fitness

Are Your Fitness Habits Nature or Nurture?

Today is National Only Child Day. I am technically an only child although I do have some step-siblings. As I was reading about the history of Only Child Day it got me thinking about how much impact my childhood, and the related lack of siblings, may have had on my fitness habits, likes, dislikes, and interests.

I grew up in a fairly sedentary household. I was rarely encouraged to join team sports or to spend time in the outdoors. As a child of the 80s I had freedom to roam the streets on feet or bicycle “until the street lights came on,” but I can’t remember ever being out that long. When I was in kindergarten I joined a girls soccer team. The Panthers. We had all black uniforms with white trim and we were hot stuff. But after a schedule change I left the team because the team practice times didn’t work for our family. In later years we lived in communities with outdoor pools and I was in the water as much as possible. Swimming as a sport was not common in our area, or at least I didn’t know about it, so as much as I enjoyed being in the pool it was more playing around and less structured.

Young girl splashing in the water at the beach. She has dark hair in a pony tail and yellow arm and waist flotation bands with a duck face on them.
I never had floaties that were this cool in the 80s!
Photo by Leo Rivas on Unsplash

All of this is, of course, my experience. I’m sure others had similar experiences and equally sure many others can’t relate. But Only Child Day got me wondering how the fitness experiences of my youth might have been different if I had siblings. Would physical activity been something we would have done together, either formally or informal play around the house? Would a sibling have spurred some sort of competitive motivation to join a team sport, either with them or to outshine them? Would my naturally introverted self been more willing to hang with the neighborhood kids running/riding the streets with a sibling by my side? Or would I still have been the same indoorsy kid who would rather read or do a puzzle than go outside?

There are a lot of factors that go into this line of “what if” thinking…. What if there were siblings? What if either of my parents had a love of the outdoors? What if I really took to team or community sports as a kid? Any one of these might have changed my adult preferences for quiet, solo activity that mostly occurs in my basement instead of in outdoor or community spaces. Or maybe it would all be the same because I just like what I like.

How about you? Any only children feel like having siblings would have changed your outlook on activities? Anyone with siblings feel like they had a big influence or no influence at all?

Amy Smith is a professor of Media & Communication and a communication consultant who lives north of Boston. Her research interests include gender communication and community building. Amy spends her movement time riding the basement bicycle to nowhere, walking her two dogs, and waiting for it to get warm enough for outdoor swimming in New England.

charity · cycling · fitness

World Parkinson’s Awareness Day

It’s April 11th. That’s World Parkinson’s Awareness Day.

That reminded me of the Pedaling for Parkinson’s ride that we’ve been doing in Prince Edward County for the past few years.

We ride in support of frequent guest blogger and family member Susan, who was diagnosed with PD in 2017. She’s blogged about it here and here,  and likely on other occasions as well.

We rode in 2022 and 2023. See also here.

Here’s 2022:

Emily,  Sam,  Susan,  and Sarah

Here’s 2023:

Sarah,  Sam,  and  Emily

Want to join us in 2024?

Register for this year’s ride in Prince Edward County,  August 17th, here. There are 40 km and 75 km options, and the roads are pretty safe and scenic in the county.

Hope you can join us! It’s a fun ride for a very important cause.

fitness

Happy Birthday to Sam’s Right Knee!

Thursday,  April 11, 2024 my right knee is one year old. My left knee turned one back in August 2023.

Sam’s right knee,  at rest,  after a bike ride home from physio

Happy birthday, new knee!

In March,  2023 I was counting down.  Getting closer,  I blogged about the two week countdown. April 3rd, I was getting ready. And on April 13th, I was coming home after surgery.

These days, I’m thinking less about my knees.  I’m walking more.  I’m doing physio twice a week still and personal training twice as well. My balance,  mobility,  and strength are all pretty good.

Think I’ll take this guy out for a walk today!

Cheddar napping. A blond dog sleeping next to a red rope chew toy.
fitness

There’s No Such Thing As A Bad Ride

There’s an adage among commuter cyclists that there’s no such thing as bad weather, just the wrong gear. I love that, and for me it has proven to be true. With my studded tires and rain cape, I’m well equipped for riding in all seasons.

But what about the days when the bad weather is in my head? Last weekend I had a day when I just felt exhausted. I hadn’t even put on pants by 4 pm.

It was sunny and I needed something from the hardware store, so I pushed myself to go for a little ride. The e-bike was a perfect choice for a day when I felt too drained to go anywhere.

I started out in the middle option of e-assist, but on the way home I felt energetic enough to drop it to the lowest level. By the end, the weather in my head had cleared up and I was able to enjoy the glorious day around me.

