Sat with Nat

Nat enjoys the gifts of a long goodbye

Social connection is an important factor in wellbeing. And if the past week is any indication, I will be well for a very long time.

Three months ago I gave my notice of retirement to my boss. Halfway through my mini-speech he joked “no, you can’t leave. We are supposed to win at capitalism together!”

And that joke set the tone of the next three months. Once we had settled on a plan we let my team know my retirement date and put a call out for my replacement.

Then something unexpected happened. My in office days became much more social. People I knew but didn’t see much in my current role started dropping by my desk or talking to me in the cafeteria.

It was a gentle touch on my arm, a smile or a hug. Sometimes it was a teasing or a confession of jealousy. All of it gifts of connection that just kept coming.

Part of me worried that this long goodbye was self indulgent. I know plenty of people who pull an “Irish Goodbye”. It’s when you just walk out of work and no one knows you have retired.

I’m here to tell you to not do that. If, like me, you have the privilege of choosing when you leave your paid work, choose a long goodbye.

Your colleagues need time to hear the news, come see you and bring you stories.

I worked in production when I joined Canada Life (then London Life). Two years in I became a leader. I’ve led 8 teams over 9 years. That’s a lot of people!

And so many of them reached out.

“Thank you for treating me like a human being.”

I’m crying just writing that. It seems like such a low bar to meet. To just relate to each other as people who matter. And we do matter.

I was told so many stories about how I helped someone through tough times by caring and being flexible.

There is definitely one person who is alive today because I took their mental health concerns seriously. Talk about making a difference.

I was delighted how many people told me they read this blog about fitness. Some folks follow me on Instagram or have added me on Facebook to see my morning cycling commute videos.

“Will you keep posting about cycling?”

Turns out those quick, off-the-cuff videos encourage lots of folks to be more active. What a gift to know I help them.

So many parties

This past week I went out 4 nights with different groups of friends to say goodbye. It was marvelous. So many good laughs and hugs.

Princess planned her own party

Since I’m technically just quitting my job there was no formal retirement company gift or funds for a party. So I decided I’d just put the word out that people could say goodbye Thursday morning 10 – 11:30 in a common use space near the cafeteria.

I invited a couple hundred people expecting maybe 30 to show up.

In the weeks running up to the day declines and quick messages trickled in.

“I’m still sick.”

“My dad’s in hospital.”

“I’m out of town.”

I had a creeping concern I’d be sitting by myself in a tiara feeling stupid. That fear is why many people choose not to have a reception.

Uh. My fears were unfounded. My colleague baked THREE CAKES. As she was unboxing them people started arriving, then forming a queue. The line-up went out the door, around the corner and down the hall.

My buddy dressed in her inflatable dinosaur costume. It was a carnival atmosphere.

A crowd in a hallway. In the distance you can see a dinosaur. Thank you Marc for the photo!

The line was full of laughter and folks being delighted to see other friends and connecting.

The line was so long some people had to leave for meetings and sent quick notes after.

Sharing is caring

Sharing fitness adventures at work, posting fitness stuff on LinkedIn where everyone is focused on business is so important. Our activities can give us a common base to build on. It helps us see each other as full people, not just interchangeable production units.

Long post, long goodbyes

I’m writing this Saturday morning while eating more cake with my coffee.

I’m looking at the mountain of thoughtful gifts and funny cards. People took time to know me and the gifts reflect the crafty, active plant lady I am. How marvelous.

A giant “love fern” is surrounded with cards and gifts.

Don’t forget the swearing

I’m known for cussing a blue streak in meetings. People find it hilarious. So when my team gave me a goodbye card I was delighted it read “Thanks for leaving us behind, asshole.” I couldn’t stop laughing.

They 3D printed a gift card holder “Fucking quitter. Oops we mean HAPPY RETIREMENT”

I’m still laughing. Perfect!

