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!

fitness · Guest Post

Deadlifts versus Bandeaus, Round Two

By Winnie

I read Sam’s post, the one about fitting into a bandeau. I launched into what was turning into a rather long comment, checked in with Sam, and she advised me to write more as a post. So here’s where my comment started:

Yes! Yes! Yes! I rushed over to your age 74 post – I am 74. All of these pointers towards being less judgmental are SO important. At my age, my fitness level is  close to what it was when I was 20, better than  when I was 30. But one of my very closest friends has an auto-immune condition that began when she was about 4. By the time we met – high school – she was frozen into a sitting position. No loss of control, just joints that arthritis had taken over & shut down. Fitness, as most of us can see it, is simply not an option. We’ve been friends for over 60 years now & watching how she is received in public settings is endlessly disturbing.


Going on from the already too long comment:
She and I might pose for the guy who likes to compare women at age 74 – those who are body builders & look the part next to those who are slumped in wheelchairs. Well, not really. I don’t look at all like a body builder. But I can ride my bike pretty much anywhere; she needs help turning over in bed. I find a comparison intended to push fitness to be especially distressing.

Remember, her illness had frozen her in a sitting position. Her family is tall; she’s not. But she went through college, went on to get a masters, went on to complete the course work for a PhD; health kept her from being able to write a dissertation while working full time. She was a bilingual speech therapist in a large, complicated public school system. Most of her working life was spent doing the intake work for kids with special needs (another category we have a very hard time defining and naming).


So, I hope we can all keep reminding ourselves – and Sam can keep reminding us in so many great ways – that categorizing people by appearance, short of looking for a cheerful girl with curly red hair to play Annie,  is very unlikely to be fair or meaningful. No, scratch even that little exception. I am thinking of P.G. Wodehouse’s Uncle Fred, who claimed he could play the part of a parrot “on broad, artistic lines.” So Annie can have brown hair. Or be played by a boy.


PS I realized I had only talked about fitness on my couple of posts here, but feminism is the other key component. I had begun to put together a little list of experiences that helped to cement feminism in my mind (not that it needed any cement). So here’s one of the funny ones. It’s all about appearances, as it turned out.


I was at the gym at an abs & core class. Another member in the class was a fiercely competitive guy. “Hey, let’s go run up to Coit Tower at lunchtime!” was an offer he often put out. That’s a very steep, not short hill in San Francsico. So when the teacher said, “Go find the weights that are right for you. We’ll be doing rowing in plank position today,” I went over and picked a pair of 20 pound weights. Competitive guy came over and very kindly (he thought) told me I had the wrong weights. He brought me a couple of 5s & a couple of 10s. I just thanked him & held onto my 20s. When the time came, & he saw me happily using the 20s, I got some serious side-eye. And some serious satisfaction. He was working hard with 10s. He was about 10 years younger than I was. And a guy. A very athletic guy.

A picture of my friend from behind (didn’t get permission to show any faces – this was a high school reunion).

And  picture, nothing to do with the post. Bruce and me standing at the summit of Mt. Ventoux, France, after a long climb (much more challenging than those 20 pound weights)!

Bio: I am a lifelong Californian. My mother and father were not born here but moved to the state as small children. I have two grown daughters and five wonderful grandchildren. I spent my working life working at, and eventually running, the family insurance business. My father had introduced many employee benefits – sabbatical starting in 1970, optional four-day work week in 1972, elimination of all official work time rules in 1974. Adults like to be treated as adults, and people tended to stay a long time, so it was a very pleasant working environment with key elements of trust and respect. I also served on a couple of independent school boards, one a strong academic school serving grades 6-12, one a school designed to start helping city kids who had suffered the ongoing effects of racism & poverty to find opportunities they might not as easily discover without support. I live at a Lifetime Care Community where I serve on the finance committee and chair the sustainability committee. I also plan to join the newly formed fitness committee. And for fun, I have ridden my bicycle across North America. Twice.

fitness · health · illness · Science

Hanta, Ebola and ticks: what I worry about and what I don’t worry about (much)

These are the days when I’m glad to know some really good epidemiologists. The planet is warming, global travel is surging, and bad buggies are on the move. No, not these kinds of buggies:

Dune, beach and horse and buggy. None of them infectious, as far as I know.
Dune, beach and horse and buggy. None of them infectious, as far as I know.

