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You are here: Home / Archives for motivation

motivation

How I got out of my own way

OperationMove · February 19, 2014 · 7 Comments

destiny

In life so many times there are real obstacles. Things that are unchangeable, things that you just have to work around. For the most part though, those things aren’t what hold you back. It’s the little lies that do that for you. Things like you don’t have the ability, or the time, or the strength or the talent.

Come to think of it, I’m not a fan of talking about talent. Because I worship at the altar of hard work. I believe most things can be worked for. You might not get them tomorrow or next week or next month. But most things, if you put in the effort, you will get.

For years I didn’t exercise because I’d convinced myself I wasn’t athletic enough or coordinated enough or I just didn’t have the time. Which was all bullshit really. Just excuses I gave myself. Excuses that I felt like I was entitled to. In part because PE in school was the epitome of all things bullying. It was humiliating. And I spent a whole lot of my adult life avoiding embarrassment or humiliation.

I liked walking and hiking. That was a pretty safe zone for me. I loved the idea of finding as many mountains to climb as I could. But you know what? I never did.

You could say life got in the way. And that’s certainly what I told myself, but really it was just a matter of taking my eyes off the goal. And when you do that, all you see is obstacles.

Then one day I decided to work for it. My initial motivation was pretty simple. I had baby weight and I was in the horrifying position of realising that unlike in my twenties, in my thirties it had a nasty habit of sticking around and I actually had to work to lose it. It’s a strange mix of leaps of faith and baby steps. Going to the gym was a leap of faith because I was terrified of exercising in public. Making the switch to running outside was another leap because I was scared about how hard it would be. The baby steps were committing to it. And the more you commit to the process, the more it gives back to you.

At first I could only run for 400m. The idea of running even a kilometre without stopping was unimaginable. But then you do. And then you run 2.5kms and then 5. And suddenly you are running 20kms OUTSIDE. And people say to you I could never do that. I found myself saying things like, yes you could. If you can run 1, you can run 5. If you can run 5, you can run 8. If you can run 8, you can run 12. If you can run 12, you can run 15 and if you can run 15 you can run a half.

Then one day you find yourself contemplating this: a full marathon ascent of about 1,250 metres even though you have never completed a full marathon.

bawbaw

All of those leaps I have taken and baby steps I have moved forward with have led me to this place. The place where I have a training plan which calls for about 5 training runs per week and 3 strength and conditioning sessions. Training which I have committed to and I don’t cancel on. It’s something I have worked at for two years. That person who wasn’t athletic enough, now has the resting heart rate of an athlete.

Once you commit to the work, it rewards you by continually proving that you can do things that you never thought possible. Less than six months ago I would have thought it impossible to run a kilometre in under 6 minutes but I recently ran one in under 5. When you are doing the impossible, there aren’t that many obstacles – there is just the work you need to do to get you from where you are to where you are going.

And now? Now I’m looking for some mountains. Goals change. Now I don’t want to walk up mountains, I want to run.

Do what moves you most.

OperationMove · February 12, 2014 · 13 Comments

move because you love to

 

For as long as I have known her, which is a pretty long time now, my best friend has played netball.

For about the same amount of time I have considered her completely insane. You’d think, with my relatively newfound love of fitness, that I would have embraced her netball playing ways. But I haven’t, and I still think she’s a little unhinged to enjoy copping elbows in the ribs and being pushed around by scary women wearing initials that I’m pretty sure stand for ‘Gut Shover’ and ‘Woman Attacker’. But hey, that’s why she plays it and I don’t.

And in fairness, I’ve spent an awful lot of my life thinking that all those runners were pretty loopy too. I’d see them sweating and panting and wonder what on earth could drive a person to do such a thing.

Turns out, feeling COMPLETELY BLOODY AWESOME is a pretty good motivator, and when I’m in the car and see people running now I just want to wind down my window and hit them with some Eye of the Tiger and a big thumbs up. I’ve yet to actually do that, and my husband often tells me to stop staring at the runners, but one day. One day.

But here’s the thing. My bestie has taken up running in the past six months and I keep waiting for her to love it like I do. And she just doesn’t. She likes how she feels after a run, but the actual running isn’t her favourite. Because we aren’t the same person.

Huh.

I see people raving about their personal trainers, and how much they love bootcamp. I think to myself if I want people to yell at me to do stuff I can just get out of bed in the morning. My kids totally have that covered. But some people thrive on it and that is their thing. If it gets you moving and loving it, then that is awesome!

Other people are mad keen cyclists. I have been trying to embrace the bike, but you know my bum still says no. It is a fun thing to do now and again with the kids, but I’m never gonna be the one out there punching the air because I rode up a mountain. Because I am never going to ride up a mountain. I’ll leave that to people who don’t mind feeling like their legs might fall off.

I will however run. And when I can’t run I will walk, because that makes me feel really great and happy too.

The biggest secret to going from a ‘fitness kick’ to a lifestyle change is liking it. It is that simple.