So. Yes. Long story longer. The long goodbye makes room for connection and closure. 10/10 I will long goodbye again.

fitness

All the people running with me

It was a long winter in Toronto. When I started running over 20 years ago, I started in the fall, and I continued throughout the winter. The first official race I participated in was a “Chilly 10K” in December. With this foundation for my running experience, I continued to run outside throughout the winter. Most winters in Toronto would allow for enough days where the snow was plowed quickly and the sidewalks were not icy. I developed a rule that as long as it wasn’t colder than -10 C and the sidewalks were clear, I’d go for my jog. My jogs were not as long as they were in the spring-autumn season, but still, I’d go out and run.

I have found the last couple winters to be more challenging for outdoor running. The main reason is that there seemed to be more “icy sidewalk” days. There seems to be a lot more extreme fluctuations, day-to-day, with lots of snow, cold, freezing, warmer, melting – and back and forth – which tends to result in icy sidewalks. With age, I can tell that I’m becoming averse to walking on even a little bit of ice.

I also don’t like running on treadmills. Years ago, one of the weird movement things I developed was that as soon as I get any speed going, my brain instructs my legs to jump to the sides. I just don’t bother anymore. I don’t enjoy the treadmill and I don’t care. It’s only been an issue when I went for a stress test once and determined that I needed to get on a waiting list for the bicycle version of a stress test, because I was incapable of walking on the treadmill long enough and fast enough for it to be an effective test.

I digress. Where was I?

It was a long winter. For running. For grief. For many things. However, I’ve been running regularly again. Last week, I had one of the best runs in a long time. I beamed about it. I wrote about it. I glowed about too much joy. Then (did I plutz too much?), a few days later, I went out for a jog and the anxiety-induced vertigo that was an issue in recent years, started to emerge again. Not as forcefully as last time. It’s manageable, but it’s there. It feels clearly like a head condition. Connected to a feeling of anxiety that affects my feeling of stability in the world. Possibly triggered by spring allergies, even though I now take heavy-duty prescription antihistamines daily.

A sunset view on a street, featuring vibrant orange and purple clouds, with a parked white pickup truck in the foreground and trees lining the roadside.

I am working my way through the things that help me with getting through it. I have lessons in my pocket from last time, that I’m employing faster and more regularly and, I’m hoping, it doesn’t get worse.

One of the things I find helps, is warming up a bit. Walk a bit first. Then transition to a run/walk and then I get a better rhythm. You may see me doing some walking warm-ups. Swinging my arms to and fro to feel my balance in the world. I also talk to myself. I bring out my mantras. “I am. I can. I will. I do. Envision. Thank you”. “Don’t take the shortcut.” “Fuck it.” “Just go.” “Your legs are strong.” “YOU ARE A RUNNER!”

I also look at places to ‘go to” as the next part of my leg – a utility pole or a car or a sign. It helps to focus on that next destination rather than the current portion of sidewalk I’m on.

I don’t know if it’s helping my running but I am always aware of the people I think about who are no longer here but who are present. My Mom. I’ve said to people recently, when we talk about the great void with her loss, that I feel her everywhere. Her energy is EVERYWHERE. At the tip of my nose. At the back of my skull. She is present. I think of a late Aunt (she died in 2010) who called me when I completed my first marathon and I was so surprised at how emotional she was about it. I didn’t know she would be so proud of something like that but she really, really was.

It’s occurring to me lately, that what IS helping my running, is “relying on a little help from my friends”. I don’t mean physically. I like to run on my own. I mean conjuring up experiences that make me feel like I have my friends’ support with me in the moment. I think of gym classes, where we’d go outside the gym and run together as a group for a little loop. I think of those people, imagine them running next to me. I think of gym friends and imagine they are waiting for me ahead. This helps.