A multi-use pathway along a river, with trees on both sides. The sky is bright blue.
advice · fitness · goals · habits · motivation

Go Team 2024: Do One Little Thing

Hey Team!

I needed this reminder today so I thought you might, too.

Whether you are trying to add new things to your life, to maintain the things you already do, or to level up a little, it is very easy to get overwhelmed.

And when we’re overwhelmed, we forget that we can only do one thing at a time.

When that happens, we often end up either trying to do everything at once or feeling like there’s no point in doing anything.

If this is happening to you, I’d like to invite you to do one little thing that’s related to your goals, habits, or plans.

Take a really deep breath and let it out slowly.

Do one squat.

Listen to one relaxing song.

Do 1 minute of cardio.

Write 1 sentence in your journal.

Put 1 thing away.

Drink 1 glass of water (or 1tsp of water.)

If you are already regularly exercising/drinking water/meditating/journaling, just add 1 little bit to your practice – one more sentence, one more squat, one more minute.

If you are struggling to take good care of yourself in some other way but you can’t get started because it is all too much, pick a tiny, tiny thing and do that – look up the email address, put on a tiny dab of face cream, do one stretch, put on (or take off) warm socks.

It’s natural to fall into the all or nothing trap, to think that only huge changes will help, to feel like only drastic actions will count.

But, the truth is…

It all counts!

All of your efforts matter.

Even giving yourself the tiniest nudge, the tiniest bit of help, the slightest movement, gets you closer to where you want to be.

Doing one little thing gives you a foothold. It tips the balance in the direction you want to go. It reminds you that you are here for yourself.

No matter how small that little thing is.

Doing one little thing is not going to bring instant, sweeping change but it will be an instant, sweeping victory for Team You.

Taking an action, no matter how small, reminds you that you *can* act on your own behalf and that you will.

And it is going to earn you a gold star:

A drawing of a gold star with a happy face.
Image description: my drawing of a cartoonish gold star with a happy face. The background is covered in small blue dots and the drawing is ‘framed’ in blue with black trim.

cycling · fitness

Riding bikes in the sunshine

It’s time!

Sunshine,  above 10 degrees Celsius,  and we’re ready to ride.

Saturday, we took the gravel bikes out and hit the Guelph to Goderich trail.

Me and my new knees are looking forward to a summer of riding bikes.  I’m going to gradually ride longer distance,  with the aim of getting my cycling endurance back.

Sarah is more ambitious. She’s doing Paris Ancaster in a few weeks. So she rode ahead some of the time and then came back to meet me.

Aside from the crabby guy who yelled at us to “curb your speed girls” when we were doing less than half the max speed for the trail and giving him lots of room to walk,  it was a great ride.

I’m not doing too badly.  Check out the PRs below.  This is a section of the trail I’ve ridden many times before.

Sunday, we set out again, but for a shorter ride on the next second of the trail that leads into Elmira.

Strava report on our ride

After our ride, we hopped into the car with Cheddar,  the dog.  We’re driving to Prince Edward County for better eclipse viewing. 

Cheddar in the car. He’s an 8 year old blonde dog with one blue eye and one brown eye.
Aikido · Crossfit · cycling · Dancing · fitness · Rowing · sailing · Sat with Nat

Memories of my best fitness times and planning my fitness future

In thinking about life after knee replacement and planning my fitness life for my sixties, I’m trying to remember my happiest active times.  I’m wondering what aspects of those times it makes sense to think about getting back, as well as what new stuff I want to add.

Sam testing for 5th kyu in Aikido

And, of course, what old stuff I’m ready to give away. I mean, some things are right out of the picture.  That’s running and all sports that involve it,  like soccer.  Other things are back in,  for sure,  like recreational cycling.

But what form does this take in my ideal life?

I’m still reflecting on Tracy’s piece about how turning 60 feels different than turning 50. And part of that,  for Tracy,  seemed to be giving up on a bunch of external fitness should talk. Her interests also changed, and she’s approaching sixty with a more integrated and sustainable approach to fitness.

Writes Tracy,  “When I was approaching my fifties, I had an intensity and focus around my fitness activities that was extremely goal-oriented. I had an eye on one thing and one thing only: the Olympic distance triathlon. Though of course the goal yielded some internal change (mostly in the form of perseverance), the goal itself was external.”

Truth be told,  Tracy’s approach differed in that she had a much more ambitious goal. And she took up more new things than me.  So it’s not a surprise that our attitudes about the difference between 50 and 60 are different.