Nope. I’m taking about these buggies:

Lyme bacteria, the current Ebola virus, and the Andes hanta virus-- colorful but dangerous.
Lyme bacteria, the current Ebola virus, and the Andes hanta virus– colorful but dangerous.

I thought I might post some updates from the aforementioned really-good-epi folks, as it’s sometimes overwhelming to try to keep up with global health news and hard to know which sources to trust. I’m not a doctor (not the medical kind, anyway), but my posted updates are from sources *I* trust– international news outlets, the WHO (World Health Organization), and YLE (Your Local Epidemiologist) substack (which pulls its info from the most reliable technical sources).

So, in titular order:

First: I posted recently about the hanta virus outbreak on a ship traveling from South America to Europe: Bad news/good news about the hantavirus outbreak.

According to the European CDC, as of 26 May there are a total of 13 cases (11 confirmed) of hantavirus. One new case has been confirmed since the last update. There are no new deaths. All quarantined persons in North America are still negative. There’s a long (45 day) incubation period, but we’re at the median period now. This means if you weren’t on that ship, you are almost certainly in the clear. Color me not worried.

My apologies if I've used the pineapple with sun glasses and party hat recently, but it personifies happiness to me right now.
My apologies if I’ve used the pineapple with sun glasses and party hat recently, but it personifies non-worry to me right now.

Second: There’s an Ebola outbreak in The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Uganda. According to YLE, there are more than 1000 cases so far in DRC, which experts believe is an undercount. Why? For wonky epidemiological reasons:

  • positive test rate is 50%
  • At most 20% of contacts are being traced right now
  • They’ve only been really testing for a week, and it’s a lot-a-lot of cases for one week
  • Cases are spread out over 16 different health zones, so containment is harder

You might be wondering, what are the Centers for Disease Control and the US government doing to help contain this outbreak and support and treat those who are affected by Ebola (which has an average case fatality rate of 50%)?

During the 2013–2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the US and Canadian governments played major roles in sending public health teams, supplies, health workers, setting up treatment centers, and providing support, along with the WHO and dozens of other countries. More than 11,000 people died of Ebola, with another 17,000 surviving it.

In 2026, the situation is quite different. Canada is providing more than $8M in international assistance funding though a bunch of governmental and non-governmental organizations. This is in addition to its annual $150–200M in foreign aid. See here for latest details.

The US government, after cutting foreign aid to the DRC by 75% (affecting its public health and other necessary infrastructures), is releasing $80M to various organizations overseen by the UN and various NGOs (non-governmental organizations).

However, the big emphasis by the Trump administration is that no American contracting Ebola (including those health workers its sending to Africa) will be returned to the US for treatment (in one of the several world-class health centers with top-level bio-containment.) Instead, according to the New York Times,

The Trump administration plans to send to Kenya U.S. citizens exposed to the Ebola virus rather than bring them home for observation and treatment, according to three people with knowledge of the plans.

The approach is a stark contrast to the way previous administrations responded to outbreaks, during which health care workers and other U.S. citizens exposed to the virus were brought home to be treated at specialized medical units. The administration this month flew an American doctor who developed symptoms to a hospital in Germany, and transported six other Americans for monitoring in Germany and the Czech Republic.

According to the substack by Dr. Craig Spencer (the physician who got Ebola in 2014 while working for MSF/Medicins Sans Frontieres/Doctors Without Borders and WAS transported to the US for treatment, and recovered):

The government is training a few dozen Public Health Service officers — uniformed members of the U.S. commissioned corps — to deploy to Kenya to staff it. These are people we send under orders, often to crises, disasters, and outbreaks. And under this plan, if one of them is exposed, or falls ill, the government apparently does not intend to bring them home either.

So, to sum up: for this Ebola outbreak, the risk to the North American public is very very low. But, the risk to global health overall is substantial. Also, the risk to American and other health workers, deployed military doing humanitarian work, and UN personnel os higher than it needs to be because the US is refusing to take care of them in our own world-class medical facilities.

So, am I worried about me or others in North American getting Ebola? No. Am I worried about the damage my country’s leaders are doing to global healthcare capacity, the mission of international health workers, and citizens of all countries affected by this outbreak? YES. You bet I am.