This imaginary community support reminds me of a quote from Maya Angelou, “I come as one, but I stand as 10,000.” I have thought of this concept outside of running. For example, when I’m anticipating a tough call at work. I’ve thought of the strong family role models I’ve had. I think of the things they’ve had to endure and how strongly they would have handled those situations. I know not all things are relative, but sometimes, I’ve thought, if they could deal with that (big) thing, I can surely handle this (much smaller) thing. It makes sense that that this feeling of community support, that I’m fortunate to have had in my life – whether from family members or friends, around me or no longer in my life, can help me feel confident during times of uncertainty.

How about you readers, are there situations where you conjure up, “a little help from your friends”, even if only in your imagination?

fitness

Bikes, Beginners, and Big Feelings: April 2026 on the Blog

How many posts? A big month — 40+ posts across 30 days, making April one of the busier months of the year so far.

Who blogged? A wide cast: Sam, Tracy, Diane, Nicole, Christine, Nat, Catherine, Cate, Mina, Martha, Elan and Mallory, as well as some guests.


April’s big throughlines:

#30DaysOfBiking ran the whole month. Sam documented the challenge from start to finish — opening with a Zwift ride when April showed up with snow, fat biking at the farm in Prince Edward County for Easter, taking new routes as part of her “New Path Protocol” intention, and closing it out on April 30 with a bike ride to the gym and the monthly Guelph Girls Gays & Theys Bike Club meet-up. The challenge gave the month a narrative spine.

New skills and beginner’s mind. This was a genuinely joyful thread. Sam and Sarah took skating lessons — she wrote about their first lesson and the second, honestly chronicling the nerves, the stickers on her helmet, the slow progress, and the grace of their instructor. Tracy spent the whole month working through C25K with a deliberate beginners’ mind, writing a beautiful mindful update about forcing herself not to skip ahead or compare to past performance. Mallory wrote about discovering queer indoor beach volleyball and her team the Raisins (“Raisin Hell”). All three were about giving yourself permission to be new at something.

Spring — finally, tentatively, then really. Diane opened the month cautiously with “Goodbye Winter? Maybe, Hopefully” after snow as late as March 28. Christine did patio yoga in front of snowshovels and loved it. Catherine started sharing her weekly tulip CSA bouquets. By mid-month, spring had landed.

Diane’s health arc. Diane had an unusually eventful April on the blog. She wrote about her pool finally reopening after renovations, then about cycling and dementia research, then “Last swim for a while” (April 23), and then on April 30 she posted “Every Step Counts” — writing from the hospital, walking 140 metres with a physiotherapist and counting it as a win. It’s a striking arc: from celebrating community at the pool to rebuilding movement one slow step at a time.

Aging, identity, and resistance. Mina’s “No Surrender” — about approaching 60, running a half marathon every month, and resisting passive acceptance of aging — was one of the top-read posts of the month. Nicole’s “Musings about Menopausal Diet Culture” was another standout: personal, sharp, and resonant. Catherine launched a new monthly Research Roundup column, examining fitness science with appropriate skepticism and wit (including mice on tiny treadmills and the thick thighs science).

Community and friendship. Nat’s Saturday posts — “What Buoys Nat When Navigating Mid-Life Chaos” and “Nat Gets By with a Little Help from Her Friends” — focused on social connection as a wellness strategy and the uneven gendered labour of maintaining it.

The Boston Marathon / Nike moment. Catherine wrote about the Nike “Runners Welcome. Walkers Tolerated” controversy — and the Altra counter-ad — in a post that got good engagement. Typical Catherine: warm, pointed, and quoting the Wellesley scream tunnel.


Top Ten posts of the month (per Sam’s April 30 roundup): Diane’s “Last Swim for a While” topped the list, followed by Nicole on menopausal diet culture, Mina’s “No Surrender,” Tracy’s C25K launch post, Nat’s two mid-life chaos/friends posts, Nicole on fitness prescriptions, Diane on Maintenance Phase, Sam and Sarah’s skating lesson, and the guest post “The Origins of My Surprising Fitness Journey.”