Me,  I want to get back to some aspects of the life I created leading up to 50. I loved it.  I loved the biking,  the rowing, Aikido,  and CrossFit. By the end of the challenge, I wasn’t so focused on an external goal.  Rather, the fittest by fifty challenge helped me appreciate how much physical activity matters to me and how much it’s part of my version of a good life. I might have started with an external goal–fittest by fifty–but it ended with a real love and appreciation of sport, physical activity, and joyful movement. I knew it was an important part of my life, going into the challenge, but the fittest by fifty challenge helped me appreciate how much it mattered.

My goal for the challenge was the Friends for Life Bike Rally, which I did as part of our challenge, but I did it again in August of 2022, right before my first knee replacement surgery. I don’t think I’ll manage it this year, the year I’m turning 60, but I’ve got 2025 in my sights.  I’d like to do it in my 50th and my 60th year and I’ll still be 60 then.

Fit at Midlife the book on the left,  Tracy and Sam in a publicity photo on the right

So I did keep some of my cycling fitness after the fittest by fifty challenge, and I hope to keep that up for a very long time yet.  So what’s missing for me?

There are four themes that keep coming up when I think about the fitness future I want.

First,  it’s community.  When I think back over my various fitness pursuits,  the best times involve working out with other people.  I think about bike clubs and teams,  my soccer team,  the Aikido dojo,  the rowing club,  and so on.  Even CrossFit’s appeal lay mainly in the community. Soccer, Aikido, rowing, and bike clubs are all team efforts where you work with others. I like that a lot. They’re also all community associations where people are drawn from all walks of life and from all corners of the community. It’s what I like about the Guelph Community Boating Club.

Sam and Sarah racing the snipe at Guelph Lake

Second,  it’s active, outdoor adventure. I love being outside.  I love moving my body.  The combo is perfect.

Two photos of Sam in red shirts in her canoe

Third, it’s intensity. I do my best work in teams and there’s something about the group effort that makes me work harder. Team time trials are one of my favourite kinds of bike races and they’re intense, co-operative efforts. Of course, that’s also true of rowing. I like sports that have intensity built in. I’m not sure what form that will take as I get older, but I still think about one of our earlier blog posts, about aging as a choice. Is Aging a Lifestyle Choice? I talked about Gretchen Reynold’s book on exercise science, The First Twenty Minutes: Surprising Science Reveals How We Can: Exercise Better, Train Smarter, Live Longer, where I was particularly taken with her chapter on aging,

I wrote: “The old view was that muscle loss and a decline in aerobic  capacity were inevitable with old age. We slow down with age and become more frail, starting in our 40s, it seemed. But new research suggests the connections may run the other way. We become slower and more frail because we stop moving. Older athletes get slower and less strong, not because they’re older, but rather because they train less than younger athletes.”

Sam’s bike rally team 2022

Fourth, they’ve involved some element of competition. I’ve never been a serious racer but I like club level competition, in most physical activity that I do. (Obviously that’s lacking in yoga and hiking.) It provides some benchmarking and gives a purpose to training.

So, purposeful training, outdoors, in a community, with intensity, and some competition…that’s where we are so far!

Canberra’s Vikings above,  Dunedin’s Women on Wheels below

What happened to my fitness community? Where did it go?

Well, my knees for one thing. Knee pain led to saying goodbye to running,  soccer,  Aikido and CrossFit. My big move was another. Bye-bye cycling coach and the community of cyclists I rode with in London. And then there was my big new job. That’s a lot.

Also there’s age. In Canada it’s harder to find groups that include older adults. I often think back fondly to my racing days in Australia where the master’s cycling group had an active over-80 group. You needed a doctors note to race after 80. It’s hard to imagine an active group of seniors racing bikes in Canada.

As I try to construct a ‘fitness after sixty’ plan, I’m thinking about activities in three groups–things I’m saying goodbye to, things I’m keeping and new things I want to add.

And I also want to recognize the pieces of the plan that are already in place.  Zwift hits both the community and competition buttons. The Guelph Community Boating Club is very much of the volunteer association model I like.

On the bye list are running,  soccer,  Aikido.

On the keep list are hiking,  cycling,  sailboat racing, yoga, paddling, and weightlifting.

And on the new list are bike packing and dancing. I’m not sure where to put swimming but it’s in there.

Oh, there’s also a fourth category–to pick again after retirement–rowing for sure!

Sled pushing at the gym

Look this is obviously very much a work in progress. Stay tuned!

Also, I’ve been trying for better blog post titles.