Third and finally, there are the ticks. It turns out that tick numbers are declining in the Northeast and Midwest at this point in 2026. YLE annoted this very nice CDC graph to show where we are:

The blue-green line is this year, and we are about at peak for the year, and it's lower than previous years. I mean, that's something.
The blue-green line is tick-related ED visits this year, and we are about at peak for the year, and it’s lower this year. I mean, that’s something.

However, tick-borne diseases are in general on the upswing, so we all need to be careful. Here are more YLE tips:

Keep enjoying the outdoors! But if you’re in a tick-prone area, take that extra minute to do a tick check. The most important thing is removing the tick properly (use fine-tipped tweezers, grab close to the skin, pull upward, no twisting, no Vaseline, no matches). Then watch for symptoms: fever, rash, fatigue, joint aches. If you find an attached tick and are in a high-risk area for Lyme disease, it’s worth calling your doctor if it was attached for more than 36 hours.

So, am I worried about ticks? Always. I live in tick heaven here in New England. But this means I am careful to wear proper repellents (DEET for skin and Permethrin for clothing for me; you do you here), and I also check carefully after being outside. Will this keep me from going outside? Certainly not. And I hope it won’t slow down your outdoorsy summer, either.

Happy Friday, y’all!

fitness

Lessons from Dad

It has been just over a year since Dad died, and and now I’m the one dealing with multiple health diagnoses. The heart is on the mend, following surgery for a condition that I had no idea about until my doctor caught it while checking for bronchitis. I’m on a waitlist to see someone about the concerning lumps on my thyroid, discovered when I went for a pre-operative CT scan. I’m finally getting around to being tested for sleep apnea after the nurses in hospital asked whether I had it.

In all three cases, there were signs I should have been paying attention to, but ignored. Dad ignored or downplayed his symptoms until nothing could be done. I’m trying really hard (now) to break that pattern of behaviour.

I think of these things as mostly being lessons from Dad, but some come from Mom too. Was it a generational thing? Or just my family dynamics? Thankfully it doesn’t seem to have been passed on to my kids so hopefully they have learned the lessons already.

  • Listen to your body;
  • Consider that what you are telling yourself is normal for your body may actually just mean you are stubborn;
  • Admit when things hurt or feel wrong;
  • Ask for help;
  • If you can’t ask, at least accept help when it’s offered;
  • Read up on what is considered “normal” so at least you have some sort of baseline for assessing whether you should be worried, or feel free to carry on with whatever gives you joy.
A smiling woman wearing dark clothes rides a blue bicycle with an orange basket on the front. She has both her feet off the pedals, stretched forward. Having done this just last week, I am pretty sure she is saying “wheeeee!”
fitness · research · Science

All the things they said/all the things they said(about exercise duration): this is not enough…

Some questions just never go away.

  • Are we alone in the universe?
  • What is the nature of consciousness?
  • How much exercise should I really get each week?

Conventional advice from convention health sources says that at least 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous exercise per week is important to maintain health. The CDC (the good-old-fashioned one, based on real health studies) says so here.

And it turns out almost half of adults in the US get that amount. Which is better than previous studies showed.

But wait– there’s new research out there telling us in no uncertain terms that we were wrong.

Yeah, stick figure and I are equally flummoxed by this news.
Yeah, stick figure and I are equally flummoxed by this news.

I know. I mean, we’ve written so many blog posts about how small intervals of physical activity, whether in short bursts or in longer increments, are a huge boost to health and well-being.

But all those things I said, all the things we said… this is not enough.

THIS IS NOT ENOUGH

@mviti.ae

FW // THIS IS NOT ENOUGH // #foryou #heatedrivalry #ilyarozanov #shanehollander #heatedrivalryedit // FAKE EVERYTHING// HEATED RIVALRY EPISODE 4

♬ original sound – mviti 🩺 🚒

According to a study published in the British Medical Journal last week, the 150-minute amount is more of a minimum threshold than a top-end goal for adult fitness. Here’s what Outside Magazine had to say about the study:

The researchers analyzed data from 17,088 participants in the UK Biobank, a large biomedical dataset and research resource, between 2013 and 2015. Study participants, with an average age of 57, wore an activity tracker on their wrist for seven consecutive days to record their normal activity levels.