It was a month where the blog felt genuinely alive — a wide pool of writers, a clear seasonal energy, some real personal stakes (Diane’s health, Tracy’s running comeback, Sam’s skating and biking), and a theme of people giving themselves permission to try things badly and keep going anyway.

bouquet of flowers in clothing with feelings written on it
Photo by Evellyn Cardoso on Pexels.com

Thanks Claude for the blog’s month in review.

fitness · top ten

 🌷 🌷 🌾🌾Top Ten Blog Posts in April 2026 🌷🌷🌾🌾

Last swim for awhile (Diane)

musings about menopausal diet culture (Nicole)

No Surrender: Dancing with Resistance and Acceptance as I Approach a New Decade (Mina)

Getting back to it…again (Tracy)

What buoys Nat when navigating mid-life chaos (Nat)

Nat gets by with a little help from her friends (Nat)

What’s the fitness prescription? (Nicole)

Catching Up with Maintenance Phase (Diane)

You’re never too old! Sam and Sarah take a learn-to-skate lesson (Sam)

The Origins of My Surprising Fitness Journey (Guest post)

Tulips
cycling · fitness

Sam ends #30DaysOfBiking with a Bang!

First, I rode my bike to the gym. I love doing that, but it’s complicated since I go to work straight after and often have my laptop and clothes with me, and I fret about rain and about theft. See Sam bikes to her new fancy gym!

But today it all worked out fine. No big meetings so I’m at work in sweatpants and a College of Arts hoodie. (Normally, Sarah drives me to my office after personal training but she had to leave early for an important presentation so I cycled there and to campus after.)

Second, assuming it’s not pouring rain, I’ll be attending the monthly meet-up ride of the Guelph Girls Gays and Theys Bike Club after work.

You can read about the club here, Wheeling into cycling season with an inclusive bike club.

Update: It was a fun ride!

fitness

Every Step Counts

There is a certain irony to having started this post just as the hospital physiotherapist arrived to take me for a walk around the ward. Where did my glute muscles go and why did they take my endurance with them?

I managed 140 metres, which was double my previous step count. Then I needed a nap.

When I’m not napping, I’m cleaning out my in-box and that’s how I rediscovered this January post by Nat. The softness of being okay with where I am, and working only to what feels comfortable really spoke to me.

It made me think of another thing that isn’t quite in season but is always relevant: One Foot in Front of the Other from the 1970 classic Christmas Show “Santa Claus is Coming to Town. You can follow this link to a YouTube version here: https://share.google/niRH0a8naZuA2zaRN

Diane in a purple jacket and carrying a blue and white umbrella out on one of her two daily walks. In the background, you can see trees beginning to bud, a sure sign of spring and better things ahead.

As of today, my walking distance has increased to 22 minutes, which works out to more than 2 km. One foot in front of the other.

fitness · motivation · running · spring · training

C25K and cultivating beginners’ mind

Close-up view of a person's feet wearing light gray running shoes with a yellow tip on a stone pavement.
Image description: looking down bare legs towards feet wearing running shoes and socks, standing on a textured concrete sidewalk. Photo by Tracy

I’ve always been drawn to the idea of cultivating beginners’ mind about things that we think we know. It’s a way of going back to that excited learning mindset where we are open-minded, enthusiastic, and teachable.

And so it was with that attitude that I’ve been approaching my spring effort to get back to a regular running routine with the Couch to 5K program. As I wrote at the beginning of the month, it’s a nine week program designed for people new to running.

I’m not new to running, having taken it up as part of Sam and my “Fittest by 50” challenge way back in 2012. But I hit a wall after my last major event, the Around the Bay 30K back in 2019. I injured my Achilles and since then I have never quite hit my stride again. I’ve tried different things, most notably the Nike Learn to Run program a couple of years back. But I couldn’t quite let go of how things “used to be” and the idea that they “should” quickly be that way again.