Here’s some AI suggested:

1. “Rediscovering Joy: Embracing Fitness After Knee Replacement”

2. “Creating a Vibrant Future: Planning Fitness in Your Sixties”

3. “Reflecting on Active Happiness: Reimagining Fitness After Knee Replacement”

4. “The Next Chapter: Designing a Fulfilling Fitness Journey in Your Sixties”

5. “From Recovery to Revival: Crafting a Dynamic Fitness Routine After Knee Replacement”

Let me know what you think!

college sports · fitness

It’s NCAA women’s basketball Finals Day, and the women are ready

Today is the culmination of a tremendous season of women’s college basketball in the US. The University of South Carolina Gamecocks face off against the University of Iowa Hawkeyes. (Full disclosure: I’m a University of South Carolina alum and fan).

Even if you’re not a college basketball fan, you’ve likely heard about Iowa’s Caitlyn Clark, who recently passed Pete Maravich the NCAA Division I basketball all-time leading scorer. She’s opted to enter the WNBA draft, and experts have said she may yet exceed LeBron James’ all-time career scoring of 40,000 points.

University of South Carolina’s team coach Dawn Staley (a legend in her own right) says this about Clark:

“It’s a monumental game for our game,” South Carolina Coach Dawn Staley said. “We’re very fortunate to be a part of it. We get to witness firsthand the legacy of Caitlin Clark. You watch her. You prep for her. You can’t help but to really love how she dissects the game. You love how she executes. I mean, it’s simple. Her game is simple and yet powerful. How do you defend fundamental basketball? You can’t. She’s going to win every time.”

The Gamecocks are also ready to play. They are undefeated this season, at 38-0 after their 78-59 semifinal win over North Carolina State. Yes, you read that right: un-de-feat-ed. Some news outlets favor them to win today’s matchup. We shall see. I know this: I’ll be watching.

Maybe the fact that March Madness this year is focused on women’s basketball isn’t surprising to you, dear readers. But, let’s take a moment to look back to 2021: the women’s NCAA tournament facilities and food and branding were completely substandard, compared with the men’s tournament. I wrote about it here: who can forget the poor-excuse for weight room consisting of a small tower of hand weights, a sad little table, and some yoga mats?

Three years later, the New Yorker is writing about how women’s basketball became the best thing in college sports. And LeBron James is gushing over the game, noting the star power and elegant play. This is all deserved praise, and hard-won.

If you’re free at 3pm Eastern Time today, I suggest you check out the final. You’ll see teamwork, expert strategy, great athletic prowess, and women doing it for themselves and their teams. What better way to spend a Sunday afternoon?

fitness

What I have trained for …

My goal for being fit at 55 and beyond has been to build and maintain strength. I have been weightlifting since 2013. I don’t do competitions; I strive weekly to improve and move forward.

Over the past few years, especially with the pandemic, part of my daily activities involves providing support to senior family members. I became skilled at the one-trip grocery carry (look at all the bags!). I’ve packed and moved boxes, shifted furniture, rearranged pantries, and so on.

Shopping for groceries with a blue basket,  WordPress stock photo

Usually, my people-assistance has been limited to providing a steadying hand for walking or helping them up out of couches or chairs determined to swallow them permanently. Recently though, I had to help a senior up from a position they could not stay in without causing harm.

It was a relief to look at the situation, figure out what needed doing, and then ensure I was aligned properly to lift without injury. Unless you are in a direct hands-on care role, most of us don’t think about our training to be something that can be applied in this way. I was glad I have spent the time ensuring I will have strength for now and the future.

If you want to know more about strength training for healthy aging, here’s a good overview from the National Insitute on Aging: https://www.nia.nih.gov/news/how-can-strength-training-build-healthier-bodies-we-age.

Here’s a quote to make you think: “Age-related mobility limitations are a fact of life for many older adults. Studies have shown that about 30% of adults over age 70 have trouble with walking, getting up out of a chair, or climbing stairs. In addition to making everyday tasks difficult, mobility limitations are also linked to higher rates of falls, chronic disease, nursing home admission, and mortality.

The focus is on prevention, but my experiences over the last three years suggest building our strength also makes us better caregivers because we have the power and the skills to help safely and prevent injuries to others and ourselves.

Billie Eilish sings her Grammy and Oscar-winning song What was I made for? In the video she is dressed as one of the Barbies from the movie Barbie.

MarthaFitat55 lives and lifts on an island off the coast of Eastern Canada.

fitness

Peaceful Playgrounds


Our family walking along the small-town road on Easter.

A group of people walk along at different distances along a quiet street. A man and young girl walking a dog are in the forefront. It is early spring with the remnants of snow and puddles lining the road.

“Wow! Busy day in town.” I exclaimed as our herd moved to the shoulders of the sidewalk-less road.