During a follow-up of the participants after nearly eight years, 1,233 cardiovascular events (heart attack and stroke) were recorded. People, regardless of fitness level, who got 150 minutes of exercise each week had a nine percent reduction in cardiovascular event risk.

But to achieve substantial protection from cardiovascular events—defined as more than a 30 percent reduction in risk—the participants needed to log between 560 and 610 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous exercise a week. This works out to about nine to ten hours of weekly exercise. Just 12 percent of people in the study hit those numbers.

Right. So, if we don’t measure up, are we just doomed? One of the researchers hastily responds no, every type and amount of movement counts.

[Senior researcher on the study] Ziheng Ning also says it’s important to avoid looking at exercise as a pass/fail threshold. “Instead, think of it as a continuum: more movement generally produces greater protection, and fitness level matters,” he says.

What are we to make of this? There have already been a bunch of criticisms and responses to the published study. Among the objections are these:

  • the study collected data for only one week for participants, potentially not accounting for variation in exercise patterns
  • the participant group was largely white and able-bodied, so not applicable to the general population
  • this was an observational study, so no causation could be concluded

But the bigger objections were from health and fitness professionals who argued that the notion of “optimun” is relative to a baseline, and these vary for a lot of reasons and at different times in one’s life. Also, other studies show modest but significant health benefits for all sorts of physical activities, in all sorts of amounts and durations.

For my money, I don’t think activity or fitness is a continuum, where we slide forwards and backwards. Instead, I think we dip in and out, try on something for size, take a new sport out for a spin, chill out, loll about, dance around, and feel the occasional spring in our step. It’s about finding a cadence that works with the playlist our lives are running at the moment.

What’s your cadence this week/this month/this year/this decade/this life? I’d love to hear what you’re up to.

ADHD · fitness · mobility · stretching · yoga

Hip, Hip… OK. Christine’s upcoming experiment

My hips are very cranky lately and instead of just being annoyed most of the time and stretching when I think of it, I have decided to actually try to make them happier by doing some targeted exercises and stretches and the like.

Yes, I know that a problem with my hips is not an isolated thing – I probably have a whole series of cranky muscles that need some kind attention – but I also know that my brain loves falling into the trap of ‘if I can’t do everything, I won’t do anything’ so I have decided to start by focusing on my hips.

And since I also know that my brain gets easily bored exercise routines, I have decided that ‘focusing on my hips’ means ‘trying all kinds of different videos to see which ones my hips like best.

So, here is my ‘happier hips’ experiment:

Try each of these videos once over the next two weeks and see which ones we (me and my hips) like best.

Updates will follow as events warrant.

A video called ‘7 Tight Hip Stretches’ from the Ask Dr Jo YouTube channel. The still image shows Dr. Jo, a woman with light skin whose brown hair is pulled back in a bun, sitting on a mat on the floor with her hands on the mat behind her. Her right leg is bent at the knee with her foot on the floor and her left leg is bent with her knee facing the camera and her left foot on her right knee. She is facing the camera and she is mid-sentence.
a short YouTube video called ‘Tight Hips? You’re not alone’ from the Yoga with DJ channel. In the still image a person in a grey tank top and black shorts. with black framed glasses with their hair in a bun on top of their head sits on a black yoga mat with the soles of their feet touching each other and their knees pointed to the sides of the mat (butterfly pose), and they are using their hands to push downwards on their knees. There are shelves of plants behind them and their yoga mat is on light-coloured parquet flooring.
a video called ‘Gentle Yoga for Tight Hips’ from Yoga with Adriene. In the still image, Adriene, a woman with long dark hair and a happy expression is wearing back leggings and a black tshirt as she sits on a yoga mat that is divided long ways into two shades of green. Her hands are resting behind her on the mat and she is leaned back slightly. Her left foot is on the floor and her left knee is bent (pointed toward the ceiling) Her right leg is bent, her right foot is resting on her left leg, and her right knee is pointing away from the viewer. Her dog Benji is sleeping in front of her but near the back wall and a table with a plant and a decorative item on it is behind her to her right.
a video called ‘Hip CARs//For IT Band Syndrom, Piriformis Syndrome etc’ from Tom Morrison. The left hand side of the image is red with text reading ‘What is The Best Hip Mobility Drill Ever!?and the right shows Tom Morrison, a man with long hair wearing a black shirt and dark pants and a woman in a black shirt and grey capri leggings with her blonde hair in a high ponytail standing next to the frame of a machine at the gym. She is holding on to the frame and tipping her leg to one side to stretch her hips.
another Yoga with Adriene video. This one is called ‘Hip Mobility – Open Your Hips – 13 Minute Yoga practice and there’s still image shows her lying on her back on a light green yoga mat and she is wearing a one piece exercise suit that is both a tank top and leggings. She is making the figure 4 position with her legs. Her right leg is bent with the knee pointing away from the viewer and her right ankle is resting on her left thigh as she pulls her left thigh toward her with her hands .
This video from Oscar Moves is called ‘Give Me 4 Minutes. I’ll Fix Your Tight Hips.’ Still image is divided into halves. On the left, he is wearing a dark shirt and shorts and he is pushing down on his right leg near the knee with both hands. On the right side, he is wearing a green shirt and dark shorts and he is sitting with the souls of his feet together and his knees pointing out to either side in butterfly position and he looks relaxed.

