anyone from my club here.

Sometimes, just doing things to make the planet better are also fitness activities. Martha tried plogging. I am still intrigued by the Old Ladies Against Underwater Garbage.

Last week I spent a whole day being active while volunteering. It’s one of the nicer things about being retired.

First up, I spent two hours picking mulberries with Hidden Harvest, an organization that harvests unwanted fruit and gets it to various agencies addressing food insecurity in Ottawa. It wasn’t super strenuous, but there was plenty of reaching and bending.

My next stop was a three hour shift with the National Capital Commission’s archaeology program. As part of its commitment to reconciliation, the NCC tests every site that might have been used by Indigenous communities before any construction or other work is done. In this case, we dug test pits in a field that is to be reforested.

Each pit is about 18 by 18 inches, and we dug down until we hit undisturbed soil – sometimes two feet or more deep. Every shovelful of dirt then had to be screened for artefacts. I think we managed four holes in three hours. We didn’t find anything of significance, so it looks like the reforestation project will go ahead.

Top: Laila, the archaeology summer student, takes photos and measurements of our work. The dirt we have sifted sits below the sieve on a blue tarp in the foreground, waiting to be returned to the hole once she is done. Bottom: some of the mulberries from our harvest.
fitness · habits · health · mindfulness · self care

Jump Back Up July? Sounds like a plan.

This month’s Action for Happiness theme is ‘Jump Back Up July’ and their calendar is full of small steps to help you build your resilience, to increase your ability to face challenges, to notice your strengths, and to be kinder to yourself.

Now, as I am sure you can guess, I don’t really think that we have to *jump* back up every single time but even staggering back up gets us back up and trying again.

Cultivating the inner fortitude to try again when things go awry, to be compassionate when we make mistakes, to ask for help when need it, to reframe challenges, and to nurture hope throughout the process can serve us well in so many areas of our lives (including fitness!) that the effort to build our resilience skills is worth the effort.

Even though many of these practices are already in my regular repertoire, I’m going to make a point of practicing them during Jump Back Up July (or Get Back Up At Your Own Pace Using Your Choice of Movements July which is more accurate for me but far less catchy. 😉 )

Are you in?

Here’s the Jump Back Up July Calendar :

a brightly coloured calendar of resilience tips from Action for Happiness
The ‘Jump Back Up July’ calendar from Action for Happiness. I will, of course, be using this for ‘Get Back Up At Your Own Pace Using Your Own Choice Of Movements July’ too. Image description: A calendar for July 2026 with each block coloured in a repeating pattern of dark green, light green, orange, and yellow. The text in each block is a daily tip for building the skills to ‘Jump Back Up’ and the edges of the calendar are decorated with black and white cartoon images of people doing resilience activities such as hugging someone or carefully repairing a loved object.

And here’s a tip video from Action for Happiness featuring Vanessa King:

A video from the Action for Happiness YouTube channel called ‘Coping with challenging times. Jump Back Up July with Vanessa King’ on the left side is a still image of Vanessa King, a middle-aged white-presenting woman with reddish blonde hair that is pulled back from her face on the sides and top but with her bangs curling down towards her eyebrows. She is wearing brown-framed glasses, a black shirt, and a green scarf decorated with white flowers and gold-coloured leaves. She is looking towards the camera and smiling and there are two books and a vase of flowers behind her. On the right side of the image is a light blue rectangle with text that reads ‘Resilience. Bouncing Back’ in red and ‘3 top tips with Vanessa King’ in yellow.

Here are a few links about resilience that you may want to check out:

Leo Babuta – A Guide to Habit Resilience

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health – Building Resilience

Dr. Tracey Marks – Is Your Brain Stuck? How To Build Resilience Through Microregulation.

Robert Waldinger – How To Ease Suffering By Widening The Container

fitness

Making the everyday special

I love this list of ways to romanticize your everyday life.

Lots of the ideas on the list, things like taking morning baths on the weekend, or small splurges like flowers or new nail polish, might seem familiar. You know, life is short so wear the fancy dresses and use the good china. But others seemed new to me, like the idea of playlists for everyday life events such as bill paying. I’m imagining a death metal themed playlist for that occasion.

Here’s another great one:

“I take myself on what I call ‘Date Me Days.'”

“I’ll take the day off work, get a coffee, go thrifting, eat at my favorite restaurants. … I do whatever I want to do for as long as I’d like to do it since I’m alone with no one to rush me.” 

Some are sillier.  One of the list contributors says, “My roommate and I have Waffle Wednesdays where we always have waffles for breakfast!” and that reminded me of our French toast Fridays. In our house, Sarah often makes French toast on the weekends, but sometimes we start the weekend early with French toast Friday.

I think we might have borrowed that idea from my fellow philosopher and cyclist friend Tim K.

Back to fitness, which is after all the main theme of the blog, one of the ways I like to make the everyday special is by giving each day its own fitness theme, like Movement Monday (see Embrace Mondays: Finding Joy in Every Day) or making Saturday a designated rest day, (see Saturday is Sam’s rest day.)

For many people in the fitness world,  it’s bench press Monday and long run Sunday.

For a time I loved Sunday night hot yoga

How about you? Do you have any special fitness days?

a row of dumbbells in a gym
Photo by Jason Morrison on Pexels.com