It was Easter, and the nine of us who gathered to celebrate were on an afternoon walk. We were moving over for two vehicles driving towards us in opposite directions when a third one came into our view at the crossroad ahead. Three cars in thirty seconds boasted unfamiliar liveliness in the small Albertan town my sister lives in.

Taking a walk has become an expected practice when we come to visit my sister. From my outsider’s viewpoint, this town is either dying or painfully tired. The main street might as well have a tumbleweed roll across as no one is seen perusing shops, attending to business, or even taking a stroll. Many of the buildings are boarded up with only a few bearing signs of life with “For Lease” plastered on their windows. Are they displayed as dreams for progress, or are they there as pleas for release? What do these sleepy towns have to hope for?

I had grown up in a town of roughly 4000 people. Walking in the middle of streets where the ditches were our sidewalks, where drivers raised a hand in greeting as they passed, where wandering parent-less until sundown was a way of life, is how I experienced my years of innocence. When I lived there, the town was prosperous and growing.

But then it started to die.

Industry left the area. Families, like mine, and individuals found themselves pursuing opportunities in the cities. The wounds of economic scarcity started to appear.

When I visited my hometown in later years, I felt like I was walking through a ghost town. Although the town wasn’t dying to the extent that my sister’s town seems to be, the town that I knew was no longer there. Isn’t that the journey of growing up? Much of what we know as children takes on new meaning as adults.

When I do visit my hometown, I often find myself at the school playground. Standing beneath worn monkey bars and cautiously climbing contorted ladders brings me back to innocence. I look at the tire swing and get flashbacks of “around the world” pushes and the dizzying ecstasy it yielded. I imagine schoolmates all around; some running, some chasing, others huddled, and the rest occupied by the pieces of equipment.

What bewilders me the most during my visits is that the equipment looks unchanged. Twenty years and the same plastic slides welcomed my use. The large wooden posts stand sturdy and just as full of splinter potential as they did in the past. The peace that comes with realizing that not everything has changed is tangible.

In the small Albertan town where there are at least three active townspeople, I experienced echoes of that same peace. As soon as the vehicles departed, my children, knowing we were heading towards a playground, noticed the worn rungs of a slide ladder peaking out the back of an alleyway.  

“The playground!” my youngest yelled. With only the one structure in partial view, I was uncertain how my kids would react to an old small-town playground. With my erroneous belief that newer means safer, I also wondered how I would fare as their mother.

As we neared and began to see the rest of the equipment appear, my worries were quelled. What I saw was my past. Jagged wood that threatened splinters, metal that lacked the lustre of newness, sand that holds evidence of generations of kids between every grain, rubber and plastic that was warped and cracked from decades facing the elements—every good material used to produce this circa 1990s playground equipment echoed the joys that were absorbed into it by the many children that graced its parts.

It looked so much like the playground I grew up on. I loved it. The sentimental touch of a bin full of intergenerational Tonka trucks and sand pales showcased the beauty of small-town intimacy. As I watched my children, husband, sister, and dog run freely across all the structures, my heart swelled.

I am unsure why I didn’t walk on the structure or climb the monkey bar pyramid or slide down a slide or even sit on the swings. It seems bizarre since playgrounds have been such a grounding source for me. But it didn’t even cross my mind.

Reflecting on it, perhaps it’s because I didn’t feel the need to be the kid again. Perhaps the stresses of adulthood left me as I stepped into the sand. I didn’t need to frolic or shut my eyes and pump my legs to reach the highest height of the swings. I didn’t need to feel the wooden bridge waver beneath my feet. I just needed to be in the sand. I just needed to watch my kids learn to slide down the fire pole and slip down gritty, silver slides.

Their living of the life I used to live brought me immense joy. At that moment, I developed an ardent hope that this town would survive, that the pendulum of its population would swing from decline to flourishing. I hope the shops sell and that the new owners take pride in running a business in a vintage town. I hope the residents of that town commit to bringing life into the community.

But most of all, I hope that the playground stays intact, just as it is.

May the toy bin be forever emptied and refilled by playful children. May the necessary maintenance be allotted to the structures. And may the adults reminisce and allow their children to experience the unique activities that small towns afford, like walking down the middle of streets and finding peace standing in the sand of an old playground.

Stephanie Morris is a transcriptionist and writer based in Alberta, Canada. She is a wife, a mom of two, and a newcomer to the career-writing world. As a fancier of history and literature, she aspires to blend the two in fiction and nonfiction pieces. To follow Stephanie’s writing adventures, find her at @words.and.smores on Instagram.