PS- The YouTube algorithm tossed another Tom Morrison hip video at me just now ( about an hour before the post goes live) so I’m going to include that too: https://youtube.com/shorts/56aOHZq2JKI?si=rfSRHcZFuMZBICAe

cycling · fitness · Zwift

Sam’s eventful Sunday morning Pride ride on Zwift

It’s almost June and that means Pride on Zwift.  You can read about it here: All About Pride On with LGBTQ Zwifters 2026 on Zwift.

“After having proudly supported Zwift-owned Pride On campaigns every June in recent years, Pride On on Zwift is now fully owned and hosted by LGBTQ Zwifters. This is what to expect this June: entertaining group rides, exciting races, runs, a new Pride On kit, legacy unlocks and – most of all – a lot of fun on a daily basis!”

It’s also cold and rainy this weekend in Ontario, and I’m feeling pretty grumpy about not riding my bike.  Two weekends ago we went car camping with Mallory and Cheddar, and we couldn’t bring our bikes because Sarah’s car, the one with the bike rack hitch, was broken.  Last weekend, Sarah got to ride her bike at the farm, but I was sick. There was also a heat alert. And then this weekend, I’m better, and I have a bike ride marked on our weekend to-do list. It’s cold and miserable. Grrr.

So instead, I got up Sunday morning and joined the 730 am Pride Ride, before church.

Well, that was a very eventful ride. Wowsa.

Zwift has lots of gamified features and I feel like on that ride, I hit all of them. So many medals and prizes.

First, I won every sprint, segment, whatever because they are given out to men and women separately and I think I was the only woman in the ride, hence the fastest woman on all the segments.

Second, I met my weekly distance goal during the ride. That required a small animated digital celebration.

Fitness tracker interface displaying weekly training goals and scores, showing a training score of 11, a weekly goal of 50 km, and a current distance of 52 km along with a week streak of 16 days.

Third, I completed a new route and got a route badge for Scotland Smash.

Graphic displaying an achievement notification titled 'Scotland Smash' with a scenic background featuring mountains, a winding road, and a water body. Text reads 'Achievement Unlocked! Great work! Keep exploring!'

Fourth, for completing the Pride Ride I got new socks and new kit.

Image showcasing an unlocked item labeled 'Pride 2023 Socks' with a blue sock icon and the phrase 'Flow as you go'.

Graphic showing an unlocked item, featuring a blue shirt icon with the text 'LGBTQ Zwifters'.

Fifth, during the course of the ride I levelled up to Level 53. Cue more streamers and confetti. Read about Zwift levels here.

And here’s my playlist for the ride from Spotify.

Playlist cover for 'Pride Party 2026' featuring a rainbow gradient and the Spotify logo, listing popular songs like 'Hung Up' by Madonna, 'Can't Get You out of My Head' by Kylie Minogue, and 'Stateside' by PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson.

I don’t think I’ve had a much fun on a Zwift ride since I got my flaming socks and my pocket Scottie.

fitness

What “Fits In a Bandeau” Actually Means

A woman in a striking black bandeau dress with an open side, posing at an event. The background features a crowd of elegantly dressed attendees.