Not this time. This time I am forcing myself to follow the program as written, not adding more running intervals or skipping weeks that feel too easy. I fell a little bit behind, with some of the weeks being spread out beyond 7 days. So I’m only starting week 4 instead of being at the end of it. Still, I have stuck to the assignment as written. And it’s been easy to get myself out the door because the workouts are so reasonable. (Apparently that changes a bit in week 5)

My beginners’ mind approach has been really good for me because it means I haven’t been too concerned with pace or how far I get or anything that I used to track. I’m not saying I’ll never go back to caring about those things, but it’s liberating to be out there without any concern for speed or distance.

I’m also not comparing myself to anyone else when I’m out there. We all have different goals and right now mine is simply to get back to a three times a week running routine, following the Couch to 5K schedule. That’s it.

Though it’s still early days, I feel confident about recommending this approach to anyone who is new to running or trying to work their way back. It’s a great way to be present for the arrival of spring, which is coming in short bursts this year, with some cold reminders that, at least in my part of the world, we’re not really in the clear until late May. Whatever, a regular running commitment has put me in touch with the vagaries of Canadian spring weather in a direct and enjoyable way.

If you’ve had experience with C25K I’d love to hear about it in the comments!

Enjoy!

ADHD · goals

Sometimes A Vague Goal Is Pretty Useful

Do I owe you a thinky post about World Creativity Day? Yes, yes, I do. Alas, last week was made of chaos, headaches, and migraines and it did not get done. I have safely emerged from that maelstrom but I am writing this on Monday and my solo storytelling show is tonight and my focus keeps wandering from my thinky post. Since I would prefer that my brain stay in one piece, I am writing about something else today and I will get back to the creativity one soon.

On Sunday evening, I made a list of things I wanted to have done by the end of this week. There were a few work tasks, a couple of household things, and, oddly enough, one rather vague item – become stronger. 

I don’t even really know where that last one came from but I found myself intrigued.

I mean, becoming stronger is an ongoing goal for me so this isn’t completely new but something felt different about having it on my list in that format.

Become stronger.

Become stronger. 

When I phrase it like that it’s not a list of exercises or a bunch of tasks or a potential goal, it’s an open loop. 

And my brain, the same one that fights with me about exercising or completing tasks*, is ALWAYS intrigued by an open loop and it starts in with the questions…

What does ‘become stronger’ mean?

How can I become stronger in a week?

What would that involve?

How will I know if I become stronger?

Why do I even want to become stronger?

Who do I want to consult on this?**

When can I get started?

See how quickly my brain dug in on this? It is totally invested in solving the mystery of how to become stronger this week. 

And I’m going to let it figure it out as we go. 

After all, I know that I can’t get a lot stronger in one week but that’s where the vagueness of ‘become stronger’ works out well. I don’t have to get a lot stronger, I just have to move the needle. 

And, in fact, when I got up Monday morning my brain was already reminding me that we had to work towards getting stronger today. 

So things are off to an interesting start!

A photo of a horse in the distance with a lot of field all around it.
This is what I got when I searched for ‘vague’ in the image library. I guess it’s accurate? The connection is value at least. Image description: a black and white photo of a dark-coloured horse (I think) on light-coloured ground that could be a field or snow or a beach. The horse is in the distance in the centre so it is very small relative to the size of the image overall. It is maybe 1/8 of the height of the image and 1/12 or the width.

PS – Today’s ‘become stronger’ activity turned out to be this 10 Minute Morning Workout to Boost Energy from MonikaFit.

Well, I won’t be able to get a lot stronger in one week but I will be able to

*Yes, I do often refer to my brain as separate from me, apparently it’s an ADHD thing.

**In this case the ‘who’ will be a combo of fitness people on YouTube and Instagram but I really wanted to get a who question in there so I phrased it as who instead of saying ‘What videos will I watch?’

fitness

Sam’s summer skating and swimming plans: Some good news and some bad news

I’ve really enjoyed taking classes this year–both adult learn to swim, and CanSkate’s learn to skate for adults were highlights of my week. I started with swimming, on Monday evenings, and when that ended, signed up for skating, Tuesdays at 7 pm. Sarah joined me for the skating but not the swimming.