Some days I just cannot be bothered, but because I know that even the junkiest run will leave me feeling like a million bucks I will do it anyway. If I had to get up and play netball I might never get out of bed again. Running is my thing. It makes me feel strong and grounded and amazing.

Maybe you haven’t found your thing yet?

Try something new.

Go for a walk. And tell us every time you head out the door, because the best props come from people who get it. Trust me on this.

Learn to run. We all started with the first step, and maybe you’ll love it and maybe you won’t, but you’ll have given it a go.

Check out Crossfit, or a local gym, or book a session with a personal trainer. Or call my house at 8.15am any given morning and I’ll put one of my kids on the phone to yell at you. Mates rates.

Just give it a go. Nothing to lose and everything to gain.

What moves you?

 

 

#walk400 – moving on and moving up!

OperationMove · January 25, 2014 · 8 Comments

the road less travelled

 

We are rapidly reaching the end of January, despite my best efforts to drag out the long days of Summer holidays with my kids.

I will admit that I didn’t think #walk400 would be that much fun for me. I’d been sulking about not being able to run and I felt like it would be a pretty poor second best to my usual running training.

I could not have been more wrong. I have spent hours enjoying the sunshine and the countryside where I live. I have listened to fabulous podcasts, I have had beautiful conversations with my children when they’ve joined me, and I’ve been able to take some gorgeous photos as well. All things that I can’t do when I run.

So many of you have already smashed through 400 minutes of walking, which is fantastic! I know many are very close to it and some may not quite get there this month. But isn’t the very best thing about goals that whether you reach them or not, you always have the ability to make new ones?

So as we wind up the challenge for this month, we are asking you where you want to go next.

We have two options for you to think about over the next few days.

Maybe you are loving walking and want to keep going. Fantastic! In February we’ll be asking you to extend yourself a little with #Feb450. Our current forum group will continue but be renamed #Feb450 because we know you have that extra 50 minutes in you! And just like this month we will have some prizes on offer too, stay tuned for more details on those.

Maybe having walked for the month you think you might like to learn to run? Guess what! Our wonderful life coach Lee from Brightside Coaching will be running a group just for you! And it is for EVERYONE and ANYONE who wants to give it a try. You do not have to have run a day in your life before, you just have to be willing to try something new. Who knows, you may end up as crazy about it as Zoey and I are! And if you don’t that’s fine too, because you will know you tried something different and challenged yourself.

So what amazing thing are you going to attempt in February? For me, February will see a return to running training and I’ll be sharing that in the Moving Machines section for the loopers who are going a bit hard core. If you’re a casual mover you might like to jump in to I like to move and make some friends there, and if you are brand new to this moving gig you can find your crew at New Movers.

So what is your February plan?

 

Congratulations Michelle @twolilcrickets who has won the #walk400 She Science gift voucher this week! We’ve loved watching you smash this challenge!

Struggletown. Population Me.

OperationMove · January 24, 2014 · 5 Comments

There’s usually no rhyme or reason to it. It just happens. Pops out of nowhere when you are least expecting it. You head off for a workout (or in my case a run) and it’s just freaking hard. Far harder than it should be. Feet like lead. Lungs at about ten percent capacity. And that ability that you take for granted, to be able to push through and find that magical next gear show up is just gone.

three-cs

 

Who are you competing against?

Is it you? Because it should be. There’s no quicker way to make your workout feel like shit than comparing it to someone else. You are your best and only competition. Anything else is a distraction unworthy of your time. You know what you should compete against? Not your time last week or last month. But that voice in your head that says you can’t. That voice is excellent competition.

Stop looking at your time, pace or distance.

It’s ok. I’m a PB addict as well. I understand. But when you know you are not going to get there, let’s not having a glaring reminder of how much today is not the day. Get back to what you loved about it before their were times and records. Outside? That’s pretty awesome. There are beautiful skies and trees to look at. Sure you might occasionally have to leap over a dead snake or rabbit but mostly so pretty. If you have kids you will probably just enjoy being on your own because how often does that even happen?

Break It Up.

Most things are intimidating if you look at them in total. If you break them up they suddenly seem more achievable. The other day I had a crossfit circuit that was 50 x squats, 7 dips, 7 chin ups and 10 power cleans with three rounds. Now if I’d looked at that in total I would have probably died. I mean 150 squats?! But it’s just a round. Anyone can do a round.

It is not a waste.

Don’t think because it’s incredibly hard, that it’s a waste and you might as well give up and try another day. It’s exactly the ability to keep pushing when you are mentally exhausted that is going to improve your speed, endurance and capabilities in the long run.

Measure a workout by the effort you put in.

Was it hard? Congratulations, you just did all you will ever need to do.

Just Finish.

You made a commitment to yourself. Finish it. It doesn’t have to be fast, it doesn’t have to be stellar. You don’t even have to like it. You just have to finish. By any means at your disposal. And then you take that ability to finish and you use it the next time that voice in your head shows up. You proved that voice wrong once and you will do it again.

And once you’ve done all of that, talking to other people who totally get it goes a very, very long way.

 

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