If your social media newsfeed is all fitness, all the time–welcome to my world–you’ve likely seen this post and many of the responses to it. Most of the women’s strength groups I follow have shared it, with rebuttals in favour of deadlifts and functional strength, and against aesthetic thinness goals.

And yes, I’m also on Team Strong over Team Skinny, though, truth be told, skinny was never on the menu for me. Strength is, and I delight in it, and in the way I feel when I’m strong, Muscles!

So regular readers know both that I’m a fan of muscles, and also that I pledged here on the blog not to skinny-shame. See (from many years ago) Fear of frail? In which Sam pledges not to body shame skinny runners…

Here’s some of my thoughts about the image and this issue.

🏋️ First,  lots of thin women might also care about beating their deadlift PR. There is no reason to think the woman in this picture doesn’t care about strength.

🏋️  Also not everyone who “fits” into a bandeau at 76, worked for it or had it as a goal. Some people just are thin,  just like others are fat.

🏋️ What do you mean “fits into a bandeau” anyway? Doesn’t that matter what size the bandeau is? We would all fit into bandeaus if they were large enough, right?

🏋️  Ah, what they really mean is “fits into a bandeau’ and looks a certain way. What way? Skinny.

🏋️ Skinny is having a moment right now. I didn’t blog about Demi Moore and the debate over her “toned” arms, but that certainly fits into the same context. See my post from a last spring, Thin being in again and the rise of authoritarianism.

🏋️ There is something to the idea that at 76, if we care about not breaking bones when we fall,  we ought to be strength training.  It’s not necessary to care about your weight-lifting PRs though, but it is necessary, if you care about retaining muscle,  to train for strength some of the time.

As usual, there’s a lot more nuance here than Team Skinny versus Team Strong. 

Where do you land? Does framing this as “different goals” let the original post off the hook too easily, or is that the right response?

Also, whatever your goal, remember it may not be something you have control over. See What does 74 look like? And how much choice do we have really?

sneakers beside arrows
Photo by Ann H on Pexels.com

fitness · season transitions

It’s almost June– time to get ready for sweating!

As I write this post on Sunday May 24, it’s 53F/11.5 C and raining in New England. This is not the May weather I grew up with, having been born and raised in South Carolina. However, after several decades of calling the Boston area home, I know that late spring doesn’t let go of its fickle grip on northern regions without some pushback. However, it does eventually become summer, and with summer comes… yes, sweating.

We at Fit is a Feminist Issue have written about sweating. Here are a few posts to check out:

Gonna make you sweat

Air conditioning and exercise: Sweaty Sam has some thoughts

Sweat first, glow later

A feminist guide to mid-life sweating

Catherine complains about sweating again, but this time there’s science involved

Basically, Samantha is accepting of sweating, Mia is a sort of a sweat advocate, and I sweat a lot and complain about it. Until now.

A local mental health clinic in my area put up this public service list of things that are good about sweaing. I took this in, and am working on being more sweat-positive this summer.

Sweat positivity list-- memorize this before the weather really turns hot and humid.
Sweat positivity list– memorize this before the weather really turns hot and humid.

Okay, I can see that sweat is another occasion for appreciating my body. And it signals that I’ve done something (mostly; although I can sweat copiously while not moving an inch). Yes, sweat is a sensational experience (in one sense of the word). And it keeps me cool without having to start panting all the time.

Fine, sweating is good for us. Happy now?

I will be once I find myself in proper sweating weather. Which I hope will be this week. Will post a perspiration update (or not) later…

Happy sweating 2026, everyone!

fitness · research · Research Roundup

Exercise Snacks: What the Latest Research Actually Shows

I love the term “exercise snacks.” It sounds fun, it’s easy to remember, and it reframes movement in a way that feels less intimidating than “you need to work out more.”

I mean on the one hand, there are gruelling ultramarathons of longer and longer distances, and on the other, there are snack-sized bites of exercise.

What’s not to love? Who doesn’t love a good snack?

(Actually the blog’s usual Sunday morning writer Catherine isn’t such a big fan.  She’s written that there is something about the term ‘exercise snack’ that rubs her the wrong way. )

Two new meta-analyses just came out with some solid findings on exercise snacks, and I followed up after they floated by repeatedly on my social media newsfeed, which is heavily fitness-oriented.