There’s something about learning a new skill and getting better at a thing that puts a smile on my face. Both classes were challenging in a really good way. See my post on expandibg one’s horizons and learning new things.

I like that I had to focus really hard on learning and practising something new. The workout aspect of both activities kind of snuck in. I was too busy concentrating to think about how hard I was working. But in both cases I was definitely working hard. There were a lot of new muscles put to good use in skating.

Yes, with age you can keep doing the same thing and lament slowing down, or you can have fun taking up something new. I’ve opted for the latter!

See You’re Never Too Old! Sam and Sarah Take a Learn-to-Skate Lesson and Chicken, Moose, Butterfly…Sam is back in the pool.

But lessons are over for the year. Now what? I’m worried about losing the skills I’ve just acquired. Also, summer is all about biking, paddling, camping, and sailing. There’s not much time for weeknight activities. Don’t even talk to me about weekends!

What about lunch hour?

Brown bag lunch and coffee

Hmmm. The university has a rink that’s open during the summer, and I had hopes that they had some open rec skating. I don’t want to lose the progress I’ve made this year. Ditto the pool and swimming.

But bad news, nowhere in Guelph has summer rec skating, it turns out. Not even the university and we have ice through the summer. BAH! If you have any suggestions,  let me know.

The good news is that pool is open for lane swimming. For staff, it’s $25 a month for pool and rec facilities access, and $40 a month for all that plus the fitness studios, weight room, and classes. I think this might be the summer of lunch hour swimming and workdays with wet hair.

Good luck
fitness · research · Science

Does exercise before breakfast burn more fat than exercise after dinner? And do we need to worry about this?

A 2025 study on fat oxidation rates and exercise timing is getting more press on social media this week. Because why not… 🙂 Here’s the deal:

In a study of (yes, you guessed it) male college students, researchers found that 60 minutes of morning exercise before breakfast, after fasting all night, resulted in 20% higher fat oxidation rates than an hour of the same exercise after eating dinner.

Uh, yay?

Actually, I think the more appropriate reaction here is: meh.

the word "meh" against a red background.
It bears repeating: meh.

Why am I not excited about this? I mean, it’s SCIENCE.

Yes, that’s so. It’s real science done by real scientists, on real experimental young male subjects. And, this is a real result. But, it doesn’t mean that we should all switch to exercising before breakfast. Why not? Here are some concerns of mine, plus some by the commenters:

  • The purpose of exercise is not necessarily to lose fat– we exercise for a host of reasons, and possible fat reduction is only one of them.
  • Fat oxidation does equal fat loss. In order to lose fat, there has to be a calorie deficit in addition to fat oxidation.
  • Some commenters argued that the results are largely due to the fact that the subjects had fasted before exercise; there’s no indication in the study that the time of day mattered (other than it’s easier to fast while sleeping– I don’t actually need a scientific study to assert this with confidence).
  • The metabolic effects on a busload of twenty-something males are not necessarily applicable to the larger population. And in particular, we know that metabolic effects of exercise vary by gender, so this result may not apply in the same way to everyone.

However, my main point is: newsy stories about studies that suggest “you oughta exercise like THIS rather than like THAT” ignore the value of just getting out there– to your neighborhood, living room, gym, yoga studio, pond, wherever you like to be while moving. Feel free to move wherever and whenever suits you.

And while we’re at it, moving before breakfast is something I plan on doing only if a bear is chasing me. Or if one of my friends (Samantha and Janet, I’m looking at y’all) manages to talk me into a very early-morning adventure. But even then, I’ll need snacks.

I love me some choices for exercise snacks. Granols bars, trail mix, chips. Thanks Nathan D for Unsplash.