challenge · fitness · Happy New Year! · new year's resolutions · winter

After six days of New Year’s challenges, Catherine reports in

I’ve been doing (or at least reading about) several New Year’s challenges this week:

As expected, I haven’t adhered strictly to all of the challenges. Here are some things that are definitely didn’t happen:

Vision board (Apartment Therapy): I am so not making a vision board (no offense to anyone here who is a fan). Maybe this is because a) sorting through hundreds of choices would get me bogged down, never to emerge from the vision-bog again; and b) I sort of have a vision already, which is my place– only rearranged, edited, repaired, and repainted (a set of tasks for spring/summer/uh, whenever). The hard part is the implementation of said vision. I am continuing forward, though: I emptied out a drawer, thew out (or rather put in a box to recycle, donate or throw out, as told by Apartment Therapy) and rearranged the remaining contents. Here’s my before and after:

Exhaustive/exhausting fitness testing (Washingon Post Tuneup): Yes, I agree that knowledge (even about my own level of fitness, etc.) is power. But, I was totally not up for working to fatigue/exhaustion/despair just because the Washington Post said so. Also, I’m extremely unhappy with their category setup for the test.

Do not EVER describe my age group as Golden. My category--
Do not EVER describe my age group as Golden.

Then, after I pushed the cheery and demeaning “Golden” button, I was told to do the following with measurements of reps and time:

  • stand on one foot
  • sit and stand from a chair
  • run or walk a mile
  • hang from a pull-up bar
  • BURPEES!

Okay, these aren’t actually bad. I might try some of them. But starting off a 5-day challenge in this way is daunting. Not so the NY Times’ Day 3 (of their 6-day energy challenge). Their assignment was this:

Over the course of three minutes, you’ll imitate a boxer, a ballerina, a tennis player, a basketball player, a runner, and, to cool down, a yoga practitioner.

This was fun. I pretended to hit a home run from my living room to across the street, imaginarily breaking windows even. The article suggested ballet moves, boxing jabs and footwork, tennis serves and returns, and basketball dribbling and layups (which I never quite got in gym class, but it matters not). I enjoyed myself, and it was a satisfying little exercise amuse-bouche. Yes, exercise snacking is approved by all sorts of health writers on the internet, and there’s some scientific evidence in its favor. I’ll write more about exercise snacking in a future post, but if you need some info now, here’s a graphic explanation from this paper:

Graphic showing sedentary behavior, then cycling, running, etc. then cardiovascular fitness, blood glucose level drop and increased vascular fitness
I mean, who needs to read a journal article when you have this? Well, there are a few details undepicted…

And then there’s Flow: 30 Days of Yoga with Adriene. I did day 0, which involved listening. But I haven’t done any of days 1–5 yet.

I'm embarrassed. This isn't me, but some lovely photo by Dmitri Ratushny, whose picture is a perfect representation of my feelings about this. It shows a woman outside, with her mittin-covered hands
I’m embarrassed. Thanks Dmitri Ratushny, who perfectly illustrated my feelings here (Unsplash).

I don’t know why I never seem to get around to doing Yoga with Adriene. I like Adriene, I like yoga, and I like her dog Benji. But instead of making a commitment to it and setting aside time each day, I just sort of hoped I would spontaneously start doing yoga with Adriene. It doesn’t seem to work that way, though.

On the other hand, I didn’t have to think at all about making a commitment to the writing/art prompts for Suleika Jaouad’s Rumi New Year’s challenge. I’m one day behind, but am steadily plowing through them all. They are behind a series of paywalls, but here is a screen shot of them:

All of these prompts are the first lines from Rumi poetry, and we use them to write or draw something. I'm up to Jan 5 today (Sunday).
All of these prompts are the first lines from Rumi poetry, and we use them to write or draw something inspired by them.

My lack of art training doesn’t keep me from using my set of multicolored felt tip pens to doodle and noodle and swirl and dot and connect the dots and fill in to my heart’s content. It is so. much. fun. There’s no pressure to perform or attain any level of achievement. All I do is play and enjoy playing. Which, come to think of it, is what I enjoyed about pretending to be a baseball player or ballerina for 3 minutes. There are no expectations, no criteria, and no judging.

So, here’s my January challenge for you, dear readers: schedule in some pretend-activities, which are in fact activities in themselves. You can pretend to be a dancer, a dog, a great artist, an interior designer, a chef, a novelist, a musician, singer, neighborhood explorer, hot-tub swimmer, flower/house-plant arranger. No pressure. No before/after photos. No personal bests. Just fun.

You might take inspiration from this jaunty little yellow frog, who showed up in my search for “challenging”. Maybe it’s not easy being yellow, but it looks great on this little cutie. And January can look great on you, too.

Hey there, cutie-pie! And thanks, Jeffrey Hamilton for taking this pic (Unsplash). A lovely yellow frog on a dark green leaf.
Hey there, cutie-pie! And thanks, Jeffrey Hamilton, for taking this pic. (Unsplash)

One thought on “After six days of New Year’s challenges, Catherine reports in

  1. I’ve been doing a few of these challenges, too. I have successfully made it through all of the Yoga with Adriene sessions. It helps that they only take about 20 minutes, and some are similar to my physical therapy exercises so I can double dip. I find the NY Times challenge kind of boring and I felt very silly doing the one where you pretend you are another athlete. Glad that you enjoyed it. I challenged myself to walk 300 miles this year and am on pace for my weekly average. I was felled by a bad sinus infection to start the year so I’m pretty happy that I’ve done anything. Just keep moving.

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