Here’s what I found, including what the research actually supports and what it doesn’t.

First, what counts as an exercise snack?

  • We’re talking genuinely short — 2–5 minutes of movement, repeated throughout the day
  • Activities using large muscle groups work best: stair climbing, brisk walking, bodyweight moves such as squats
  • The sweet spot in the research: moving for 2–5 minutes every 30–60 minutes of sitting
  • So basically: get up, move, sit back down, repeat

What the research supports

  • Exercise snacks improved cardiorespiratory fitness in physically inactive adults — and this finding had moderate-certainty evidence behind it, which in research terms is genuinely meaningful, not a hedge
  • Breaking up sitting improved blood flow and caused a small but real drop in systolic blood pressure — and these effects showed up acutely, meaning during a sitting session, not just over months of training
  • I find this part kind of amazing: your blood vessels respond to movement pretty quickly. You’re not just banking future health credits. Something is actually happening right now, while you climb those stairs.

What the research doesn’t support (yet)

  • There isn’t strong evidence yet that exercise snacks improve other cardiometabolic markers like blood sugar or cholesterol. The hype sometimes gets ahead of the data on this one
  • Muscular endurance benefits in older adults were limited in the evidence
  • These studies focused on physically inactive people — if you’re already active, the cardiorespiratory gains are less likely to be dramatic for you, though the sitting-break findings apply to pretty much everyone

One nuance I think is really worth flagging

  • Reducing total sedentary time and avoiding long uninterrupted sitting may matter independently of whether you’re doing structured exercise snacks
  • In other words: taking three short walks doesn’t entirely cancel out eight hours in a chair
  • The duration of uninterrupted sitting itself seems to affect vascular function — these are related but genuinely separate things
  • I know that’s not the most cheerful finding if, like me,  you have a desk job, but hey, sometimes the truth hurts

The bottom line

  • If you’re not currently exercising, exercise snacks are a genuinely evidence-supported place to start — especially for your cardiovascular fitness
  • If you sit for long stretches (hi, fellow desk workers), building in movement breaks every 30–60 minutes has real short-term benefits for your circulation, even if you’re otherwise active
  • Use the stairs when you can — it keeps showing up in the research as a particularly good option, and now I feel vindicated every time I take them, now that I can post knee surgeries!
  • And as always: I trust research that tells me what it doesn’t know, not just what it does

What I read: Effect of exercise snacks on fitness and cardiometabolic health in physically inactive individuals: systematic review and meta-analysis

Rodríguez MÁ, Quintana-Cepedal M, Cheval B, et al, Effect of exercise snacks on fitness and cardiometabolic health in physically inactive individuals: systematic review and meta-analysis, British Journal of Sports Medicine 2026;60:133-141.

“Moderate certainty of evidence indicated that exercise snacks improved cardiorespiratory fitness in physically inactive adults. However, evidence for benefits on muscular endurance in older adults was limited, and the current data do not support their effectiveness for improving other cardiometabolic health markers.”

🥞🧇🫐🍒🥐

What I read: Acute effects of “exercise snacks” during prolonged sitting on hemodynamics and peripheral vascular function: a three-level meta-analysis

Wang, H., Chang, Y., Wang, H. et al. Acute effects of “exercise snacks” during prolonged sitting on hemodynamics and peripheral vascular function: a three-level meta-analysis. Nutr Metab (Lond) (2026). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12986-026-01120-5

“Breaking up prolonged sitting with short bouts of physical activity (“exercise snacks”) acutely improves flow-mediated dilation and peripheral blood flow, and is associated with a small but statistically significant reduction in systolic blood pressure. Mean arterial pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and peripheral arterial diameter did not show consistent significant changes. Findings for shear rate and heart rate were sensitive to bias correction and should therefore be interpreted cautiously. Activity breaks involving large muscle groups (e.g., stair climbing), performed for 2–5 min every 30–60 min, may be particularly beneficial for vascular protection. Where feasible, reducing total sedentary time and avoiding prolonged uninterrupted sitting may also be important.”

Cover of the journal 'Nutrition & Metabolism' by BMC, featuring a red background with geometric shapes in various shades.